Chapter 3 Meeting Life Challenges (AutoRecovered)
Chapter 3 Meeting Life Challenges (AutoRecovered)
Chapter 3 Meeting Life Challenges (AutoRecovered)
CHAPTER 3
MEETING LIFE CHALLENGES
1. Concept of Stress
2. Cognitive theory of Stress
3. Types of Stress
4. Sources of Stress
5. Effects of Stress on Psychological Functioning and Health
6. Stress and Health
7. General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
8. Stress and Immune System
9. Stress and Lifestyle
10. Coping with Stress
11. Stress Management Techniques
12. Promoting Positive Health and Well-Being
Concept of Stress
1. Pattern of responses an organism makes to a stimulus event which disturbs the equilibrium state of
an individual and hinders the person’s ability to cope
2. Stress is further of two types:
o Eustress is good for the individual and keeps a person motivated. Eustress is instrumental in
attaining peak performance in an important task.
o Distress is not good for the individual as this level of stress definitely hinders the person’s
ability to cope and distress exhausts an individual emotionally, mentally and physically.
o Primary and Secondary Appraisals are subjective and depend on the past experience of the
individual and also whether they are controllable or not.
Appraisal:
Reaction to Stress Assessment or
Evaluation
Changes in Stress
Signs and Symptoms of Stress
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Types of Stress
1. Physical and Environmental Stress
o Physical stress happens when we feel physically exhausted and strained due to overreaction,
lack of sound sleep and a nutritious diet.
o Environmental stress includes noise and air pollution, and dirty surroundings which make us
feel stressed.
2. Psychological Stress
o Stress generated by us from our minds is called psychological stress and it is subjective in
nature
o Various sources of psychological stress are Frustration, Conflicts, Internal Pressure,
Social Pressure.
3. Social Stress
o It results from our interpersonal relationships and interactions with other people.
o For example, Break up with a friend, death of a close family member
o Social stress is also subjective in nature.
Sources of Stress
1. Life Events
o Small or big changes happen in life and some of them are pre-planned, hence easy to cope up
with, like changing schools.
o Some big changes happen in life as well which are unpredictable in nature and are not easy to
deal with. For the death of a close family member.
2. Traumatic Events
o They leave a deep imprint on the mind of the victims and affect them psychologically and
emotionally and tragic events are of non-recurring nature.
o For example, Rape, Terrorist Attack.
3. Hassles
o Day to day stressful situations like noisy surroundings, stressful jobs, add up to our stress
level.
o Social support in such case is important as it helps an individual coping with hassles.
2. Physiological Effects
o Certain hormones like cortisol and adrenaline are produced in our body in stressful situations
and that can be effective in short-run but in long run, it does hamper our well-being
o Examples of Physiological Effects include an increase in heart rate, an increase in blood
pressure etc.
3. Cognitive Effects
o Too much stress leads to mental overload and hinders our cognitive abilities like memory,
decision-making, concentration etc.
Physiological systems involved in the alarm reaction stage and resistance stage become ineffective and the
chance of high blood pressure increases.
1. Lifestyle is defined as the overall pattern of a person’s day to day decision making and the way
he/she lives a life that determines their health and quality of life.
2. There is a direct correlation between high levels of stress and an unhealthy lifestyle.
3. People who are highly stressed have poor nutritional habits, disturbed sleep patterns and no fitness
regime to look after their health and well-being.
4. A proper and healthy lifestyle has the following prerequisites-
o Positive thinking
o Nutritious Diet
o Exercise
o Social support
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