The Difference Between Bad and Good Stress
Good Stress Is Real - And It Might Be Just What You Need
We talk about stress like it's always the enemy. Something to manage, minimize, and escape whenever possible. But what if some stress is actually working for you - quietly building your strength, sharpening your focus, and making life feel more meaningful?
Experts say there are two very different kinds of stress, and one of them, believe it or not, is genuinely good for your health. It's called eustress, and understanding the difference between the two could change the way you think about the challenges in your life.
Not All Stress Is Created Equal
When most of us hear the word "stress," we picture sleepless nights,
tight deadlines, and that familiar knot in the stomach. That kind of
stress - the kind that drains you - is called distress. It shows up when
life's demands feel bigger than your ability to handle them, and over
time it can lead to anxiety, low mood, and a real dip in how well you
function day to day. Left unchecked, distress can quietly chip away at
both your physical and emotional health.
Eustress is something else entirely. It's the buzz you feel before a
first date, the excitement of starting a new project, or the satisfying
burn after a really good workout. Clinical psychiatrist Dr. Michael
Genovese puts it simply: eustress keeps us motivated, helps us work
toward goals, and makes us feel good about life. Without it, he says,
our well-being can actually suffer. In other words, a life with zero
stress isn't necessarily a healthy one - it may just be a life without
enough challenge.
The Brain and Body Connection
Here's something fascinating: both eustress and distress trigger the
same basic chemical response in the body. Your heart beats a little
faster, your senses sharpen, and your body mobilizes energy. The
difference lies in how you interpret what's happening - and what comes
next.
With distress, that response lingers and wears you down. With eustress,
it energizes you and fades naturally once the challenge passes. The
excitement you feel before giving a speech, hosting a dinner party, or
trying something adventurous is your body gearing up to perform - and
that's a beautiful thing.
The Stress That Helps You Grow
What makes eustress "good" is that it pushes you - but doesn't deplete you. Psychologist Dr. Kara Fasone describes it as challenging yourself without running on empty. And the growth it drives touches several parts of your life at once.
Emotionally, eustress brings feelings of inspiration, motivation, and
deep contentment. There's a quality called "flow" - that state of being
completely absorbed in what you're doing - that eustress can unlock.
Mentally, it builds confidence, resilience, and a stronger sense of who
you are and what you're capable of. Physically, it strengthens your body
- think of the effort you put into a tough hike, a brisk swim, or an
energizing fitness class. When you come out the other side of a good
challenge, you feel capable and proud. That's eustress doing exactly
what it's supposed to do.
Where You Might Already Be Experiencing
It Eustress shows up in more places than you'd expect, and there's a good chance it's already a part of your life without you realizing it.
At work, it can look like taking on a project that requires you to learn something new - one that's tough, but genuinely within reach. The key word there is realistic. A challenge that excites and engages you is very different from a crushing workload that overwhelms you. When the balance is right, work can be one of the most reliable sources of positive stress in adult life.
Travel is a perfect example too. Navigating an unfamiliar city, trying
foods you've never tasted, hearing a language you don't speak - it's all
a little stressful, and also completely wonderful. That mix of
uncertainty and discovery is eustress in its purest form. Many people
find that some of their most cherished memories were born from moments
that felt a little nerve-wracking at the time.
Your personal interests and hobbies carry enormous eustress potential as
well. Learning to paint, picking up a new instrument, joining a
community sports league, tackling a challenging book - any time you're
stretching your skills and noticing small wins along the way, positive
stress is part of the picture. The early stages of learning something
new can feel awkward and humbling, but that discomfort is actually a
sign of growth happening in real time.
Even social situations can bring eustress. Meeting new people, joining a
club, or simply striking up a conversation with someone unfamiliar can
feel nerve-wracking - and also deeply rewarding. These small social
risks build confidence and connection over time.
Simple Ways to Invite More of It In
If you'd like more of this good stress in your daily life, the steps are refreshingly straightforward. Commit to learning something new each day, even something small. Set personal goals that genuinely challenge you without being completely out of reach. Try saying yes to a new responsibility at work, or finally sign up for that class you've been quietly considering for months. Revisit a hobby you let go of years ago. Plan a trip somewhere you've never been. And of course - move your body. Exercise is one of the most reliable and immediate sources of eustress there is.
One important note: even positive stress needs to be balanced with genuine rest. Time to recharge isn't laziness - it's what allows you to keep showing up for the good challenges life has to offer.
The Bigger Picture
Stress will always be part of life. Some of it we can't control, and
some of it genuinely needs to be reduced. But not all of it is working
against you, and recognizing the difference is a powerful shift. Seek
out the kind of stress that makes you feel alive, capable, and a little
bit proud of yourself. Lean into challenges that stretch you without
breaking you. Let the good stress do its job - and watch what you become
on the other side.