What Type of Stress are You Under?
March 11, 2015We’ve all experienced stress. When we have had a long day at the office or at home with the kids, homework, deadlines, finances weighing on our minds, we feel tired and stressed. While situations like these are what most of us picture, this is actually only one form!
The symptoms of stress are many and include physical problems like sleep disturbances, low energy, inability to focus, lack of patience, and increased incidence of illness. When stress symptoms are noticed, the general recommendation is to work less or slow down. While at times this certainly can be appropriate, it can also reduce productivity and may actually contribute to the stress you’re trying to reduce!
Uncomplimentary Stress
This is the harmful, negative stress in our lives we generally think of when we hear the word. Unfortunately, approximately sixty percent of all stress is uncomplimentary. When we experience uncomplimentary stress, we also experience anxiety that provides no positive benefit. Thus, this type of stress should be eliminated or reduced as much as possible because there is no good that comes from it.
Uncomplimentary stress can present itself in a number of forms. Environmental stress, for example, is a big source—approximately ten percent of uncomplimentary stress comes from environmental sources. Pollutants in the air, contaminants in water, and other such toxins provide no positive benefits to us and cause stress on the body.
Psychological stress is another major form of uncomplimentary stress, making up about twenty percent of the uncomplimentary stress we experience. This kind tends to be self-imposed and includes habits of negative self talk, worrying about things outside of your control, setting unrealistic goals and failing, and other such tendencies that provide no positive benefit.
However, the greatest source of uncomplimentary stress in America today, at about seventy percent, comes from nutritional stress, experienced because of the unhealthy nature of food. And with unhealthy foods making up the bulk of the modern American diet, nutritional stress can also occur because you’re not eating enough of the right foods. When our bodies aren’t
By regularly eating real, nutrient dense, whole foods, cellular regeneration will be allowed to occur efficiently and therefore rebuild our bodily tissues. Obviously, this process of cellular regeneration is vital for every single cell and organ of our bodies, making efficiency essential for a well, healthy-functioning body. These healthy foods have not been heavily processed, refined, or had nutrients stripped from them or synthetic ingredients added. Foods such as fresh fruit and vegetables, unrefined hemp seeds, quinoa, sprouted nuts and seeds, legumes, and sprouted grains are all real, whole, unadulterated foods that help prevent nutritional stress.
Complimentary Stress
This form of stress can be beneficial and productive for the body when kept in balance. One form of complimentary stress is exercise. Regular exercise done the right way is beneficial to the body, allowing it to stimulate cellular renewal and growth, as well as detoxify and strengthen. However, if we over-exercise, the body isn’t able to maintain balance and reaches a stressful state where overuse, injuries, and tissue breakdown occurs.
Production Stress
The ideal state for your body is minimal or nonexistent uncomplimentary stress, a healthy balance of the complimentary stress, and steady or increasing (up until it becomes uncomplimentary) production stress. While too much stress is bad, not enough of the right kind can actually increase the bad stress!
Some of the top stress-fighting foods include:
- Asparagus
- Avocado
- Berries
- Chamomile tea
- Green tea
- Raw cacao (chocolate)
- Garlic
- Walnuts
- Dark leafy greens