Stress is a common physical and emotional response to situations that are perceived as challenging, demanding, or overwhelming. It is often used to describe unpleasant feelings such as frustration, anger, conflict, fatigue, or emotional pressure. Although stress is a natural part of life, prolonged or excessive stress can negatively affect both physical and mental well-being.
From an evolutionary perspective, stress developed as a survival mechanism known as the "Fight, Flight, or Fright" response. When the brain perceives danger, the body prepares itself to react quickly in order to protect against potential threats. While this response is extremely useful during emergencies, frequent activation in everyday life can become harmful.
In today's fast-paced world, stress can arise from many different situations, including work pressure, relationship conflicts, financial concerns, academic challenges, health problems, or even major positive life events such as marriage, career changes, or relocation. Every individual experiences stress differently depending on their personality, coping skills, and life circumstances.
During stressful situations, the Autonomic Nervous System (particularly the Sympathetic Nervous System) and the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) Axis become activated. This leads to the release of stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline, which increase heart rate, elevate blood pressure, improve alertness, and redirect blood flow to vital organs. These physiological changes prepare the body for immediate action.
While this response is beneficial for short-term survival, chronic or persistent stress can disrupt normal body functions and significantly increase the risk of anxiety disorders, depression, sleep disturbances, high blood pressure, heart disease, digestive problems, weakened immunity, and several other physical and psychological health conditions.
Modern lifestyles expose individuals to multiple sources of stress every day. Increasing professional responsibilities, financial uncertainty, social expectations, and personal challenges make stress one of the most common health concerns worldwide. Although many stressful situations cannot be completely avoided, learning healthy coping strategies can significantly reduce their impact.
Common causes of stress include unemployment, loss of a loved one, relationship problems, academic pressure, failure in competitive examinations, workplace stress, financial difficulties, chronic medical illnesses, and family conflicts. While we may not always be able to control these situations, we can learn to modify our thoughts, emotions, behaviours, and reactions to adapt more effectively to life's challenges.
Stress can affect a person's physical health, emotions, thinking ability, and behaviour. The symptoms may vary from person to person depending on the severity and duration of stress.
Fatigue, persistent headache, insomnia or excessive sleeping (hypersomnia), increased muscular tension, palpitations, chest pain, tremors, flushing, excessive sweating, and in severe long-term cases, an increased risk of heart disease or heart attack.
Confusion, indecisiveness, poor concentration, memory difficulties, mood changes, depression, and the development or worsening of other psychiatric illnesses.
Anxiety, nervousness, anger, frustration, excessive worrying, fear, emotional instability, and irritability.
Nervous habits such as nail-biting, increased or decreased appetite, smoking, alcohol consumption, substance use, social withdrawal, and other unhealthy coping behaviours.
Every individual responds to stress differently; therefore, stress management should be personalized according to the person's needs and circumstances. One of the simplest approaches to coping with stress is following the 4A Rule.
Avoid unnecessary stress whenever possible.
Alter situations that can be changed through healthy communication and problem-solving.
Adapt your thoughts, emotions, and behaviours to deal more effectively with stressful situations.
Accept situations that cannot be changed and focus your energy on positive coping strategies.
Stress management begins by identifying the actual sources of stress in your daily life. Many people overlook their own habits, behaviours, and thought patterns. Maintaining a simple journal can help improve self-awareness.
• Cause of stress
• How did you feel?
• How did you react?
• What made you feel better?
• Smoking and alcohol consumption.
• Overeating or undereating.
• Sleeping excessively.
• Procrastinating important tasks.
• Withdrawing from friends and family.
• Losing emotional control or becoming angry frequently.
• Take adequate relaxation time every day.
• Stay socially connected with family and friends.
• Engage in enjoyable hobbies such as cooking, painting, music, or reading.
• Exercise regularly and practice Yoga or meditation.
• Eat a healthy and balanced diet while avoiding junk food.
• Reduce caffeine and sugar intake.
• Avoid alcohol, cigarettes, and recreational drugs.
• Maintain healthy sleep habits and aim for 7–8 hours of sleep each night.
If stress continues despite adopting healthy coping strategies, professional psychiatric consultation is strongly recommended. Dr. Satish Kumar (MD Psychiatry, AIIMS Delhi) has more than 12 years of experience in treating stress and other psychiatric disorders. He provides sufficient consultation time, compassionate counselling, evidence-based treatment, and practical coping strategies to help patients regain emotional well-being and improve their quality of life.