Video Transcript: Stress
Sorry, Mr Smith, I'll get right on it. I got I got delayed. No excuses. Come on. What are you doing here? Johnson, I asked you to get it to me yesterday. I know, I know, but Right away, sir, right away. Oh, I gotta call, call Tim and maybe Jack and Sue. We gotta get going on this. Yes, honey, contractions. Oh, okay, yeah, come on. Come on. Come on. It's okay, sweetie, it's all right. We'll get to the hospital in time. We really will stress, stress and life that boss that wanted it yesterday, your wife, husbands whose water broke and it's time to go, or wives, your water just broke, it's time to go to the hospital, Honey, don't you get in the car, stop staring at me, go stress or maybe that test that you've been stressed out about, and it's gonna happen tomorrow morning, 8am if you're even awake, oh, but adrenaline is your friend, as well as caffeine. Stress plays a big role in our human experience. There's good stress, there's bad stress, there's in between stress that can be good and bad, there's stress that's very detrimental for the body, and stress that really empowers the body, and it even not only empowers the body, but also helps it to get stronger, telling the stress that we we we do, for instance, when we lift weights and and there's that that stress on the muscles, but or the stress of doing that fast run, and good for the heart and good and the stress in the body is then therefore helps it to To get stronger and endurance. Stress has many applications, many meanings. Psychologically, it's important to understand how stress affects not only the body, but also the mind. So we look at stress, we need to understand its definition to properly understand how it works. Stress is the physiological response, or the physiological responses, according to your book, that occur when an organism fails to respond appropriately to emotional or physical threats. Now, of course, in the example of exercise or stress upon the body that you expect to happen. However, the body, of course, let's give it, make it more personal about the body. The body to personalize it, to make an anthropomorphism, if you will, is it's not expecting it, oh, oh. But then there's a reaction to it, stress and with this reaction, this response, physiological responses that occur when an organism fails to respond appropriately to emotional or physical threats, we then have many different reactions that happened after the initial reaction and response to a stressor, a stressor, because, again, like with stimuli and responses, as we looked at with emotion, and also with understanding how the stimulus response was Skinner and Watson and with latent learning and all these things. Stress, of course, is in the middle of all this. But then we get into the area of trauma. We get into the area how stress can be rather bad. And this is often where theorists go, not only the good part of stress, we'll look at that for certain. But when it comes to the bad part of stress, how stress can can bring health issues and and disease and so and other things, and also stress to the mind, this is often where we need to go, because of the well being of a person. A post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, is one of those concerns. Anxiety Disorder is also a relate in relation to this stress, insomnia, nightmares, flashbacks, or where we have
things that flash in our minds that we remember from years ago that was traumatic, and it hits without warning or being nervous or and because of this post traumatic, there is after trauma, post traumatic, post trauma post stressor, post traumatic stress disorder, something is out of order. We then often, if we are victims of this, some people, not all, but some people do turn to drug abuse, alcohol abuse because of their mental state. And we often find that with veterans, those who have been through war, or others who have been through abuse and so on. Well, what causes PTSD or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder? First of all, the definition is there's a medical syndrome that includes symptoms of anxiety, sleeplessness, nightmares and social withdrawal. Of course, what happens as what is extended out of this, of course, is the abuse of other drugs and alcohol or food addiction, other addictive tendencies. But what are the top four reasons men and women suffer PTSD? One study says number one is rape, sexual traumatic experiences. The second is combat exposure, those who have been in the military. Third is childhood neglect, and the fourth one is childhood physical abuse, which is what we cited earlier about abuse and other things like it. That's what we then turn to start understanding the disorder caused by trauma. Well, from PTSD, we then, then come to understand, again, this is all within the context of how you are, then helping people understand where they are at. I've been counseling a gentleman right now who still is experiencing grief and post traumatic stress because of a marriage that went sour over 12 years ago, as well as a previous marriage. In fact, he has been through three marriages, and because of this, there is ample evidence of post traumatic stress. One wife was very manipulative. Another wife was experiencing her own mental break, or came to borderline personality disorder, a disorder going to discuss in another video headed with personality disorders in the realm of psychology, but coming back, we then look at how people adapt, how people then work through trauma, work through