{"id":3791,"date":"1957-01-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1957-01-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1957-vol-38-no-1-lets-avoid-stress\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:20:31","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:20:31","slug":"january-1957-vol-38-no-1-lets-avoid-stress","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1957-vol-38-no-1-lets-avoid-stress\/","title":{"rendered":"January 1957 &#8211; Vol. 38, No. 1 &#8211; Let&#8217;s Avoid Stress"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">TOO MANY executives look upon life as the                     Norsemen did upon heaven: the time was to be passed in daily                     battles, with magical healing of wounds.<\/p>\n<p> Everyone in out western civilization has to meet demands                     on his nervous energy that were not made in former years.<\/p>\n<p>The farmer, looked upon as living the most tranquil of lives,                     has economic, social and political problems of which his grandfather                     was ignorant. The doctor and the lawyer have clients pressing                     at their office doors, and are conscious that others need                     them elsewhere. Teachers have the task of maintaining discipline                     in a brood more restless than ever before. Stenographers,                     typing so many words a minute; operators of calculating and                     accounting machines, with an unending flow of papers to process;                     factory hands engaged in countless operations; bank tellers                     meeting the wants of customers with flawless accuracy: everyone                     is working under conditions that strain the physical, mental                     and emotional structure built during ages of evolution.<\/p>\n<p>Nor is out immediate environment ail that counts. From radio                     reports that accompany breakfast to the late night news we                     are under the pressure of baffling world difficulties. We                     are exposed to tension, expecting some new crisis.<\/p>\n<p>We need to take what precautions we can if we expect to                     keep mentally and physically fit. Our failure to do so will                     show itself with all its unfortunate consequences in the doctor&#8217;s                     office or a hospital bed.<\/p>\n<p>Keeping fit is not simply a matter of taking physical exercise,                     though that is important. It concerns both mind and body.                     It requires that we case the stress of living.<\/p>\n<h3>What is stress?<\/h3>\n<p>Dr. Hans Selye, Director of the Institute of Experimental                     Medicine and Surgery at the University of Montreal, has put                     forward a concept of stress that has been called &#8220;the greates                     single contribution to the realm of biology and medicine since                     Pasteur.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>He suggests that every disease, every accident and every                     emotional upset produces stress in the victim. The body becomes                     alarmed by the stress and tries to defend itself. The endocrine                     glands pour out hormones, the heart beats faster, the liver                     increases its supply of glycogen, the blood pressure rises,                     and the activity of many internal organs is suspended so that                     their energy may be diverted to the external muscles. We,                     like our primitive ancestors, become tensed for fight or flight.<\/p>\n<p>The physical wear-and-tear is of the same order                     in an executive when his accountant gives him a month-end                     statement in red figures as when his ages-ago forefather                     caught sight of a prowling wild-beast on the horizon.<\/p>\n<p>When stress continues too long, or is too frequently repeated,                     or is too great, a break-down may occur in our defence                     system. Said Dr. Selye when explaining his ideas to the Canadian                     Club in Montreal three years ago: &#8220;Inadequate counter-measures                     in the face of serious attacks may be the cause of disease                     or death, but excessive defence reactions may likewise be                     harmful if they are quite out of proportion to a negligible                     threat.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The medical profession and those who are doing research                     in the subject cannot look upon stress as a simple concept.                     It is, indeed, complex to the point of being beyond adequate                     treatment in a short essay. In his book <em>The Stress of                     Life <\/em>published toward the end of 1956 (McGraw-Hill                     Book Company Inc.) Dr. Selye deals with the idea in five divisions:                     The Discovery of Stress; The Dissection of Stress; The Diseases                     of Adaptation; Sketch for a Unified Theory; and Implications                     and Applications. His closing chapters are or: &#8220;Philosophic                     Implications&#8221; and &#8220;The Road Ahead&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Every year sees thousands of research papers prepared by                     endocrinologists who are in all parts of the world, following                     up Dr. Selye&#8217;s concept. The British Medical Journal remarked                     that no other theory in living memory has possessed to such                     an extent the power to stimulate research. Dr. Selye&#8217;s work                     won for the University of Montreal the first grant ever made                     to a Canadian university by the United States Government,                     and it is supported by grants from foundations, individuals,                     corporations and the Canadian government.<\/p>\n<h3>Some causes of stress<\/h3>\n<p>Improper mental states can cause trouble in out physical                     make-up. A publication of the Metropolitan Life Insurance                     Company says that fifty per cent of all people seeking medical                     attention are suffering from ailments brought about or made                     worse by such emotional factors as prolonged worry, anxiety,                     or fear. In fact, out of a thousand diseases described in                     a textbook of medicine, it is said that emotionally induced                     illness is as common as all the other 999 put together.