A lively debate has begun in the stress management community
over Kelly McGonigal’s Ted Talk in which she presents research that indicates
it’s not stress that is damaging, but instead one’s attitude toward stress that
dictates the damage done to one’s health by stressful situations. To put it bluntly, stress doesn’t kill
people, thinking that stress is bad kills people. Volition over physiology.
Can we all be so wrong?
Maybe there’s some middle ground here. It’s no secret that one’s attitude toward a
situation, and the strength of one’s will to face it, can very strongly
influence the outcome of the situation faced.
So yes, stress can wreak terrible havoc on the body and the mind. But, of course, one who faces stress as the
positive result of a life intensely lived is less likely to get sick. Will can help us avoid bad results, but it
cannot preclude all the negative effects of stress. Maybe in all of the research that proves the
negative effects of stress all of the research subjects had a bad perception of
stress’ impact. But I’m willing to bet
that some people who faced stress with gusto still got sick.
My personal experience is instructive. If there is a strong genetic component to
bipolar disorder, then my brothers and sister share my predisposition toward
the disease. But only I have it. Yet, I think I’m the most optimistic one of
the bunch, and I see opportunity in every challenge. During my twenties, looking back, I had what
can be identified as a couple of manic episodes. But they took little negative toll on my
life. As I approached thirty, I was a
fast rising sales executive traveling constantly, chasing down ever more
difficult goals, consumed fully by my work.
I loved every minute of it. I had
never faced stress like that in my life, and I thrived on it. Stress was a key motivator for me, it kept me
going. Then it all came apart and I
ended up in a psych hospital. Good
attitude, bad result.
Stress had precipitated the expression of bipolar
disorder. Some believe that all mental
illness is a stress response. The result
of this period of stress in my life seems to be the reason why my
predisposition to bipolar disorder was triggered. And it was what I consider to be positive
stress that did it. Mood disorders can
of course worsen as one faces death in the family, job loss, or the stress of
physical illness. But anyone with a
serious affective disorder knows that even the stress of very positive events
can trigger mania or depression. Many
people have broken down over a pending wedding, beginning a new job, or having
a child.
Then there’s the period of recovery. Here I think will is key. One must expect improvement in order to
achieve it. I faced the challenges of
bipolar disorder positively and got better.
Today it has little impact on my functioning. However, getting to this point took five more
hospitalizations and some terrible mixed episodes. Managing stress, and yes, facing stress
positively, has been as important as any medication I have taken or therapy I
have engaged in.
So, years later, did the stress kill me? No. I
would be included in the research McGonigal cites as one who reinforces her
hypothesis. I have a good attitude
toward stress and I did not die. But
such a simple metric ignores the work involved, the quality of life, and the
setbacks along the way. So, is McGonigal
right? Yes, and No. Her Ted Talk is provocative and the research
outcomes included worth considering. Yet
it may fall a little too heavily on the side of blaming the victim. We can’t just will the negative effects of
stress away. But we can’t face the
challenge of poor health passively, or negatively, either.
I'm not so sure McGonigal was correct in her conclusions either. While the studies she cited seem to indicate that people who believed stress was "very bad" for them had a higher rate of death than those who didn't, all this tells me is that you can significantly increase your stress levels (unhealthy to begin with) by being convinced your stress is going to kill/damage you. This additional level of heightened fear just adds to your prior levels of "stress" that you experienced in the first place. No surprise here that this group would have higher death rates. To me, all this proves is that certain beliefs can create more stress and alternative beliefs may be able to reduce some of our stress. But where did the original stress come from in the first place? Well, a lot of it came from a multitude of other beliefs that we have and this was not address by McGonigal nor would it be likely to lower our main stress load just by changing your one belief about whether stress may be bad or not so bad for you. It might reduce the ADDED amount of stress you will add but it won't do a thing to reduce your chronic levels of stress otherwise.
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