Saint James High School
Saint James High School
Saint James High School
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT
Information Sheet No. 4
Objectives:
At the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
1. identify the sources of stress and its effects
2. explain that understanding stress and its sources may help in identifying ways to
cope and have a healthful life
3. develop a stress management in coping stress and maintaining mental health
Discussion
Just like problems, stress is a part of us. We all go through this regardless of our
gender, social status and age, therefore, no one exempts, but its impact depends on
how we deal with it and we can encounter it anywhere, may be at home, at school
and in our community and even within ourselves. Also, we have different coping
styles and different experiences, the important is we deal with it and will not allow
ourselves to be consumed by stress for it gives us negative effects and most likely is
depression to committing suicide and or being ill. In reality, Adolescents are more
prone to stress for they have been experiencing major changes in all aspects in their
lives. Thus, this lesson is very much helpful to you.
A stressful experience is caused by something that occurs either within the individual
or from environment. A past painful experience can linger in our memory and make
us feel depressed. Conflicts with other people cause us difficulty ending up in stress.
Common stressors among students may come in the form of academic demands.
We say that stress is the effect while stressor is the cause.
What is Stress? Exams, deadlines, research paper, school projects demand time
and attention. Family expectations, conflicts, frustration and disappointments
sometimes lead to an overload of emotional tension and stress. When we are under
stress, we feel tense, nervous and sometimes jittery. We could not even concentrate
in our work. Whether we are aware of it or not, so many things around us can create
stress. We may have gotten used to noise everyday and we are not even aware that
it is causing us stress. A stressful condition can happen suddenly like a calamity or a
n accident.
Sources of Stress
A stressor is but anything that induces a stress response. It may be physical, mental,
emotional, social, psychological, economic or even spiritual in nature. Physical
stressors may come in the form of pollution, a congested place or a high level of
noise. It may also include fatigue, pain, shock, trauma and other physiological
conditions in our body. Mental stressors include academic overload, reviewing for
exams, running after deadlines or situations that call for sustained mental effort.
Social, emotional and psychological stressors are somehow interrelated because
they involve relating with other people. As we interact with others, we encounter
conflicts and disappointments leading to feelings of frustration, tension, anxiety and
even anger or depression. Economic stressor may involve one’s socio-economic
condition such as limited financial resources to meet our essential needs in life.
Lastly, stressor affecting our spirituality involves loss of joy and peace or disturbance
of tranquility.
Effects of Stress
The effect of stress cannot be easily felt except in case of trauma where the incident
happens quickly and intensely such as car accident or parental separation. Stressors
that happen almost everyday take time before they finally take a toll on our health.
Sometimes we get used to it that we simply ignore the signs of stress. Think of
ticking bombing or a whistle kettle. Before the bomb explodes and before the kettle
starts, whistling takes some time. The same happens in prolonged stress. Our body
and our mind can no longer take the pressure, thus, causing fatigue that eventually
lowers the immune system. You often get colds and cough when your body is under
stress -- a physiological process that our body undergoes when under prolonged
stress.
Stress Factors
1. Physiological factor - Hans Selye, an Austrian-Canadian endocrinologist,
proposed the General Adaptation Syndrome to explain our body’s response to stress
and is consists of three stages: a) Alarm stage you probably remember that there
was a burst of energy at the onset of a stressor b) Resistance stage followed by a
resistance or attempt to adapt to the stressor and c) Exhaustion stage finally a feeling
of tiredness or fatigue when the energy is already depleted.
2. Psychological factor - this stems from one’s own mental and emotional reactivity
patterns to environmental factors such as persons, places, or events. In other words,
there are individual differences in the way we appraise or interprets a situation. Our
appraisal may or may not elicit a stress response. When we are overwhelmed with
stress, it is not only the body that suffers but our mind and behavior as well. We feel
lonely and depressed. Others become forgetful, irritable and anxious. Some tend to
isolate themselves from others.
Below is a list of common signs and symptoms of stress that we may have
experienced.
Cognitive Symptoms Emotional Symptoms
- memory problems - moodiness or irritability or short temper
- inability to concentrate - agitation (inability to relax)
- poor judgement - feeling overwhelmed
- seeing only the negative - sense of loneliness
- anxious or racing thoughts - depression or general unhappiness
Physical Symptoms Behavioral Symptoms
- headaches - eating more or less
- back pains - sleeping too much or too little
- diarrhea or constipation - isolating oneself
- frequent colds - procrastinating
- rapid heartbeat - forgetting or neglecting obligations
- dizziness
Coping Strategies
How we handle stress depends on several factors such as the person’s
characteristics, the situation and the type of stressor that he or she faces. People
differ in their coping styles. There are people who are easily discouraged and fearful
but there are also people who are confident and sees problems as challenges.