<\/p>\n<p>How we think has a definite effect on how we feel. We translate                     our woes from the language of the mind into the language of                     the body.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever we allow to affect our minds in the way of pain                     or pleasure, hope or fear, extends its influence to out hearts.                     Financial worries, a monotonous job, strain at the office,                     emotional upsets in the home: these, and many more, may show                     themselves physically as high blood pressure, digestive ailments                     such as peptic ulcer and colitis, headache, skin disorders                     and some allergies.<\/p>\n<p>But you cannot go into a drug store and buy a bottle of                     psychosomatic medicine.<\/p>\n<p>The first thing to do when you feel unwell is to have your                     doctor give you a thorough check-up. He will learn from                     his tests and his questions whether there is something organically                     wrong, and how much of your illness is derived from emotional                     sources. Finding the cause is the first step on the way to                     cure.<\/p>\n<p>All emotions are not bad. Some are guides to protective                     action. Pleasurable emotion is conducive to health. An invigorating                     emotion unlocks new stores of energy and drives away fatigue,                     it provides the zest of pursuit, the joy of striving, intense                     interest in work, and renewed enthusiasm. As someone said,                     the Irish cheer may signify nothing in particular, but it                     is a mighly relief for the excited Celt.<\/p>\n<h3>Signs of stress<\/h3>\n<p>Modern invention and labour saving machinery have relieved                     us of much physical drudgery, but there are signs that they                     have increased our nervous strain.<\/p>\n<p>Aided by our gadgets, we live at high speed. &#8220;We are always&#8221;,                     said Dr. J. B. Kirkpatrick, Director of the School of Physical                     Education at McGill University in an address a few years ago,                     &#8220;meeting deadlines, catching trains, grabbing a bite to eat.                     Our toes are tramped on and our tempers are frayed as we fight                     to get on board a street-car. We have lost some of the                     amenities of living in this mad scramble.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These exasperations of the day get us keyed up. The tension                     accompanies us home and keeps us awake, unless we have worked                     out for ourselves an effective way of releasing it.<\/p>\n<p>One evil result of our hasty living is that we so often                     fail to solve our problems adequately. Much of the time we                     are tangled up in the woolly words with which we clothe our                     thoughts rather than with facts themselves. The result is                     a state of anxiety.<\/p>\n<p>It is wholesome to have fear when it is an alarm bell, a                     warning of impending danger, but some of us go around in a                     perpetual aura of anxiety, as if we still thought the world                     to be fiat and that we might fall over its edge. This pervasive                     anxiety prevents us from relaxing, keeps us tense. The protective                     patterns set in motion by our bodies are overworked.<\/p>\n<h3>Moments of doubt<\/h3>\n<p>The best executives have moments of doubt and weariness,                     but rise from their depression by recurring to principles                     they have learned. One of life&#8217;s most health-going virtues                     is to be able to meet disappointment and frustration well.<\/p>\n<p>An angry outburst is a poor response to disappointment,                     because it heals nothing, replaces nothing of what has been                     lost, and takes its toll of the body. An angry man is not                     one who is doing something, but one who is suffering something                     to be done to him. He is allowing his dignity to be lowered,                     and that is bad enough, but he is also interfering with his                     digestion, disrupting his circulation, and putting undue strain                     on his body&#8217;s defensive organism.<\/p>\n<p>Some people, instead of being disappointed after an event,                     forestall events. They wrench them of out their place in the                     future, and worry about them today. Dean Inge remarked that                     worry is interest paid on trouble before it falls due.<\/p>\n<p>What is worry? It is with us when, as Mrs. Elizabeth Browning                     said so well in one of her poems, &#8220;we walk upon the shadow                     of hills across a level thrown, and pant like climbers.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In extreme cases worry turns into what is called &#8220;doubting                     folly&#8221;, in which a person doubts whether he can trust his                     own senses. He is forever returning to see if he has locked                     his safe, expressed himself properly in a letter, told his                     secretary about an appointment, and the like.<\/p>\n<p>There are many illustrative cases in <em>Psychomatic Medicine<\/em>,                     a textbook by Weiss and English (W.B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia).                     Chronic worry can bring on dyspepsia, ulcers, common colds,                     arthritis, asthma, and a host of other diseases.<\/p>\n<p>Most common, perhaps, is fatigue of one sort or another.                     There is nothing dramatic about fatigue. It creeps upon us,                     seeping through our bodies like poison. We consult a competent                     physician, who tells us we have no sign of tuberculosis, heart                     trouble, or any other demonstrable disease. There is nothing                     wrong with our body machinery, but we still feel tired. We                     get our wires crossed: the wrong messages come through to                     the brain.<\/p>\n<p>Boredom sets up stresses that give us feelings of fatigue.                     Long hours at a desk, repeated day after day, result in muscular                     tension that can be more physically fatiguing than heavy manual                     labour. The small boy who has to sit through a ponderous sermon                     gets the wriggles because of static tenseness. Sherlock Holmes                     said to Dr. Watson: &#8220;I never remember feeling tired by work,                     though idleness exhausts me completely.