The Different Kinds
of Stress
Stress management can be complicated and confusing because there are
different types of stress--acute stress, episodic acute stress, and
chronic
stress -- each with its own characteristics,
symptoms, duration, and treatment
approaches. Let's look at each one.
Acute Stress
Acute stress is the most common form of stress. It comes from demands and
pressures of the recent past and anticipated demands and pressures of the near
future. Acute stress is thrilling and exciting in small doses, but too much is
exhausting. A fast run down a challenging ski slope, for example, is
exhilarating early in the day. That same ski run late in the day is taxing and
wearing. Skiing beyond your limits can lead to falls and broken bones. By the
same token, overdoing on short-term stress can lead to psychological distress,
tension headaches, upset stomach, and other symptoms.
Fortunately, acute stress symptoms are recognized by most people. It's a
laundry list of what has gone awry in their lives: the auto accident that
crumpled the car fender, the loss of an important contract, a deadline they're
rushing to meet, their child's occasional problems at school, and so on.
Because it is short term, acute stress doesn't have enough time to do the
extensive damage associated with long-term stress. The most common symptoms
are:
- emotional distress--some combination of anger or irritability, anxiety, and
depression, the three stress emotions;
- muscular problems including tension headache, back pain, jaw pain, and the
muscular tensions that lead to pulled muscles and tendon and ligament problems;
- stomach, gut and bowel problems such as heartburn, acid stomach,
flatulence, diarrhea, constipation, and irritable bowel syndrome;
- transient over arousal leads to elevation in blood pressure, rapid
heartbeat, sweaty palms, heart palpitations, dizziness, migraine headaches,
cold hands or feet, shortness of breath, and chest pain.
Acute stress can crop up in anyone's life, and it is highly treatable and
manageable.
Episodic Acute Stress
There are those, however, who suffer acute stress frequently, whose lives
are so disordered that they are studies in chaos and crisis. They're always in
a rush, but always late. If something can go wrong, it does. They take on too
much, have too many irons in the fire, and can't organize the slew of
self-inflicted demands and pressures clamoring for their attention. They seem
perpetually in the clutches of acute stress.
It is common for people with acute stress reactions to be over aroused,
short-tempered, irritable, anxious, and tense. Often, they describe themselves
as having "a lot of nervous energy." Always in a hurry, they tend to
be abrupt, and sometimes their irritability comes across as hostility.
Interpersonal relationships deteriorate rapidly when others respond with real
hostility. The work becomes a very stressful place for them.
The cardiac prone, "Type A" personality described by
cardiologists, Meter Friedman and Ray Rosenman, is similar to an extreme case
of episodic acute stress. Type A's have an "excessive competitive drive,
aggressiveness, impatience, and a harrying sense of time urgency." In
addition there is a "free-floating, but well-rationalized form of
hostility, and almost always a deep-seated insecurity." Such personality
characteristics would seem to create frequent episodes of acute stress for the
Type A individual. Friedman and Rosenman found Type A's to be much more likely
to develop coronary heat disease than Type B's, who show an opposite pattern of
behavior.
Another form of episodic acute stress comes from ceaseless worry.
"Worry warts" see disaster around every corner and pessimistically
forecast catastrophe in every situation. The world is a dangerous, unrewarding,
punitive place where something awful is always about to happen. These
"awfulizers" also tend to be over aroused and tense, but are more
anxious and depressed than angry and hostile.
The symptoms of episodic acute stress are the symptoms of extended over
arousal: persistent tension headaches, migraines, hypertension, chest pain, and
heart disease. Treating episodic acute stress requires intervention on a number
of levels, generally requiring professional help, which may take many months.
Often, lifestyle and personality issues are so ingrained and habitual with
these individuals that they see nothing wrong with the way they conduct their
lives. They blame their woes on other people and external events. Frequently,
they see their lifestyle, their patterns of interacting with others, and their
ways of perceiving the world as part and parcel of who and what they are.
Sufferers can be fiercely resistant to change. Only the promise of relief
from pain and discomfort of their symptoms can keep them in treatment and on
track in their recovery program.
Chronic Stress
While acute stress can be thrilling and exciting, chronic stress is not.
This is the grinding stress that wears people away day after day, year after
year. Chronic stress destroys bodies, minds and lives. It wreaks havoc through
long-term attrition. It's the stress of poverty, of dysfunctional families, of
being trapped in an unhappy marriage or in a despised job or career. It's the
stress that the never-ending "troubles" have brought to the people of
Northern Ireland, the tensions of the Middle East have brought to the Arab and
Jew, and the endless ethnic rivalries that have been brought to the people of
Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
Chronic stress comes when a person never sees a way out of a miserable
situation. It's the stress of unrelenting demands and pressures for seemingly
interminable periods of time. With no hope, the individual gives up searching
for solutions.
Some chronic stresses stem from traumatic, early childhood experiences that
become internalized and remain forever painful and present. Some experiences
profoundly affect personality. A view of the world, or a belief system, is
created that causes unending stress for the individual (e.g., the world is a
threatening place, people will find out you are a pretender, you must be
perfect at all times). When personality or deep-seated convictions and beliefs
must be reformulated, recovery requires active self-examination, often with
professional help.
The worst aspect of chronic stress is that people get used to it.
They forget it's there. People are immediately aware of acute stress because it
is new; they ignore chronic stress because it is old, familiar, and sometimes,
almost comfortable.
Chronic stress kills through suicide, violence, heart attack, stroke, and,
perhaps, even cancer. People wear down to a final, fatal breakdown. Because
physical and mental resources are depleted through long-term attrition, the
symptoms of chronic stress are difficult to treat and may require extended
medical as well as behavioral treatment and stress management.
Adapted from The Stress Solution by Lyle H. Miller, Ph.D., and
Alma Dell Smith, Ph.D.
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