Choose Your Stress Wisely

You can’t lower stress by avoiding difficult situations. But confronting difficult situations causes stress too. Both choices are stressful. What kind of stress do you want?

Protect yourself from stress: Some parts of your brain shrink under the influence of prolonged stress. Image of a stressed child.

Stress caused by avoiding tough situations:

#1. Unresolved issues cause anxiety.

Avoiding difficulty is like living with a low-level toothache.

#2. Anxiety turns into chronic stress.

Procrastination provides brief relief. But prolonged stress turns you into the walking dead.

#3. Self-incrimination undermines confidence.

You believe you should act, but you don’t. You lose initiative as time passes. The more you avoid difficulty the easier it becomes to avoid it. But consequences pile up until they drag you down.

Stress caused by confronting tough situations:

#1. Addressing issues causes more stress.

Confronting stressful situations causes more stress in the short term and less in the long term.

#2. Action includes its own relief.

Everything might not turn out as you hope but you’re dealing with it. Action ends procrastination. You experience a bad toothache for a day instead of a low-level toothache for a month.

#3. Action has positive possibilities.

Avoiding issues multiplies pain over time. Dealing with problems may resolve them. At least you took action.

Conclusion:

Stress is unavoidable. There is stress when you avoid and stress when you confront. Which kind of stress will you choose today?

What are you learning about stress at work?

More on stress:

5 Ways to Protect Yourself from Stress

23 Ways to Lower Stress that Don’t Work

This article is inspired by Carolyn Hax’s article, “Risk retaliation or let a colleague take credit for work?” – The Washington Post


John David Mann and I collaborated on a book about self-reflection. Self-reflection in isolation leads to self-deception. Everything good in leadership begins with humble self-reflection.

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