Stress is the body's reaction to pressures from changes in life 
situations with physical, mental, and emotional responses. Stress is a 
normal part of life, an understood reaction to a stressful situation or 
pressure. Not always easy to deal with. A medical health practitioner 
gives some help to the readers of a parish bulletin on how to deal with 
stress.
 
Stress and anxiety are not always easy to 
distinguish. The words are often used interchangeably. Stress may be 
positive but anxiety is always negative and long-lasting. Stress may 
develop into anxiety. Both may be followed not only with headaches and 
the raising of blood pressure but with depression and other 
psychological problems. However, when we take extreme steps to avoid all
 pressures we are not acting wisely for a certain amount of stress in 
life is expected and not harmful and can be helpful. What we can do to 
rid ourselves of the factors that produce the stress is all for the good
 but some stress is not bad.
 
Stress factors make life 
difficult. However, often the secondary responses to the stress are what
 makes the problem troublesome. An example: "Why does this happen to 
me?"  "Why did I act so foolishly?"  and blaming oneself. Trying to 
solve the problem by drinking and other harmful acts are to be avoided. 
 It may be difficult to prevent stress but we can prevent the secondary 
acts that follow upon the stress.
 
Psychological capital 
refers to what we have within ourselves to deal with adversities. It's a
 positive evaluation and perception of our abilities. The ability to 
bounce back after a fall, resilience to recover from failure, motivation facing negative events, optimism that accepts positive events
 internally and persistently. It's necessary to find and cultivate such 
inner psychological resources. When all our efforts at overcoming the 
stress encountered are of no help we need to ask for help.
 
These
 days in the liturgical year we are hearing of the mysteries of our 
faith which in a word deal with the love God has for his creation. God 
is love and this is repeated in the liturgy. Faith is a belief in this 
love and the desire to accept it. However, the noise we have to contend 
with in our world drowns out a great deal of the messages. Below are the
 words of St. Francis de Sales on anxiety which we can understand as a 
type of stress and more serious.
 
Anxiety is the greatest evil
 which can happen to the soul, sin only excepted. Just as internal 
commotions and seditions ruin a commonwealth, and make it incapable of 
resisting its foreign enemies, so if our heart be disturbed and anxious,
 it loses power to retain such graces as it has, as well as strength to 
resist the temptations of the Evil One, who is all the more ready to 
fish (according to an old proverb) in troubled waters.
Anxiety 
arises from an unregulated desire to be delivered from any pressing 
evil, or to obtain some hoped-for good. Nevertheless, nothing tends so 
greatly to enhance the one or retard the other as over-eagerness and 
anxiety. Birds that are captured in nets and snares become inextricably 
entangled therein, because they flutter and struggle so much.
 
Therefore,
 whensoever you urgently desire to be delivered from any evil, or to 
attain some good thing, strive above all else to keep a calm, restful 
spirit,--steady your judgment and will, and then go quietly and easily 
after your object, taking all fitting means to attain thereto. By easily
 I do not mean carelessly, but without eagerness, disquietude or 
anxiety; otherwise, so far from bringing about what you wish, you will 
hinder it, and add more and more to your perplexities  (Introduction To A
 Devout Life by St. Francis de Sales).

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