Stress Management

Anybody else feel daunted thinking about stress managment lately? [wide eyed emoji]

It’s November of the hardest year in my recent professional memory, and the escalating stress levels I witness every day show no signs of abating. My patients are sleeping poorly, gaining weight, and their blood pressure continues to rise. They miss quality time with loved ones and rethink their life paths more seriously now than ever. Strangers on the street seem increasingly confrontational. The world is once again embroiled in war and violence. Our stress management skills are called forth, no question.

I attended the second ever Harvard Medical School coaching conference in the spring of 2009, where I met Benjamin Zander and The Art of Possibility became my personal development bible. Roz Zander, co-author, former wife, and decades long collaborator to Ben Zander, died suddenly this year. I hope my writing and impact may honor her, as these 14 years of my inner and outer work, sparked by the Zanders at that meeting, made me a better person that I would otherwise have been, founded on the practices in their book.

**Deep breath**

It’s been at least a decade, and I still ask patients to assess work stress in terms of threat and challenge. Threat stress–basically fight or flight–is physiologically taxing, meant to last seconds (not years), and costs us our health if prolonged. Challenge stress is activating, productive, and beneficial. I also query about personal fulfillment from work–meaning. We can tolerate very high levels of stress, even prolonged threat, if it’s worth it to us.

Parenting may be a better example than work. When we fear for our children’s well being, and even their lives in crises, how do we manage that? Is there any worse threat? We’d all rather it be ourselves suffering than our kids, right? How do we cope when we have no control?

At the risk of sounding arrogant, I feel very confident in my stress management skills. This is not to say I don’t experience severe stress or feel its consequences. I just move through it much more easily and with a lot less suffering now than in the past. I feel a lot less threat than challenge. Briefly, the practices:
Breathe. Ever since my first medical assistant posted “TAKE A DEEP BREATH” at my workspace, I have appreciated the calming effect of one deep breath, physically and psychologically. We can breathe ourselves through childbirth, injury, emotional trauma, and myriad other urgent and emergent situations. Deep breathing stimulates the de-escalating parasympathetic (rest and digest) nervous system, balancing the autonomic hijack mediated by the sympathetic system. I breathe along with patients when I listen to their lungs. I inhale deeply when listening to books, and during strenuous exercise. It is my central grounding practice.
Accept. “It is what it is.” This has nothing to do with how I feel about it. But the sooner I separate what is from what I want it to be, the less I suffer. Obviously I find this much easier to do for things I care less about. But even for big things, like the state of our healthcare system, the brokenness of our government, and my estimate of the ultimate demise of humanity (I think five more generations, give or take), just being with what is, as a first step to figuring out what to do next, helps me suffer a lot less.
Withhold judgment. I’m really good now at not jumping to conclusions and not making sweeping judgments about people based on limited information. I am able to separate judgment of actions from people’s character and humanity. If you’re screaming at my team and me, you are clearly unwell. We can hold you accountable to your actions and still show you compassion and respect. I don’t have to think you’re a bad person. This way, I don’t take your negative actions personally, and I can stay calm and even.
Get help. I ask every patient every year about their emotional support network, because it matters. Mine is phenomenal and I could not be more grateful. But I only know they are so because I call on them enough and they on me. Rarely I am disappointed, and I learn to turn elsewhere. I cannot overstate the profound importance of tribe and connection. It is my raison d’etre.
Move. When daughter was admitted to the hospital and I stayed with her there, I made sure to get on the ellipitical each day that week. When I go too many days without movement, I get edgy and stuck in my thoughts. My stress is exponentially more manageable if I protect my workouts, which I have now done for many years.
Attune and differentiate. My greatest stressors involve other people. Friction, tension, grating, colliding, etc. Since my LOH leadership training helped me articulate these complementary concepts, I recognize now that attuning/aligning with others, as well as differentiating and standing firm in my own core values and practices are equally important and fluid in their dynamics. Feeling out that optimal integration in any given interaction is rewarding in itself, and the outcomes are always better when I attend to both, knowing that I am showing up true to myself. What more can I ask of me?

So what could be better? Anything, really. For the rest of my life, new stressors will continually emerge. In his book Master of Change, Brad Stulberg quotes a statistic that in an average adult life, we will experience 34 major disruption events, which works out to about one every 18 months. Sounds about right to me! So I can expect to be challenged and trained in all of these skills and more, usque ad mortem. I only hope I can keep learning, applying, improving, and growing. Bring it.

