You are stressed – by your deadlines, your responsibilities,
your ever–increasing workload, and your life in general. If you are like me, you even stress about how
much stress you’re feeling - worrying
that it is interfering with your performance and possibly taking years off of your
life.
This might sound a little crazy, but what if it’s the very
fact that we assume stress is bad that’s actually making it so bad for
us? And what if there were another way
to think about stress –a way that might actually make it a force for good in
our lives? Well there is, according to new
research from Yale’s Alia Crum and Peter Salovey, and Shawn Achor author of
The Happiness Advantage.
Let’s take a step back, and begin with a different question:
What is stress?
Generally speaking, it’s the experience – or anticipation - of
difficulty or adversity. We humans, along with other animals, have an
instinctive physical response to stressors. It includes activation of the
sympathetic nervous system (“fight or flight”), inhibition of the parasympathetic
nervous system (“rest and digest”), and the release of adrenaline and cortisol. But what does all of that do? In short, it primes the pump – we become more
aroused and more focused, more ready to respond physically and mentally to
whatever is coming our way.
Kind of sounds like a good
thing, doesn’t it?
But wait, you say, can’t chronic stress make us sick? Can’t it take a toll on our immune
functioning?
Yes…but there is plenty of evidence that stress can also enhance
immunity.
Well then, you
point out, can’t it leave us feeling
depressed and lethargic?
Yes… but studies show that it can also create mental
toughness, increase clarity, result in greater appreciation for one’s
circumstances, and contribute to a sense of confidence built on a history of
overcoming of obstacles (which is the best, most long-lasting kind of
confidence you can have). So stress is
bad, and somehow also good. How can we
make sense of the paradoxical nature of stress?
I’ll bet right now you are saying to yourself, it’s the amount of stress that matters. Low levels may be good, but high levels are
still definitely bad. (i.e., What
doesn’t kill you might make you stronger….but too much stress is probably going
kill you.)
The problem with this theory - which was once the dominant
theory among psychologists, too - is that by and large, it doesn’t appear to be
true. The amount of stress you encounter
is a surprisingly poor predictor of whether it will leave you worse (or better)
off.
As it turns out, your mindset about stress may be the most
important predictor of how it affects you.
As Crum, Salovey, and Achor discovered, people have different beliefs
about stress. Some people – arguably
most people – believe that stress is a bad thing. They agreed with statements like “The effects of stress are negative and
should be avoided,” and the researchers called this the stress-is-debilitating mindset. Those who instead agreed that
“Experiencing stress facilitates my learning and growth” had what they called a
stress-is-enhancing mindset.
In their studies, Crum and colleagues began by identifying
stress mindsets among a group of nearly 400 employees of an international
financial institution. They found that
those employees who had stress-is-enhancing mindsets (compared to
stress-is-debilitating) reported having better health, greater life
satisfaction, and superior work performance.
That’s already rather amazing, but here’s the best part –
your mindset can also change! If you have been living with a
stress-is-debilitating mindset (like most of us), you don’t have to be stuck
with it. A subset of the 400 employees in the
aforementioned study were shown a series of 3-minute videos over the course of
the following week, illustrating either the enhancing or debilitating effects of stress on health, performance, and
personal growth. Those in the stress-is-enhancing group (i.e., the lucky ones) reported
significant increases in both wellbeing and
work performance.
Yet another study showed that stress-is-enhancing believers
were more likely to use productive strategies, like seeking out feedback on a
stress-inducing task. They were also
more likely to show “optimal” levels of cortisol activity. (It turns out that both
too much and too little cortisol release in response to a stressor can have
negative physiological consequences. But
with the stress-is-enhancing mindset, cortisol release is – like Baby Bear’s porridge
- just
right.)
Taken together, all this research paints a very clear
picture: stress is killing you because you believe that it is. Of course, that doesn’t mean you aren’t
juggling too many projects at once – each of us has limited time and energy,
and people can and do get overworked.
But if you can come to see the difficulties and challenges
you face as opportunities to learn and grow, rather than as your “daily grind,”
then you really can be happier, healthier, and more effective. Maybe you don’t need less stress – you just need to think about your stress a little
differently.
This post appeared originally on HBR.org
Don't forget to check out the FOCUS pre-order giveaway and free online assessment!
This is really a fascinating study, Heidi! Or, set of studies. It sounds very much like Carol Dweck's findings on growth vs. fixed mindsets, doesn't it? I'm definitely going to share with my readers!
ReplyDelete