It’s valid for you to feel stressed

Stress.  Ironically in a country where it could be argued we’ve never had it so good, more and more people are suffering from it in Australia.

And I never thought I’d be among those ranks but I’m one of them.

Stress is a bastard of a thing.  It stops you sleeping, it stops you eating properly, it makes you feel like there is a giant knot in your gut that won’t go away.  It’s most certainly something that stops life being as fun as it could be.

 

But is the stress you are feeling valid?

 

Well I don’t know you but I’m going to go out on a limb here and say yesYes it is.  Because you can’t control what stresses you – if you did you would most likely put a stop to it so you could stop being stressed.  Stress isn’t like say a teenage-angst depression (rather than the full blown one) where people get, as the song goes, addicted to a certain kind of sadness.  And since you can’t control what stresses you and that stress is particular to you then that stress is valid.  But it can be hard to maintain perspective.

 

Two pieces in the media last week have made me think about my own stress.  One was a half hour special on the ABC from the show ‘You can’t ask that!’ where they posed questions to former soldiers.  These people have, almost across the board, crippling physical, emotional and psychological impairments and will never be the same from what they went through in service of their country.  Many of them have had their relationships end or otherwise have trouble forming ones to begin with.

The other was a story on JJJ’s Hack program where they had people talking about how with the current state of the rental property market in Australia. To afford a place to rent these people have to sacrifice using the heater, eating properly and so on.  Now that may have been my world when attending Uni (I didn’t use the heater, I sat in a chair with a blanket over me and a hot water bottle between my legs) but then I wasn’t working a 40 hour week with children to support.  Amazing the amount of cold you can ignore while playing Mario Kart 64.

Now compared to those two groups I’ve got it pretty damn good.  Besides a back that plays up from time to time I don’t have any ongoing physical injuries and besides having the odd dream where I am back in high school, where I was constantly beaten up and bullied, I don’t have any emotional or psychological problems.  Financially I’m earning more money than I ever have and am comfortably ahead on my mortgage repayments.  Relationship wise I have the most wonderful wife in the world and our mutual love is never in doubt for a moment for either of us, likewise our love for our kids and theirs for us is rock solid.  Yep, compared to many I’ve got it pretty bloody good…

…yet I’m stressed as hell!

Does this mean my stress is less valid than others?  Well maybe the above groups would see me the same way I reacted to the suicide of Robin Williams a few years ago.  The outpouring of sadness from the public was phenomenal.  My reaction was somewhat different.  All I could think was “He had children – how DARE he kill himself!  When you have kids suicide is off the table, even if they are grown up –  period!  And what was wrong with his life anyway?  A multi-millionaire, internationally famous and beloved – what the f*ck did he have to kill himself over?  I’d kill to have the life he just threw away!”

In retrospect I didn’t know the man personally.  I don’t know what stresses he had in his life, though it was probably more a deep seated depression that caused him to take the action he did.  Just as other groups could look at me and be disgusted at me being stressed considering my relative good fortune, I reacted the same way to him and that was not the right thing to do.  Just because on the surface he had it a lot better than I doesn’t mean the stresses he felt in his life were any less valid.

 

I don’t want to go in to my own stresses too much.  Suffice it to say I am desperately trying to change careers and am feeling very trapped at my inability to do so due to my lack of experience in other fields.  I’m being turned down for jobs that pay half as much and require more hours yet provide less yearly leave than I get now.  I can’t simply quit my current job as I have a mortgage and bills to pay and a family to support – my actions affect far more than me.  My beautiful daughter still does not sleep properly and there is only one or two nights a week that my wife and I get enough sleep – sleep deprivation really does your head in, especially when it’s been going on for years.  I keep trying and failing at quitting cigarettes, mainly because I am stressed and I smoke when I’m stressed, and the fact I am smoking is making me stress about that too.  There are other stresses in my life but these are probably the big 3.

