It is believed that being stressed can give
you an extended period of defense against illness. In fact, it seems
that being anxious about something lets the immune system know that you
may need its help in overcoming whatever it is you are anxious about.
It's also been suggested that experiencing stress before receiving a
vaccination could help you be better protected.
In a 2012 study conducted by the Stanford Institute for Immunity,
Transplantation, and Infection, they drew blood from rats before and
after stressful events. After the latter samples, it was found that huge
amounts of immune cells had been mobilized, released by the adrenal
glands.
Still, you don't want to keep your immune system on high alert at all
times. Dr. Firdaus Dhabhar of Stanford says that "nature uses the brain,
the organ most capable of detecting an approaching challenge, to signal
that detection to the rest of the body by directing the release of
stress hormones. Without them, a lion couldn't kill, and an Impala
couldn't escape."
3. It's motivating
While it may be obvious, in the case of pre-match jitters, a little
stress can be a strike of clear urgency needed to make sure a task is
done. And if not overdoing it, stress can help you become more efficient
and creative by way of necessity. According to Dr. Kerry McGonigal of
Stanford University, "it all depends on how you look at it." In 2013,
her book The Upside of Stress posited that with sheer willpower
previously negative feelings can be reinvented as something else.
"We are born with so many instincts for thriving under stress. If you
can view stress as it is happening, you can alter the effect it has on
you." She adds, "You don’t need to go into therapy for 20 years. The key
is changing how we think about it. If you embrace stress, you can
transform fear into courage, isolation into connection, and suffering
into meaning.”
4. It'll make your kids smarter
Time and time again we have been told that
stressed mothers-to-be will place undue strain on the baby and this is
categorically a bad thing. But, according to a study conducted at the
Bloomberg School of Public Health in 2006, it was actually found that
mild maternal stress might help children to mature quicker.
It was found that of those tested, children of mothers who were anxious
during pregnancy showed greater motor and developmental skills as
two-year-olds than those of entirely relaxed stock. Janet A DiPietro,
lead author of the study adds that “Our findings should provide relief
to women who are experiencing the normal anxieties and stresses common
to the demands of modern life. In essence, women can stop worrying that
their emotional state is harming their unborn baby."
5. It toughens you up
A child who has suffered the trials of school knows that a little panic
can be formative. This occurs in adults too. For instance, the first day
in a new job, making friends, performing in public - these are all
means of 'positive stress' and they are an example of anxiety that works
out for the better, probably forcing us to avoid mistakes and not take
dangerous risks.
Moderate stress has also been shown to be beneficial. In a 2012 survey
conducted on 2,400 people by psychologists at the University of Buffalo
found that those who had faced adverse life experiences were more
well-adjusted than those without.
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