Why stress is not your enemy
Ivan Vatchkov
Digital Health & AI | Longevity | Investor | Hedge fund PM | Fintech expert | WEF YGL.
At some point, an expert in a position of authority has probably told you to avoid “stress” as it’s “bad” for you. This is terrible advice.?
Leaving aside the fact that most of us can’t control our chaotic minds and stress responses (e.g., “Don't think of a pink elephant”), stress is essential to life and completely unavoidable.?
Reframing stress is a critical life hack many of us have yet to master. You need to understand cortisol, acute vs chronic stress, the growth equation and the seven types of rest.
Here goes.?
Cortisol is your hero
Cortisol is often misunderstood. It’s your body’s natural stress response hero, working hard behind the scenes to keep you alive in high-pressure situations.
Combined with adrenaline,? cortisol upregulates our entire response system so that we can perform better and be more resilient. This is what we call acute stress, and it is a vital skill for us to survive in dangerous situations and perform in short bursts when needed.?
This is normal and desirable. You must be able to upregulate in the right conditions and give performance a turbo boost. Acute stress enhances cognitive function, stimulates nerve cell production, boosts immune response and builds resilience.? It has no adverse effect on health.?
Furthermore, cortisol is essential to life and always present, not just when we are stressed. We need cortisol to function, so it has a natural rhythm of peaking as we wake up and heading lower as we sleep. Too little cortisol, often caused by chronic infections, can result in fatigue, weakness, and digestive issues.
And this is where we encounter the “too much of a good thing” paradox.?
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Acute vs Chronic stress
When we are constantly under stress, we have chronically high cortisol. In today’s world of constant stimuli, our cortisol levels are often out of sync, with higher lows and higher highs.?
This is wreaking havoc on our health and performance. A chronically elevated stress response can cause problems such as weight gain, poor glucose control, suppressed immunity, and even heart disease.
How do we manage chronic stress?? There is a simple equation:?
Stress + Rest = Growth
You should seek to limit your acute stress to short bursts, often dictated by factors beyond your control. You should manage chronic stress through targeted rest. And rest means more than you think. In fact, it means seven times more:?
Understanding and incorporating these seven types of rest into daily life is your toolkit for ensuring stress results in growth, not ruin.?
Stress is information. Use it wisely.
#StressManagement #WorkLifeBalance #PersonalGrowth #Resilience #HealthAndWellness
"We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used to create them”
2 个月This is excellent Ivan
Head of Digital Architecture at University Hospital Zurich, shaping the future of healthcare
3 个月If one follows the proper semantics then stress is bad for you. This has nothing to do with "stress" during physical workouts or any other initiative produced via intrinsic motivation. Even in healthcare we refer to putting a patient under stress (f.e. cardiovascular examination) which is something that a physician imposes upon the person, not by the person's choice. Now, looking for something else outside of the field of comfort, searching for an inspiration to do something never done by one self before - this all puts a person in a "stress" position, but its self-imposed and controlled. At the end growth can be achieved in numerous ways and stress is often a mood killer to look for growth.
Empowering Healthy Futures
3 个月There is good stress and there is chronic stress when you keep adding more of the same stress without proper recovery. Sleep is ultimately one of the recovery strategies but not nearly enough in present times.
?? Got a way to measure the cortisol levels?