Stress and Crafting the Good Life
Whoever lives the longest doesn't win any prize. But preserving
our health and well-being are important parts of what I call
Crafting the Good Life- a life lived with love, courage,
wisdom and passion. We harvest the greatest treasures of
a well-lived, loved, and understood life in the last third
of our journey here. To be around for the harvest, we need
to know how to safeguard our health and well-being and if
we're serious about doing that-then understanding and controlling
stress needs to be at the top of our "things to do"
list.
Most people are hungry to connect to who they deeply are,
a
connection often made difficult and even impossible by our
family and cultural; conditioning. Conditioning sets limits
that
can keep us trapped in an identity that often swims in a sea
of
stress hormones because it's too small for who we truly are.
Stress related illnesses cause more deaths yearly than deaths
resulting from all other causes combined. Our health care
system
is really a disease care system, so it doesn't work to prevent
stress related illnesses before they occur-it treats them
only
after they arise. Stress is a biochemical event that involves
powerful hormones: cortisol, epinephrine and norepinephrine.
When our inner pharmacy releases these stress hormones into
our
body too often or for too long, they become toxic poisons
that
can compromise our health and even kill us.
The World Health Organization now recognizes stress as the
number one health problem in industrialized nations. And as
Dr.
Paul Rosch, president of the nonprofit American Institute
of
Stress, noted, in America stress is "...taking a terrible
toll
on the nation's health and economy. It is a heavy contributor
to
heart disease, cancer, respiratory distress, lupus and many
other life threatening illnesses."
Two-thirds of the visits to primary care medical physicians
in
this country are for symptoms resulting from stress. More
than
100 million people are taking weekly medication to manage
stress, medication which is for most people unnecessary and
which can cause serious side effects and addiction.
What causes stress? Many things, including, real or perceived,
job, family and financial pressures. Our mind and body are
an
interdependent unit: the mindbody. If we worry too much about
financial catastrophe, for example, the primitive part of
our
brain can misinterpret our worry as actual financial failure
and
then stress hormones will be released as part of an "emergency
alert" reaction.
There are two switches on our body's involuntary nervous
system:
one is for ordinary housekeeping chores; the other is for
emergency situations.
When one switch is on, the other is off. The ordinary housekeeping
switch controls the
normal processes of our body such as breathing, digestion
and metabolism. The emergency switch is designed to enable
us to survive in the face life threatening emergencies by
triggering our body's "stress response," also known
as the "fight or flight response."
When the emergency switch triggers, powerful hormones flow
into
our body through a process set in motion by our reactive brain.
Our reactive brain cues the master gland of our endocrine
system
that we are in danger and then another phase of the fight
or
flight response is set into motion.
An often overlooked, but critical, factor in understanding
and
controlling stress related illness is to address our perceptual
tendencies to view life situations as stressful. The way we
see
things determines our "view." View defines reality.
If we tend
to view life events as stressful, they will be. Such perceptual
tendencies can result from unhealed past wounds or if we are
not
honoring what we truly want and love in life. Provisional
solutions to stress include regular exercise, deep relaxation
and meditation training, to name a few.
However, unless we deal with the real sources of stress in
our
life, these methods are just short-term bypasses. After 30
years
of work in the best of the western and eastern well-being
traditions, I created a powerful practice to, among other
things, address this problem. The Good Life ProcessT
incorporates ancient spiritual wisdom with cutting-edge
knowledge to short-circuit stress at its source.
This practice also helps create the positive conditions within
the mind and body that bring deep awareness, well-being and
longevity. The Good Life ProcessT relieves the conditions
that
cause stress by returning us to our Heart-to who we deeply
are.
Americans suffer from a great deal of work related stress.
We
work three months longer than the Germans every year and one
month longer than the Japanese. And we sleep 90 minutes less
a
night than did our grandparents.
But it's not just working too long that causes American work
stress. For many of Americans, their work isn't Heart based.
We
do what we feel that we should do or must do instead of what
we
want and love to do. This is a set up for stress and the health
problems associated with what I call "the-not-such-a-good-life."
As Confucius told us: "Choose a job you love, and you
will never
have to work a day in your life." And as the Buddha added:
"Your
work is to discover your work and then with all your heart,
give
yourself to it."
The fact is that our soul, our inner life, aches at "just
for
money" work that lacks depth and meaning. Such work has
no
connection to all-important "inner spark" that can
only be found
within our deepest nature. Nothing but a good connection to
this
inner spark can set our lives on fire. We need to connect
to our
deepest nature, find our inner spark and set our life ablaze
with what we want and love.
Nothing will prove more effective at bringing us the health
and
well-being needed to enjoy the richest of the Good Life's
harvests.
About the author:
Dr. Jim Manganiello is an award winning depth psychologist,
Master coach, and meditation instructor. He works with people
who want to craft their life into a work of art. Jim created
the amazing, 5 part, Crafting the Good Life Course, now available
at www.craftingthegoodlife.com.