Living with stress
When I submitted my last assignment and sat my last exam a few weeks ago, I naively assumed that my life would suddenly be free from stress. This is sometimes what we to tell ourselves just to get through: that if we study just a little bit longer, if we write just one more paragraph or read one more chapter, then we鈥檒l be one step closer to that mythical stress-free place.
Of course, this place isn鈥檛 real. Stress doesn鈥檛 exist in a vacuum, so whether we鈥檙e dealing with exams or not, it will always exist in our lives in some form. It might be stress at work, stress in relationships, or maybe most complicated of all, self-induced stress: the kind born from anxieties about the future, what we鈥檒l do, where we鈥檒l go, and who we鈥檒l be.
Perhaps in some slightly perverse way, we need stress. We鈥檙e so used to it that we make room for it, and we don鈥檛 know how to live without it. This isn鈥檛 to say we necessarily聽enjoy聽feeling stressed; I think most of us know how uncomfortable a feeling it can be, but it鈥檚 there, whether we like it or not. I suppose instead of ignoring it or relying on a future that is stress-free (impossible), what we should really do is accept it, face it, and learn how to live in harmony with stress.
Managing stress will always be fundamental to our mental health and wellbeing. This is true for periods of extreme stress (e.g. exam season) and periods of more minimal stress (e.g. running late for an appointment). Part of managing that stress is reminding yourself that everything passes, and that it鈥檚 important to stay focused and present. If we can learn to live with stress in this way鈥攖hat is, with balance and perspective鈥攖hen we won鈥檛 need to lie to ourselves or imagine living in that mythical stress-free place. Life as it is, stress and all, could be enough.