stress. There is a an adaptation pattern called general adaptation syndrome. General adaptation syndrome and general adaptation syndrome has three stages, and with each stage, there's initial reaction, the general adaptation syndrome. Of course, looking at how people adapt to different stages, different things are these. The first stage that we look at is the alarm state, the alarm stage, or the alarm reaction. In other words, the initial reaction to stressors such as increased oxygen and blood supply to the necessary areas of the body. So when I'm running, there is an increase in oxygen going into my lungs and into my body, and also then a reaction that might the brain has, where then I begin to feel the dopamine taking in the natural THC as well, which one article recently cited after some study. And then we're not talking about marijuana here, but, but the body's natural juices get the natural chemicals giving off these the increased oxygen, increased dopamine levels, increased the health benefits of running. Hence the alarm. It's an alarm, and of course, the there's the negative aspects. Where the
body is under alarm because something is happening, where, where it's not good. But with the initial stage, the alarm stage something of increased oxygen levels. And, of course, you could argue too well when something traumatic is happening and or that cars coming to you, like with James Lang theory and, and and also Cannen Bard, like car that bears coming at you, and there's that arousal, and there's more oxygen coming into the body. Well, there's the next stage, which is the resistance development stage, or increased functional capacity to adapt to stressors such as increasing motor unit recruitment. So in other words, I am now going to run from the bear. I'm now going to run from the car that's coming at me that's out of fear, or I'm going to defend myself from an attacker. You get the idea. Resistance stage. Resistance development, increased functional capacity to adapt to stressors or stimuli, such as increasing motor unit recruitment. My arms are going to do something, my hands are going to do something. I'm recruiting right now automatically respond, and then from the alarm and resistance, we then get into exhaustion, a prolonged and intolerable stressor produces fatigue and leads to a breakdown in the system or injury, this is the more the negative effect. Let's take a look at this, the these stages in action on a chart. Now, this whole general adaptation syndrome was developed by a researcher by the name of Hans Selye the 1950s and he you looked at this and you look at stress resistance. As you can see at the top, the body's resistance to stress can last only so long before exhaustion sets in. You see that where the stressor occurs at the start of this bell curve and the Phase One alarm reaction, mobilize resources. Here we go phase two, going up in the stratosphere. Here there is a resistance, the coping with the stressor, positive or negative, and then the downward spiral, the downward downward effect, where there's exhaustion, the reserves are depleted. He observed the natural progression of how we then can't handle it anymore, and we need to rest so we can then return to that task, return to the job, return to what it is that will cause stress in a good way or a bad way. Now, of course, as we can tell with that job, you don't like for example, and you're back to the on the assembly line. Are you back there? Back Of course, working the job in in painting, and you don't like it. Of course, I'm speaking for myself, painting is not my gift, but or perhaps you're going back to to fixing something in the car, and it's arduous, there's stress, there's then the reactive part of it, you're then using your resources. And then, okay, after a few hours, I'm tired, I need to rest again. Well, from Hans's observation, and of course, measuring that the responses to also another graphic that helps us see how stress levels interact with our bodies. Stress level with such as these are measured in this way, performance and stress level. You have the one side where there's the lane, the inactive and bored stage ever had, that Saturday afternoon where you're bored, you have nothing to do to the healthy tension, okay, I'm engaged. I've got something going on. My spouse or my my child is engaging me with whether something fun to do or a project to do
around the house, to motivate it. I'm motivated to get to my job because, ooh, I'm I'm really wanting to do a good job for the boss, for the cause, for the organization today, and then it gets us to the focus area where there's optimum stress, and we are focused, we're in the game. And maybe that that it really, literally is the game of baseball, football or or one of these other games, depending on what or cricket, that's your famous game. There your part of the world, and at that peak performance, we hit that peak, but then we then go from that healthy stage, then to the fatigue stage, and that's where they can we see that the overload as opposed to the optimum level. And this researchers have looked at this psychologically, we see that the body is going to get stressed. It's overloading the stress from healthy stress to unhealthy stress, which we observed earlier then, to the exhaustion, and if we don't rest, as it says in the Bible, of course, Genesis 1, the seventh day. What God rested? Rest is a design God has given to us. God knows we can't go 24/7 high level energy being on and on it all the time. 24 hours