I feel less harshly about our collective, societal stress management skills and outcomes than I do about our obessions and ironies with exercise and nutrition. Really, I think everybody’s doing the best they can, with the skills they have, in the circumstances of their lives at any given time. I just wish our environments didn’t create and perpetuate so many of our stressors in the first place.

So what’s already good?
Potential. We are all surrounded by one another. So every encounter, any time, any place, is an opportunity to do people-ing better. In any given relationship, if anyone is willing at all, there is always the chance for repair after rupture. Humans are innate learners; we can continually acquire the skills to stop impaling ourselves with the second arrow of suffering, after the arrows of pain hit us in daily life. We can even hold one another up and heal our injuries together.
Books, teachers, resources. Those aisles and shelves of stress management books really are dense, and I can say with conviction from first hand consumption that the knowledge and potential benefit living in those pages is immense. For those with the bandwidth to actively seek, consume, digest, and apply, lives can be transformed, especially if shared, discussed, and practiced together.
–Sometimes it really doesn’t take much. Your friend calls to check on you. A stranger helpsy you carry your groceries. When we say ‘it’s the little things,’ we speak truth. Small acts of kindness and incidental connections will not solve our hardest problems, but we must not underestimate their profound potential to help, and for that help to amplify in unexpectedly large ways. What’s more, both the helper and the helped benefit from the encounter.

What could be better?
–Teach it explicitly. There is a movement afoot among Dialectical Behavior (T)herapists to formally incorporate stress management skills into school curriculum. DBT organizes life skills around four central pillars: Mindfulness, Emotional Regulation, Distress Tolerance, and Interpersonal Effectiveness. Within each module are sets of practices, many with campy acronyms to help us remember. I refer patients to the DBT skills website often, not just to help them cope better themselves, but to help them model better coping skills to their children, direct reports, and leaders. Simply having the confidence that we can handle whatever comes our way, because we know what to do, decreases stress exponentially. What if we learn these skills in childhood, before the chaos of adolescence and serial tumult that is adulting? Can you imagine?
–Relational Leadership Training and Valuation. Leadership done well is a practice in empathic, compassionate, accountable, and transparent stewardship. It is a way of being and doing, one that requires high level self-awareness and self-regulation, and excellent attunement and communication skills. Right now I think leadership training focuses a lot on transactional communication, superficial team dynamics, and not enough on building leaders’ stewardship mindset and deeper relational skills. We should require evidence of these skills for promotion and provide communal support and feedback to strengthen their practice. This would reduce overall stress in organizations by building cultures of empathy, compassion, accountability, and transparency from the top. Workers’ stress, in my observation, stems in large part from toxic cultures set by relationally inept leaders.

So, another plot twist, but maybe not really. My solution to stress management optimization is relationship-centered: first relationship with self, then between self and others, and then between/among those who know us, by way of example setting.

Stress is complex. Its optimal management is a lifelong practice. It’s never too late to start, and no skills practice is too small or wasted.

“The only way out is through. The best way through is together.” I think that applies here.

Nutrition

Ok friends, now we get to talk about hard stuff: Food. GAAH, I JUST LOVE IT SO MUCH. My indiscriminately joyous palate and hedonist tendencies conspire to make me positively fat, and I have spent decades resisting that outcome. I feel an internal truce developing with age, though. I wrote my post on leading vs lagging indicators of health back in February, and share it regularly with patients. Each conversation reinforces my thesis: that numbers, be they body mass, body fat, glucose, or cholesterol, do not tell a remotely complete story about our overall health.

After reading Anti-Diet by Christy Harrison at the recommendation of a therapist friend, I can own my insidious internalization of our cultural obsession with thinness. I diverge mildly from some of the author’s opinions and assertions. I still greatly appreciate her understanding and validation of the complexity that is body weight, and the reality that we do not and cannot necessarily control it. Despite what many say, body mass does not simply equate to calories in minus calories out. Metabolism takes myriad inputs and outputs, both intrinsic and extrinsic, always in flux. Genetics play a large role, more for some than others, in body habitus changes over a lifetime. Sometimes acceptance is a healthier, more peaceful strategy than resistance.