I try to combat this by thinking of all the good I have.  I have a wonderful wife, 2 beautiful children, a nice house and hobby a farm in the country. My job at least pays well and is reasonably secure.  I’m in no imminent danger of not having food in my belly or a roof over my head.  Does this dwelling on the positives always work? Often but certainly not always.  There are times I’m lying there awake for hours in the middle of the night and all the negatives in my life join forces and become a bit too much.  Those nights the giant knot in my gut rules the roost.

So how does one combat stress?  Well, there are a million experts out there that will give you the answer (and probably charge you a pretty penny for doing so) so I won’t really go into that.  All I can say is do what works for you.  Whether that’s spending time with friends and family, losing yourself in movies and television, having a beer at the end of a long day – it’s what relaxes you.  But, if I had all the answers I wouldn’t be stressed myself.

Sometimes true

So don’t stress that your stress is not valid.  If you are feeling stressed and think you shouldn’t because there are those worse off than you, just remember that there are also people that are better off than you and they get stressed as well.

Now if you excuse me, I’m off to play with my kids and then sit on my veranda and have a beer -that’s what works well for me.

 

Got something to add or say about the article above?  Would love to read it in the comments section below!

6 thoughts on “It’s valid for you to feel stressed”

  1. Thanks Trev. I’ve had PTSD since getting mangled
    In a car crash. I am a staunch realist who doesnt do martyrdom , I check my priveledge every day:
    But now in cars my feet and hands tingle and go numb and my heart rushes and thunps in my chest and my Body tries to protect me from danger by blacking out. I cannot rationalise my way through this and it isn’t valid as far as I am
    comserned. But that’s what I’m dealing with and it’s embaressing .

    1. And as far as I’m concerned it is valid for you to feel that way Madds. I’ve had plenty of car crashes but they were as a young hoon and nothing ever got hurt except the cars panelling, so I wont pretend to relate to the experience you went through. But I remember having trusted dogs my entire life and when I was 16 I was walking past some guy with some pissy little white hairball which lept up and sunk it’s fangs into my calf. The guy just grinned and never even apologized for his dog biting a kid! Even though I didn’t suffer any serious injury, let alone have an experience that could have resulted in death like yours could have, it took me near a decade to walk past a strange dog without reflexively shying my legs away from it. You can feel the way you do about cars and I can’t think of a single reasonable person that would think you are less than valid for doing so.

  2. Good call Trev. Stress is totally a personal thing and I can relate to the job change stress. I do the same focusing on gratitude things to help my stress, husband is a deadset legend and just makes everything magically better. Reminding myself I have choices helps crack that feeling of being trapped for me. They may not always be the choices I want but they are choices none the less. I also meditate and am trained in reiki which really works for me but might not be for everyone. Hang in there, if you’re open to change and putting yourself out there for new opportunities then the right one will come. And you’re intelligent and adaptable so I reckon you’ll be able to settle yourself into something new. It’s frustrating that it doesn’t happen when you want it to but as long as you keep open to opportunities the right one will turn up. Good luck man!

  3. Trev, I know the feelings you have expressed here. It’s hard not to feel like your own stress is trivial or unjustified, but as you say, it’s valid.

    I agree it’s hard to control your stress sources We largely only have control over how we respond to them.

    Recently I’ve been trying a mediation called “thoughtless awareness”. For me starts with 5 mins when I wake and before I sleep just trying not to think about anything at all. Letting all that bubbling mind chatter settle down. It’s been tricky to persevere but I feel it’s helped (and reduced the frequency of my dreams being a loop of the work day! Urgh.)

    I’m glad you wrote about this. It’s been on my mind for a while.

    1. I’m glad you found it of use Carl – those are exactly the reason I wrote it 🙂

      FYI – I spent half of last night awake stressing about going back to work next week, and when I was asleep I was dreaming for hours on end I was there and getting told off by my bosses. Doesn’t is suck when you dream about work – sleep should be your ultimate escape from the workplace eh.

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