a day, seven days a week, we need to sleep. We need to take a day off, or an equivalent of a day off, half a day here, another half day here, where we then had that Shabbat, that shalom, that that Sabbath. So we can, in fact, take care of ourselves. Stress can be good and it can be bad if we don't take care as we say. So we see the exhaustion release can lead to panic, anxiety, hence, anxiety disorders, anger as well. Why? Because there's there's worth that's being robbed from us, as well as dignity that's being taken away and then to burn out, break down, and we see disease. Stress has been linked to heart attacks, cancer and other things, which, course, we're not specializing here in this course, or in your this, any of the programs, necessarily, here at CLI but we are looking at the aspects of how the realities of spiritually to begin with, of Course, biblically speaking, spiritually speaking, as well as physically speaking and psychologically speaking, where we then can say, yes, there's a problem. Yes, we understand personality. Yes, we see how you are overdoing it. We balance in our lives the biblical perspective. Of course, everything comes out of Scripture, not only looking at the psychological, sociological, but also the biological and also physiological. All of it is there. So this is what we then measure, how we understand the human experience when it comes to stress. In fact, what researchers have given to us to help us better understand and measure how at what level person is in stress, in duress, is a special scale. Let's take a look these scales of stress involve these. This scale, which you'll find in your your textbook, help us to understand how stress then is interpreted, how stress can then add up, literally, to a danger zone, or to add up to a low risk zone, or a mid risk zone, or a high risk zone, which you can call a danger zone, the number one, it's very interesting, the number one life event that causes the most stress in a person's life is a death of a spouse. Right behind it, which some have argued is worse than death, is a divorce. The mean value, or the value given to this life event, is 100 for the death of a spouse, 73
for for a divorce, and right behind that is marital separation at a 65 No wonder when we look at marriage and the family, and no wonder why we are needed in as clergy, as those involved in church leadership and ministry, God has called us to come alongside and not fix because I can't fix you. You can't fix me. I can't fix the guy who I talked about earlier, who's been through through stress, post traumatic stress, and thank the Lord, by the holy power of the Holy Spirit, give all glory to God he is. Been healing. It's going well. Thank you, Lord. Now of it all the time. You know it's in God's time, but again we prove ourselves effective. Again we prove ourselves worthy, as in says in I and II Timothy. We then look at our character as counselors and church leaders and pastors and so on, as we are there to come alongside to help our brothers and sisters move forward, succeed with God's help and where God does it. But with this, this measurement, this measurement helps us to better understand where people are at so we help them see where things are. Let's go back to that, that scale. One more look at some other examples. See, we look at death of a spouse, divorce, marital separation as the top, top three, top five. You look at a jail term, prison death of a close family member. So death and also limitations, kind of makes you wonder about, in fact, what's not listed here are lockdowns. We look at our current covid 19 situation, as well as the context of those lockdowns where there's isolation, jail terms are very similar to this. Why? Because you're locked up, you are isolated, with the exception of those who are locked up with and then you have marriage itself, which is a good thing, but there's still stress. It's in the top 10, or there's a firing, you're fired at work or this marital reconciliation that takes work stress, retirement. Coming in. Number 10 is retirement and change in health. Number 11, pregnancy, sex difficulties, and on down they go right down to changing eating habits. In the top 40. It's kind of like, it feels like the whole, you know, top 40 billboard, the top 100 billboard, where do you rank, and how things can maybe change and shift and rank. Oh, with the research here, looking at life events and stress, they don't change that often. Death of a spouse is still number one and so on. But then, how do we interpret this? How does this work? When we help a person getting again, listening and then responding, listening and then also coaching through and counseling, we then look at an interpretation. Interpretation is, if you have a score after you cite all things going on here at the moment, maybe there's death of a spouse, or maybe it is that changing eating habits. And I don't have the whole, I didn't show you, the whole scale, it goes right down to, I believe, not having here in front of me, you have, then the whole thing of down to the top, down to the bottom, where the number 20, number 19, so on, number 15, so 40 is not the cutoff, but you get the idea, if you score 11 to 150 You have only a low to moderate chance of becoming ill in the near future. This is very helpful. The second level of interpretation is 150, to 299, you have a moderate to high chance of becoming ill in the near future, depending on what the life events have been happening here