Reconciling body mass and shape to health and well-being, especially for folks like me who are not naturally thin, costs loads of psychic energy. It can cause layers of stress and discomfort, much beyond moving around in a heavy body. I focus on weight/body mass and appearance in this post on nutrition becuase when my dietician colleagues and I talk to patients about food, a majority of the conversations are centered here. If American culture is obsessed with exercise, then we are brainwashed about thinness. I can think of few domains where both collective and individual judgment is more harsh and destructive. And when we judge weight, judgment of food and eating follows closely behind. Let’s see if we can shift this, shall we?

When I look at my eating habits today, I nod approvingly. Not because they are perfect or even admirable, but because they are so much healthier than in the past. This year especially, I’m able to practice mindful eating:  More often than before, I ask myself:  What’s driving my eating at this moment?  If it’s not truly hunger, will the calories be worth it?  What else do I need (water? sex? laughter? connection? movement?), and is food a good enough substitute?  I understand my non-hunger eating drivers (eg visual cues–never watch Big Bang Theory after dinner–and omg stress) and can anticipate them farther in advance. I can take precautions like not keeping ice cream in the house, and buying sweets in easily portioned units (thank you, Trader Joe’s frozen macaron varies!). I know my sleep requirement threshold below which mindless eating easily takes hold, and make strides to get to bed on time. My snacks are healthier–I pop blueberries as I write this–and I attune to my saiety much better with age–just ate my last blueberry of the writing session.

Here’s what I’m still working on, the mantra I have yet to integrate: “Enjoy every bite!” Whether it’s mac ‘n’ cheese or pecan pie, mashed potatoes or Haagen-Dazs, I am sure to indulge when offered. The visceral and limbic pleasures of flavor, texture, and sharing with friends act like jet fuel accelerating utensil to mouth oscillation speed. The greatest potential food joy quickly and easily devolves into an automatic race to consume, and it’s over before I realize. Not only have I then obliviated a peak plesaurable sensory experience, but I have also likely overeaten, and the sadness and guilt compound. “Enjoy every bite,” if I can remember and repeat, reminds me to slow down and attend to the full experience. Temperature, texture, flavor, aroma–just thinking of it all now relaxes and uplifts me. Good food, enjoyed mindfully in real time and especially in good company, connects and delights. I will continue to practice this not only for the most indulgent foods, but also the most mundane. The simplest foods can make me positively giddy: a poached egg, buttered toast, watermelon. Holy cow I just realized: If I truly enjoy every bite this way, how much more amazing could my sensory life be? Could I even stand it?


So what’s already good about American nutrition? Let me put down my cynic hat for a moment…
The United States is self-sufficient in food: we can produce enough to feed our own population (though 17 million households were food insecure for some part of 2022).
–Many of us have access to non-local, non-seasonal food, which we often take for granted (though economic and ecological costs are high).
–Information about healthy eating (though not necessarily healthy food) is more and more easily accessible.. though misinformation and fads cost us millions of hard earned dollars every year.
–Oh here’s a good one: Reasonably healthy meal prep and delivery services are increasingly available for busy families…. who have the funds to outsource planning/shopping/cooking.

Okay let’s just skip to what could be better.. no holds barred here, full fantasy mode engaged:
–Portion options at restaurants, with coinciding pricing scale. This prompts diners to assess and decide more mindfully when ordering. Or offer to present takeout container when entrees are served, so diners may save leftovers at the beginning of the meal and eat mindlessly thereafter (I try to bring my own boxes)
–Elevate nutrient quality of meals served in schools
–Effectively incentivize purchase and consumption of locally produced plants and animals by both individuals and businesses
–4 day work week. This could actually solve, or at least improve, intersecting problems in all 5 reciprocal domains of health: sleep, exercise, nutrition, stress management, and relationships. See evidence for benefit from The World Economic Forum, the Wall Street Journal, and the UK/EU
–Cultivate a collective mindset of slow, selective activity and connection, both personal and professional, rather than the frenetic, competitive, have-and-do-it-all mentality that drives us all to the brink and over the edge of burnout and insanity

Huh. At a collective, cultural, societal level, turns out I feel pretty pessimistic about meaningful positive changes in nutrition patterns. So it’s basically up to us individuals and small groups/organizations to continue swimming upstream against forceful currents of hyperprocessed food supply, agribusiness, and thinness obsession despite all systems trying by default to make us fat and sick.

HA! I’ll think more about this. I’m not hopeless or sad, more just fascinated. How are you feeling about it?

Exercise

“There are two kinds of people: those who exercise regularly because it’s who they are and they can’t help it, and those who do it because they know they should.”

