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by Dane Wysocki, M.S., as told to Valerie Nanninga Engeltjes, M.A.
Your perspective determines how to cope with stress. Perspective guides
and shapes us. One of the best ways to cope with stress is to develop
what for many is a different perspective on stress and on life itself.
Here's an example. I travel around the country talking to groups about
how to cope with stress. Regardless of where I go, when I meet people
for the first time, they mistake me for a K-Mart assistant store manager.
I'm a psychologist by training, so I used to get a little upset about
that. Then I realized life is much too short to get upset about something
so trivial. Now, if I'm in a K-Mart and someone comes up to me and asks
me where the hardware section is, I show them.
I believe your perspective can guide you correctly in times of stress
and worry. It helps remind us that those experiences in our lives happen
for a reason--to teach us, inspire us, or maybe to remind us of what is
simple and joyful in life. Life is more fun if we're along for the ride
instead of getting run over by it. Your perspective allows you to do that.
A Defining Moment of Perspective
When my wife, Karin, and I were expecting our first child, we had
an ultrasound exam. The technician described the anatomical parts of the
child and asked if we wanted to find out the sex. Karin and I open our
Christmas presents early, so, of course, we wanted to know the child's
gender. The technician focused on the genitalia and said, "Do you
see how that looks like a hamburger? We think that means it's going to
be a baby girl."
Naturally, I said, "What's a boy, a hot dog?" She said, "No,
a turtle."
So for 4-1/2 months, we planned and put all our emotional energy to prepare
for this wonderful event--the birth of our baby girl.
Two days before Karin went into labor, we had another ultrasound done
with a new technician. I told her the hamburger/hot dog story, and as
I described it, she noticed that something was amiss. She asked if we
wanted to confirm the sex. Karin said yes and I said no, so I left the
room. Karin found out that our hamburger had miraculously evolved into
a turtle. She told everyone--friends, relatives, neighbors. Everyone knew
except me.
The night of the birth, the labor room was so exciting, frantic, and
chaotic. All night long, I was saying, "Halley's a beautiful name,
Honey. I think Megan could be a good name, too."
The baby was born. The doctor delivered it and said, "Congratulations,
you have a beautifu baby boy."
"Honey, it's a turtle!" I cried, still overcome.
I never could have described the term "tears of joy" until
that moment. I look back at that as a defining moment of perspective for
me. Think of it. How many times do you put all of your energy and emotional
resources into planning and preparing for a certain event and at the actual
moment of truth what ends up happening is completely different from what
you expected, yet it's still miraculous and wonderful?
How great it would be to walk through life with that perspective.
We don't always. We can't--because we're adults. As adults, we've learned
that life is complicated and needs to be taken seriously.
Teaching Our Children, But Can We Also Learn from Them?
As parents, it's our job to role model behavior for our children,
to bring them up, to show them the way. But how often do we allow our
children to be role models for us? We certainly teach our children in
the ways or the world, but we also can learn from them, particularly on
how they view life.
One summer, I was in the backyard with my three-year-old turtle, Cameron.
He was playing baseball with himself. He threw the ball up, took a swing
with the bat, and missed. He had no reaction, and I was a little curious
about what he was going to do. He tossed the ball up a second time, swung
the bat, and missed again. No fit, no temper tantrum. He picked the ball
up a third time, took another swing, and missed again.
By this time, I was quite proud because he still didn't get angry. I
walked over, put my arm around him, and said, "Cameron, that's OK,
buddy. A lot of times we're just not able to hit that baseball."
He looked up at me and said, "No, Dad, I was the pitcher."
Perspective. Children have this ability to look at life in the simplest
of ways. Children's job is to play. And play means laughter. Research
shows that children laugh 300 times in a day. When's the last time we
laughed 300 times in a day? When was the last time you laughed so hard
you blew milk out of your nose? Has it been a while?
I love the quote: "An optimist is someone who laughs to forget,
but a pessimist is someone who forgets to laugh." How true that is
when we talk about the pressures of life that face us every day.
Appreciating Relationships
One question I ask people who are dealing with pressures and changes
is: "What is it that gets you to do whatever it is you do every day?"
Some say it's the paycheck. Other say they love the work. Most people,
however, when asked that question will say, "It's the people"--the
people with whom you connect every day. These are the people you cannot
only laugh with, but the people you can cry with, as well. The people
you seek out when you really need support.
These connections allow us to never have to face difficult circumstances
alone and what allow us to survive the stresses of everyday life.
How Men and Women Handle Stress
Who deals with stress better, men or women?
Men tell me women do because they talk with other women. Women think
men do because they say men are selfish.
Stress used to be clearly the domain of men in terms of heart attacks,
migraines, ulcers, and strokes--all those stress-related physical symptoms.
Now women are experiencing those physiological effects of stress in equal
percentages as men.
Actually, neither one deals with it better, but we can learn from each
other. Men can learn from women to relate and to talk to one another,
to support one another, and to seek out that support when it's needed.
My wife can call up another woman and say, "Let's go outside and
talk" for no reason. And they do it. For hours.
Can you imagine a man calling another man and saying, "Hey, Jim,
let's go outside and talk." The response would be: "I don't
know. Will we be competing in some way?" Yes, men can learn a great
deal about how to relate to one another.