recently, currently, or what you're anticipating happening to 300 to 600 where you have a high or very high risk of becoming ill in the near future, there is stress, there are life events that You can't control, or you can control, but it's inevitable. You have to make that choice. There is a path you have to go down. Well from here, then we look at fight or flight in particular. Now we've talked about fight and flight before when it comes to stimulus and response and as other Freud and also other theorists, but more importantly, we want to look at fight and flight by itself. What does it mean? How is it the dynamic here, as we look at the whole thing of stress this context rather well, it's an emotional and behavioral reaction to stress that increases the readiness for action. Before we looked at fight and flight in the context of the unconscious to the conscious. We looked at in terms of latent learning. We looked at and in all those other. Their physical to non physical responses. Fight and flight was included in that. In those explanations, however, we now look more specifically at stress as a framework as a context of its own, coming back with fight and flight, it is that emotional and behavioral reaction to stress that increases the readiness for action, as we see here in the graphic. Next to the definition, there are four responses, thanks to Grace LaConte, four responses to fear. At the top, you see where we engage, at the bottom, where we disengage. Then horizontally, we see repel, as opposed to attract, and vice versa, between engage and repel. There's that fight I want to fight, and between engage and attract we see, we then face the situation. We face the stress and between attract and disengage. Whew, that's when we freeze. I remember as a kid, I was crossing a busy street on my bike, and just like James and Lang and also the other Bard and Cannen I was crossing, I was about to cross that busy street, and I froze, and a whole bunch of cars were coming at me. I can still remember today, in my mind's eye, I was stressed. I was about 10-11 years old, biking home from gramma's house, living in the city, and I was on that bike I had. I was about to go for it. I'd gotten off the curb into the street, and I for some reason, I was kind of stuck, or my tire didn't go the way it needed to, and I saw the car coming, like the bear and the oncoming car. I froze. I disengaged. I thought, Okay, God, you take it. Fortunately, the car stopped. Couple young guys, they got out. It was the, of course, a teenage guy said we couldn't stop. And, you know, you pretty much scolding me, as opposed to saying, Hey, are you okay with him? It was more anger and frustration, and I just said, thank you very much. Got back on the curb, waited for another opportunity and got across that street. Well, engage, disengage, face the fear, or freeze because of the fear, or disengage to repel at that flight. Run away. In I Corinthians 6, morality, run. Run for the hills. Don't go there. If there's someone is is coming after you, you run right now. They think you're all that and and they are sexually trying to engage. You get out of there now, because it's time to flee, says Paul in Scripture. And of course, the repel to engage you are ready to fight now, not necessarily the put up your fists or
maybe because of self defense, but to fight, it's that posture, it's the tone of voice, it's the eyes and the eye to eye contact and the facial expressions. Remember nonverbal communication very important. This is where it can come in, and where you can even scare off somebody without saying a word, fight, flight, engage, disengage, but then for fight or flight, in the context of stress, we then look at testosterone and estrogen, men and women, and how there's oxytocin, another chemical in the bodies of men and women, regardless of gender, which is in fact, that special chemical in us that helps to bring the feeling of nurture, the feeling of reduction of stress and also a bit of some relaxation, although not. Full, but the initial relaxing of the body and where there's that feeling of, I can, I can then breathe, breathe relief. Well, this goes to the fight or flight versus the tend and befriend you saw in the previous graphic, tend and befriend. Tend and befriend, as opposed to fight or flight. Is responding to stress with nurturant activities designed to protect oneself and one's offspring, where you tend to them or someone who you're close to, or are you connected with, well, if you will, and creating social networks that provide protection from threats, where we befriend and protect and provide which is why, of course, when it comes to the husband comforting The wife with the news level of the loss, or when it comes to that stress that she just can't doesn't know what to do with, and the husband's right there, or vice versa, or the hot the stress the husband's dealing with because of work and and often, that often the case, or and with mom or something Home, or mom because she's working outside the home, whichever, however the roles are, wherever stress may be, there is that nurturing that tend and attend to you. I'm going to befriend, I'm going to help protect, as a pastor, as a church leader, as that volunteer, the peer coach, whatever your role may be in ministry, God has called us biblically speaking, and also then in the whole area of psychology to come alongside of people, not fix them, where God will fix them and use you in the process of Reducing stress and building community, as the Bible mandates.