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Fatigue may be brought on by too much conversation. Energy                     is wasted in unnecessary speech. Some people, like Voltaire,                     literally live on talk but most of us would gain something                     both physically and mentally by retreating into silence at                     periods during every day.<\/p>\n<h3>What to do about it<\/h3>\n<p>What can one do if one feels under stress, fatigued, run                     down? The first thing is to have an examination by a physician.                     Today&#8217;s physicians do not look only for organic disease, but                     seek the cause of unfitness in social and personal factors.<\/p>\n<p>There is danger in self-medication. At a meeting of                     the American Medical Association scientific section in November,                     members were told of the dangers revealed by research into                     the unscientific use of tranquillizing drugs. People do not                     react in the same way to pills that relieve stress. Some become                     depressed or develop psychoneurotic difficulties, while others                     feel so free of pain that they fail to take necessary medical                     measures, or are so energized that they neglect to take proper                     rest.<\/p>\n<p>It goes without saying that good work conditions contribute                     to physical and mental well-being. In one office, efficiency                     was increased, errors were reduced, and absenteeism was lowered                     by decreasing the noise level from 75 to 50 decibels. Comfort,                     ability and health are added to by adequate ventilation assuring                     a sufficient supply of oxygen. Proper lighting contributes                     its share.<\/p>\n<p>Some people may find it necessary to change employment,                     but many more can improve their health just by changing position.                     Stress in one area may be relieved by shifting part of the                     load to another, as when the man who is so unfortunate as                     to have to carry home a heavily laden brief case shifts it                     from hand to hand. To walk around one&#8217;s office or home at                     periods is a break that relieves physical and mental stress.                     There is stress-release value in the old rocking chair.<\/p>\n<p>We need not accept hurry and tension as unavoidable, allowing                     ourselves to be pressed down by the sheer weight of things                     to be done. Dr. William Osier, distinguished and beloved tutor                     of hundreds of medical students, the first man to win an international                     reputation for Canadian medicine, wrote: &#8220;the ordinary high-pressure                     business or professional man suffering from angina pectoris                     may find relief, or even cure, in the simple process of slowing                     the engines.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Too many men and women exceed what is necessary. They are                     not content to be eminent, but compromise their victories                     by extra effort. Success incites them to greater activity                     and more urgent endeavour. The only solution they know for                     their mounting need of self-expression is by way of working                     harder. They become tense and anxiety-ridden. They burn                     themselves out.<\/p>\n<p>That picture is all too common. Yet the very men who are                     putting so great strain on their physical capacities know                     very well that it is in moments of relaxed and easy work that                     they are more efficient: that their most rewarding successes                     are scored when, having determined upon a course of action,                     they unclamp their intellectual and physical machinery and                     let it run free.<\/p>\n<h3>Relaxing little tensions<\/h3>\n<p>Our ability to relax is one of the surest symptoms of our                     mental health. After we have been keyed up to accomplish a                     task, we need to slacken off instead of whipping ourselves                     into new exertion. If we relax away the little tensions as                     they occur we stand a very good chance of preventing the accumulation                     of big tensions.<\/p>\n<p>These small relaxations are simple. When listening to an                     uninteresting speaker, slacken your muscles; when commuting                     in train or street-car, close your eyes; when waiting                     for a caller to be ushered in, look out the window.<\/p>\n<p>But don&#8217;t make the resolve to become strenuously relaxed,                     cost what it will, for the rest of your lire. When he was                     introducing <em>The Stress of Life <\/em>to the public in November,                     Dr. Selye warned that a vacation in Florida may not be the                     right thing for a busy executive. &#8220;Activity may be his man&#8217;s                     way of relieving pressure. He may build up more internal pressure                     idling than if he were at work.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Every person must find out what his needs are in the way                     of relaxation just as everyone needs to estimate his needs                     in the way of sleep. The sleep requirement may range from                     an hour or two a day to twelve hours. We should leave our                     troubles at the bedroom door, refrain from looking at our                     bank books late at night, abstain from talking politics after                     9 p.m., and compose anger and tantrums before retiring. We                     may even, through sleep, escape for a while from our own company,                     and that escape is not a bad thing.<\/p>\n<p>In between work and sleep come hobbies. Some people profess                     to regard &#8220;hobby&#8221; as a word to laugh at, but when it means                     a sincere interest in something outside our jobs it bas a                     physical and mental value that is not at all ridiculous.<\/p>\n<p>Wise use of our leisure holds the germ of survival in our                     complicated civilization. Play, fun and laughter are agents                     of health. They promote digestion, soothe our nerves, stimulate                     circulation, give power to the heart, and ward off the feeling                     of old age. Out leisure is a time to stretch our limbs and                     let go out tensions, to laugh and be cheerful.