08 Mar 2008 12:28:06 | Roy Thomsitt
Modern stress is habitual, and is something that the vast
majority of Americans and Britons succumb to in their material
driven lives. Whether mildly or overwhelmingly, stress will cast
its powers across most of us at some stage in our lives, often
increasingly as we get sucked into a pattern of working and
living that gradually strips us of our individuality.
Stress reduction has therefore become a "necessary" antidote
industry. We may console ourselves by saying that our lives are
fast paced; that this is what modern living is all about and we
must pursue it frenetically; that people in those poor countries
which have not adopted the Anglo-American way are just backward
and will catch on eventually. But that is not just a
consolation; it is both an illusion and a denial, and helps
stress reduction in no way at all.
It is an illusion first of all that the average consumer has a
fast paced life. A commuter may sit in a train twice a day, to
and from their place of work; that train may move at a fast
pace, but the commuter does not. They just sit there, their
minds going over the same themes as always; last night's tv,
tonight's tv, wishing they could have had another hour's sleep
or wishing they were already home and tucked up for the night's
slumber, or the day's boredom at work behind them or before
them. Drowned in tedium and repetition, the vacuum left in their
daily lives is gradually filled with stress, as if it had a
supporting role in their existence.
A tiring and repetitious daily routine can be a breeding ground
for discontent and unhappiness, the real reasons for modern
stress. If that routine is full of creativity, and control over
one's own actions, then it may not be a source of stress at all,
or discontent. If, however, the individual is suppressed, then
it can be a very different story. Most people are employees,
whose lives are dictated by those above them and with no or
little scope to think and do for themselves. They are
particularly vulnerable to modern stress.
Caught up in the modern way of life, it is very easy to lose
connection with yourself as an individual, for your
individuality can be suppressed from all sides. I am sure I am
not alone in having experienced that. I had lived the zombie
like existence for over 20 years, and despite the fact that I
had some very stimulating jobs, I had, almost unknowingly, lost
track of life as it should be. Then in 1995, I packed it all in
and started my own business, and started the long haul to win
back my individuality. But it was 1998 before I started to fully
appreciate again what having control over your own life really
meant. The 20 plus years were a blur; where had I been all that
time?
One of the problems with modern stress is that it becomes a
focus, along side the focus on purely material things such as
the "need" to have a new car, a new house, the best clothes, the
best tv and so on. Modern stress is a consumer product in
itself, part of the material razzmatazz, that keeps the consumer
in his or her place: a consumer, not a doer or a thinker;
someone who plays by the rules and spends and borrows and spends
and borrows to relieve themselves of the tedium and chase the
shadow of achievement. Not real achievement; just its shadow.
That is not to say, though, that there is no relief from stress
in the Anglo-American world. Those who are able to escape back
to the real world now and again, and who can exercise sufficient
self control regularly enough, will find that stress relatively
easy to keep under control.
So how do we get to this other world, where we can manage our
stress? There are portals all around you. Anything that will
take your mind away from the self focus is a portal into this
other world. Spending time with your children, and seeing life
through their eyes for a while every day; the joy of discovery
and play; but not as a drain upon your resources, and not as a
part of your tedium. Spending time appreciating the wonders
around you, the joys of nature, the little miracles that are
within a short distance of where you stand or sit. Spending time
travelling, helping others, seeing the true misery of people who
are under the real stress caused by extreme poverty and disease,
not the packaged consumer stress that we tend to think of.
This "other world" is a world of perspective. It is a world you
used to know, but have somehow lost through lack of time. Yet,
there was never any lack of time; that was an illusion too. This
"other world" is also a world where you make the choices,
consciously, not have them dictated to you by employers or
weariness. A few simple choices each day can distract you enough
to bring some relief to consumer induced stress. Fill the vacuum
with your choices, and stress will not find such an easy way in.
About Author :
This stress reduction article was written by Roy Thomsitt, owner
and part author of http://www.routes-to-self-improvement.com/ManagingStress.htm