What can women learn from men? Well, when a man gets sick, he becomes
a whiner and can't even get up to get the remote for the TV. We're completely
helpless. But that's because men have learned to take care of themselves
first and then take care of others. The caveman knew if he didn't take
care of himself, not only would he perish, but so would his family. When
those oxygen masks fall from the airplane, the flight attendant tells
you to put it over your mouth first, then help those around you. How many
women set aside times for themselves to do something solely for themselves
and to take care of themselves first? If they don't, they need to.
Learning from Others
There are people in our lives who show us examples how to or not to
cope. My father doesn't necessarily cope with the changes of technology
well but always maintains his sense of humor. He still believes the fax
machine is a miracle. He thinks the piece of paper you put in the fax
machine is the actual piece of paper the other person gets. He's convinced
there are tubes like at the bank that transport the piece of paper all
over the world.
I saw him faxing something one day and said, "Dad, that's not a
stamp you're putting on, is it?" He denied it as he palmed the stamp.
Then I said, "Does the person you're faxing that to have a fax machine?'
He said, "No, but I heard it's a lot quicker to send that way."
How do you argue with that kind of logic?
My dad's goal in life was to someday get an automatic ice maker because
my older sister and I would take out the ice cube tray, pop out all but
that last ice cube, and stick the tray back in with one cube in it so
we never had to refill it with water.
My dad never had enough ice. Constant disappointment every day--until
my mother bought him an automatic ice maker. He was thrilled.
Now my dad doesn't delve into the inner workings of these technological
devices, so he doesn't really know how the ice makes itself. At some point,
he started to think, "This thing makes a lot of ice. I've got to
start drinking more to keep up with the ice production." Then he
started worrying that he would not be able to keep up, so he started to
empty the ice bucket every couple of hours.
"Logic" kicked in, and he thought, "How am I going to
sleep?" His solution was to set the alarm for 3:00 a.m., go downstairs,
and empty the ice bucket, knowing if he didn't he'd wake up with the house
floating down the street. At some point, he decided he was wasting perfectly
good ice. His solution was to take the ice, put it in bags, and put the
bags in the freezer in the garage.
I came home from college and was surprised at how tired Dad looked. I
asked how he was doing, and he said, "Dane, you have to come see
this." He showed me the freezer in the garage with dozens of bags
of ice in it. At this point, I was concerned about his mental health.
He said, "That ice maker is nothing but a nightmare. I'd rather
go back to the trays." We walked into the kitchen, and I showed my
dad the bar that stops the ice from continually making itself. He mumbled
something about, "You'd think for that kind of money, the Sears guy
would tell you about this stupid bar."
Then he started to get it. He realized how stressful and dumb this had
been, and he started to laugh.
The best gift my father has ever taught me is that ability to laugh at
yourself when you've done something that incredibly dumb. As he walked
away from this event that had tortured him for the last week and a half,
he said, smiling, "When did life get so complicated?"
The answer to that was the day we became adults.
When was the day we became adults? It was the day we walked around the
mud puddle instead of walking through the mud puddle. On that day, something
happened where we started thinking differently and worrying.
Return to Simplicity
When we lose our sights on perspective, when life becomes overwhelming,
we can always look back to how children look at the world. I was driving
with a 1O-year-old neighbor when a flock of geese flew overhead. He said,
"Dane, do you know why one side is longer than the other?" I
thought, "I've seen thousands of flocks of geese, and I always wondered
why that was. Is it the direction they're going, maybe the leader was
on that side." So I asked, "Why is one side longer than the
other side?" He said, "More geese on that side."
Life is pretty simple. We can make it that way in spite of ourselves.
Stress Factors
Many different factors affect your ability to cope with stress.
- Your personality. Are you a perfectionist versus being flexible and
adaptable?
- Your environment. Is your office cluttered or organized?
- Your mental abilities. Can you concentrate or are you easily distracted?
- Your emotions. Are you calm and rational or do you feel guilt, anger,
or resentment?
- Your spiritual state. Do you rely on God and religion to help you
through stressful times or does your spiritual journey cause you stress?
All of these factors determine not only your perspective, but also how
you may tend to respond and behave in times of stress.
Options for Dealing with Stress
How do you choose to deal with stress? One option is the "fight
or flight response" we've all heard. But we can't physically fight
today, so we fight differently. We become rebellious, hostile, sarcastic,
and insulting. We get some of that internal aggression out.
We can flee. But fleeing is dangerous, so we deny. We suppress. We use
fantasy or regression. We can freeze--decide to do nothing. We can procrastinate
and just wait until it's over.
So, how do we cope? Coping comes largely by your perspective, by your
ability to not do it alone, to connect with those around you. Maintain
the idea that life is simple. Do what's simple. When your body is tired,
exercise your mind. When your mind is tired, exercise your body. Simplify
your life and say "no" to too many commitments.
And once again, remember the option to take what you do seriously while
taking yourself lightly. The ability to maintain perspective, to laugh
at yourself, and take pleasures in the wonders around you every day is
what will allow you to survive any stress you encounter.
And if I ever forget that life can be fun and exciting and take pleasure
in even the simplest joys, I remember the vision of my three-year-old
son climbing naked out of the tub, going to his room, putting on a tool
belt, cowboy boots, and hard hat, jumping up and down on his bed singing,
"I'm a little teapot, short and stout." And I think to myself,
"You know, it has been weeks since I've done that."
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