When my teacher in medical school said this, I took it as truth. I now see it as partial truth. It reminds me of what little I know of Ayurvedic doshas, an eastern medicine idea of inborn constitutions; the first kind of people above are vata dominant, always active, high energy. The second kind are the rest of us. That said, these ‘constitutions’ are not cut and dry; they exist along a multidimensional spectrum. I don’t know what Ayurvedic medicine says about maleability of constitution, but the older I get the more I think we are all a living paradox: We are who we are from a very young age (before we are even born, in my opinion), and we are constantly changing and evolving throughout our lifetimes.

“You’re an athlete, Cathy.” Wut? My trainer Melissa stated it with a tone of irrefutable certainty. We had worked together maybe four months in 2014; she had observed me try and fail at many new movements, and also make noticeable progress along the way. Before that day I would have identified more as ‘mathlete’. In high school, classes were easy. Volleyball was hard. I participated fully in practice and drills, gave full effort in the weight room, all to be an okay player on the team. I did no other sports. But I kept playing at open gyms, college and med school intramurals, anywhere and anytime I could. To this day, I can still hold my own on a volleyball court. That sunny summer day running through her neighborhood, Melissa assigned me a new distinction, one I may never have considered. I have now proudly claimed it, and today my fitness program is firmly established and thriving. Since Melissa met my Ethos coaches six months ago, I have resumed learning, practicing, and training new movements, awakening dormant muscles and integrating them with what’s already strong and stable. My weight is unchanged, yet my clothes fit better. I’m stronger. I feel better about myself.

Consistency. Results. Progress. Tribe. My exercise pattern today is the best I’ve ever experienced. I wonder what it will look and feel like with another six months of training and beyond? After tearing my ACL in 2017, I know to appreciate any session that doesn’t end in injury. So how could my fitness be better? I must stay on the path, no matter how it winds and climbs. Surgery and changes at work disrupted my personal training schedule. So I rehab’d on my own at home. COVID prevented me from joining Ethos in 2020. So sibs and I did HIIT workouts at home over Zoom for three years. I can work out by myself; I know now that I do it exponentially better and have ‘way more fun with others. So that’s the plan–stick with the group that teaches me and holds me up. If I can do that, I’ll live to be STRONG OLD LADY, not frail old lady.


How would we describe American fitness? What is our exercise identity? ‘Bipolar’ and ‘ironic’ come to mind. On one hand we positively obsess over it all. If you live in any urban or suburban setting, you can practically fall out your front door and land in a gym of some kind. Sports apparel’s new fashion (genre?), Athleisure, now accounts for nearly 20% of online clothing sales. So you can at least look like an athlete when you walk around outside of the gym. On the other hand, according to the CDC, “60 percent of US adults do not engage in the recommended of activity,” and “approximately 25 percent of Americans are not active at all.” Well duh. Let’s take a look at just two correlates:

Infrastructure. American geographic sprawl necessitates transportation in the static sitting position, in cars, trains, and buses. Neither roadways nor transit culture make cycling or other self-powered locomotion appealing or feasible to anyone but the most determined, avid, and resourced. Most of us barely walk anywhere anymore, to the point of having to track daily step counts to goad us into getting up and moving at all.

Work culture. “Moreover, more than 80% of American jobs involve mostly sedentary activities,” statistics reported in 2021. This worsened for many with the pandemic, as remote work tied to a fixed computer video screen eliminated incidental movement within and between office spaces and in transit (walking to the train station or parking lot is still walking), reducing workday steps to the distance between bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen.

How can we make this better? Some simple, though not easy, ideas:

Stairs. Build them beautifully and out in the open, as centerpieces of our public spaces instead of last resort, emergency egress. Make it normal and the default to take the stairs instead of the elevator.

“5 of the best office staircase design ideas” –www.robinpowered.com

Get off camera. Do you really need that Zoom meeting? Do you need to meet at all? Whatever can be converted to a (concise!) email or voice call, do it. Hold folks accountable for preparation and brevity so all time spent meeting is valuable and productive. Then give them the time back so they can get away from their desks, accompish more tasks both personal and professional, and get more sleep, so they can be more motivated for the workouts they can now fit into their days.

Sit to stand desks. Make them standard in offices and reimburse workers to get them at home.

Give people balance boards and mini steppers as remote work onboarding gifts.

How else can we modify our systems and structures to lower the threshhold to get off our butts? What do you see around you that’s working already?