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Introduction to Stress Management Topics

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Title: Introduction to Stress Management Topics


1
Introduction to Stress Management Topics
2
Stress
  • Middle English, 1303 c.e.
  • From Old French estrece, meaning narrowness or
    oppression.
  • Distress from the Latin districtus, to hinder
    (as in the narrow, hindering streets in an urban
    district).

3
Stress (contd)
  • As a verb, stress was first used in the sense
    to put emphasis on in the year 1896.
  • Why then?
  • What could stress come to mean in the future?

4
The pioneers
  • Walter Cannon. (1932). The wisdom of the body.
  • Identified fight-or-flight response.
  • Assumes that exposure to a stressor (such as a
    bear in the woods, or a stranger in a dark alley)
    causes the body to prepare for escape or combat.
  • Limitations

5
The pioneers (contd)
  • Hans Selye. (1956). The stress of life.
  • Selye proposed a three-stage model
  • Alarm reaction First exposure to a stressor
    results in bodily changes
  • Resistance With continue exposure, body no
    longer shows signs of stress
  • Exhaustion Energy exhausted death.

6
Selye model
  • Selyes model is deterministic it assumes that
    stress events cause stress reactions.
  • Selyes model is medical it assumes that stress
    reactions can be caused in terms of the body.
  • Selyes model was positivistic, assuming that
    cause and effect are related in scientifically
    axiomatic ways.

7
The pioneers (contd)
  • A.T.W. Simeons. (1961). Mans presumptuous brain.
    Argues that the human brain has not evolved at
    the same pace as 20th-century life.
  • Alvin Toeffler, Future Shock

8
The pioneers (contd)
  • Jacobson, Schultz, Benson Concerned with
    physical sensations of stress.
  • Schultz Developed autogenics.
  • Herbert Benson Developed technique similar to
    Transcendental Meditation.

9
Legacy in vocabulary
  • Bracing Unnecessary contraction of the muscles.
  • Symbolic stressor - a situation in which the
    fight-or-flight response does not prove adaptive.
  • Eustress - resulting from stressors that are
    widely regarded as positive.
  • Distress - stress regarded as negative.

10
Relationship b/w stress and stress reactivity
  • In essence, people harden themselves against
    stress by learning stress management techniques.
  • These experiences help people to feel less
    overwhelmed by stress and also help such feelings
    to pass more quickly.

11
Example (p.10)
  • Two people are fired from their jobs
  • One person worries how they will pay their bills,
    and feels stressed.
  • The other person looks forward to going on
    vacation, and does not feel so stressed.
  • Note There are limitations on the usefulness of
    this technique can you identify them?

12
Goal of stress management
  • A goal of stress management is NOT to eliminate
    all stress.
  • Enjoyable events are stressful, too.
  • Stress also motivates peak performance.

13
Relationship b/w stress and illness
Illness
Stress
14
True or False?
  • Is the following statement true or false?
  • ___ A lack of problems or adversity can,
    ironically, cause individuals to experience
    personal crisis.

15
Goals of stress management
  • Deter undesired stress reactions from occurring
    by planning life events and monitoring ones
    perceptions
  • Eliminate some stressors from our lives when it
    is feasible to do so
  • Limit the harmful effects of stress by dealing
    with its emotional and physical consequences
  • Enjoy life.

16
The subjectivity of approaches
  • What is Greenbergs favored approach to stress
    management?
  • What is Bakers favored approach?
  • What is yours?
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