<\/p>\n<p>William James gave a lecture entitled &#8220;The Gospel of Relaxation.&#8221;                     It was in his series of talks to teachers on psychology in                     1915. Here is his advice: &#8220;the sovereign voluntary path to                     cheerfulness, if our spontaneous cheerfulness be lost, is                     to sit up cheerfully, to look round cheerfully, and to act                     and speak as if cheerfulness were already there.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The executive&#8217;s job<\/h3>\n<p>The stresses associated with the management of a business,                     a class-room or a home can have a definite effect upon                     health. Leadership bas its price: but its toll can be cut                     down.<\/p>\n<p>What is the inescapable characteristic of the executive&#8217;s                     role? Its tyrannical demands in terms of time and continuous                     mental and physical pressure. The top man can never escape                     responsibility. Weighty decisions expose him to frequent emotional                     strains. Advisory and administrative duties build tension.                     The man who, knowing these things, does nothing more about                     them than gnaw his nails is a major problem in his organization,                     a grade-A candidate for executive neurosis.<\/p>\n<p>It is an attribute, not a fault, that the executive has                     so many things to think about. His alert mind finds ten things                     to be concerned about while the dullard worker can think of                     only one.<\/p>\n<p>Such a man should not be content with keeping his belt in                     the same notch where it was five years ago. It is, of course,                     important to have firm abdominal muscles instead of flabby.                     To be a good executive you must first be a good animal.<\/p>\n<p>But something more is needed if a man is to keep his equanimity                     in a world full of stress. It is when an executive bas to                     lead his company or department under unusual strain that his                     qualities are actually tested. That demands the inner calm                     that follows a frank facing of difficulty and fear and disappointment                     and even prospect of disaster.<\/p>\n<p>Let&#8217;s ease the pressure on ourselves by admitting the impossibility                     of being a success by every standard, of being always right,                     of never suffering a set-back. Many of our tensions stem                     from trying to act the role of supermen.<\/p>\n<p>Well-balanced people of brilliant ability think little                     of admitting their failures. Such people conserve their power.                     They surfer injury every once in a while, but they recuperate                     from the wounds inflicted by &#8220;the slings and arrows of outrageous                     fortune&#8221; because they have a reserve of strength not used.<\/p>\n<p>The best balanced people are not obsessively devoted to                     their jobs, but have a natural rhythm in work and rest, an                     answer in part at least to the stress of living, equalizing                     wear and tear on their bodies.<\/p>\n<h3>What to aim at<\/h3>\n<p>The end result of balanced living should be peace of mind,                     though it will be made up of different ingredients in different                     people. Peace of mind is within reach, but it requires thought                     and action. It is the one sure and abiding answer to the evil                     of stress and tension.<\/p>\n<p>In the specialization required of most people today we have                     forgotten in part how to live. We are not well-rounded                     people with broad appreciation of life. Joy in sunlight, birds                     and flowers is left chiefly to the poets; delight in line                     and curve is left to the artist; drama and make-believe                     belong to the stage. But enjoyment of ail these is the right                     and privilege of the whole human race, contributing to both                     mental and physical vigour.<\/p>\n<p>Each of us has a ration of one body with one set of organs                     to last him for life. This body, if it is to fill out its                     span without unnecessary wear and break-down, must be                     treated with simple mechanical understanding. It is not a                     feeble, perishable weakling. It can be pushed far, very far,                     and find resources to recover. But why place strain upon it                     needlessly? We cannot avoid all the impacts of adversity,                     but if we permit the stress of them to continue without taking                     rational steps to relieve it, we surfer uncalled for damage.<\/p>\n<p>The fit man can depend upon his body and mind to remain                     fresh through crowded days of work, through patience-trying                     conferences and through critical periods. But this fitness                     can only be maintained by mental alertness that detects stress                     and offsets it; that recognizes tension for a debilitating                     state, and releases it; that sees worry as a fruitless expenditure                     of energy, and conserves power by taking wise action about                     problems.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps, too, we should cease admiring jerk and snap and                     speed for their own sakes. It is what we accomplish that counts,                     not the fireworks of exhibitionism.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[37],"class_list":["post-3791","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-37"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>January 1957 - Vol. 38, No. 1 - Let&#039;s Avoid Stress - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/january-1957-vol-38-no-1-lets-avoid-stress\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"January 1957 - Vol. 38, No. 1 - Let&#039;s Avoid Stress - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"TOO MANY executives look upon life as the Norsemen did upon heaven: the time was to be passed in daily battles, with magical healing of wounds. 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Everyone in out western civilization has to meet demands on his nervous energy that were not made in former years. 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