The
Reaction to Stress
Editorial note:
Stress is a common experience of all organisers. Even
the inanimate world of matter has been found to experience
stress. Though common and universal; stress has till now
been regarded only as a dreaded something to which one has
to somehow adjust. Recently, however, the trend in psychology
is to look at the positive aspect of stress, called 'eustress',
so as to discover in it an evolutionary force that by disturbing
the lower equilibrium within and around us forces us to
enter into a higher equilibrium. The article touches upon
this issue briefly
TheAdaptive Systems
Our physical body has not only to adjust to the external
environment but has also to maintain an internal environment
for proper functioning. The maintenance of a stable internal
environment (homeostasis) is achieved through regulatory
mechanisms that co-ordinate systems with divergent and conflicting
functions. One such important regulatory mechanism is the
Autonomic Nervous System which has to balance two components:
(a) the sympathetico-adreno-medullary system that gears
the organism for expenditure of bodily energy (catabolism)
to cope with threats, and (b) the parasympathetic system
which helps in restoration and conservation of bodily energy
(anabolism).
Faced with a stressful situation, the harmonious balance
between the two components gets disturbed and one system
temporarily comes to dominate the other. This is nature's
adaptive device to prepare an organism for offence or defence
when under a threat. One has to be physically and emotionally
aroused to cope with an emergency. When a tiger growls,
one cannot continue to recite poetry, one has to run. The
sympathetico-adrenomedullary- system becomes dominant to
mobilize bodily resources for the intense muscular effort
needed. Sufficient blood must flow through the skeletal
muscles, heart, lungs and brain; the heart must beat faster,
the pupils should dilate for better vision while the urinary
and rectal sphincters tighten and the more leisurely activities
like intestinal movements and intestinal secretions slow
down as part of the body's economical adjustments. Besides,
one cannot simultaneously be in a holiday mood - one is
frightened, tense, anxious or enraged (one needs to be a
Yogi to remain composed) one must be both physically and
emotionally vigilant to face the challenge
A question often raised is, what responds to stress first
- the body or the emotions? Some argue that emotional arousal
is followed by physical arousal. William James believed
the opposite to be true and proposed that feelings, including
anxiety, were merely the individual's conscious awareness
of physiological processes antecedent to the emotion. The
controversy remains unsolved.
From the perspective of Integral Yoga where personality
is studied not as a finished product but along hierarchical
planes of consciousness with universal forces acting at
different levels, one could theorise that depending upon
the level of interaction, either the emotions (vital) or
the body (physical) could be aroused first or both could
even be aroused together. In the Integral Yoga, the vital-physical
is that plane of personality which is involved in the reactions
of the nerves and the reflexive sensations and feelings
(1). Sri Aurobindo elaborated,
"It [the vital-physical] is also. largely responsible
for most of the suffering and disease of mind or body to
which the physical being is subject in Nature"(2).
Return to the Base-line
The tiger, however, cannot be allowed to growl for long
and eventually a time comes when the danger ceases (one
runs out of the forest). Logically this implies that when
the stressful situation abates, the sympatheticoadreno-medullary
system must cease to dominate; the internal physical environment
must revert to the status-quo and the harmony should be
re-established. This is just what should ideally happen
to a healthy individual.
The Maladaptive Trend
Unfortunately, sometimes or in some individuals, even after
the external threat ceases to be relevant, the sympatheticoadreno-medullary
system continues to be unnecessarily dominant for an extended
period of time or a state of sustained emotional arousal
continues, no more as an adaptive but as a maladaptive trend.
Such a state is strenuous for both the physical and mental
health of the individual. As a result, a host of illnesses
can erupt, depending also on mediating variables like genetic
predisposition, environmental influences, personality traits,
organ vulnerability and psychological conflicts. Thus one
may develop physical manifestations of generalised anxiety,
a psychosomatic disease or an emotional disorder. Using
the Mother's description, one can ascribe such an illness
to a functional imbalance. Once a person is ill, the illness
itself acts as a new threat - a new stressor, exacerbating
the disharmony and establishing a vicious cycle that entangles
one as in a spider's web.
Psychological Threats
The response of the homeostatic regulating mechanisms which
prepare an organism to cope with an external threat is a
protective device perfectly suited for the sub-human animal
species and our forest-dwelling human ancestors. However,
in our self-acclaimed 'civilized' society, many of the threats
we face are in essence not physical but psychological. The
probability of being physically devoured by tigers is less
than facing threats from examinations, law-suits, share
market fluctuations, marital discords and unpredictable
office bosses. Work overload, retirement, status change,
social isolation, interpersonal conflicts, boredom, life
events or the demands of a changing society are more important
stressors today. Besides, one has to face internal threats
from unacceptable and unconscious conflicts and instinctual
forces that have not been adequately 'repressed'. There
is the stress arising from the conflict between one's achievements
and ambitions, from the distortion of one's selfimage, from
the inflated demands and insatiable desires of the ego.
Scientists believe that usually such stressors are aversive
events that most people would prefer to do without. If animals
could be given a choice, they would either avoid these situations
or escape.
As a matter of fact, in a study we conducted on missing
children and adolescents from well-to-do families in Calcutta,
42 per cent of the boys ran away to avoid the excessive
stress of studies and 53 per cent of the girls eloped to
avoid the stress of forced marriages(3). Unfortunately we
lack the romantic vigour of adolescence and if we do not
'run away' by committing suicide, we become ill when overwhelmed
by stress.
It is interesting to note that we react to psychological
threats in the same way as we react to a physical threat.
Selye, one of the pioneers of stress research, finds that
psychological events can produce the same stress responses
as physical stressors( 4). This means that whatever may
be the source of the threat, most of us continue to physically
and emotionally react to the stressors of modern life in
the same way that we did as inhabitants of the wild - a
habitual response which we now find difficult to unlearn.
If this be true, then, obviously, in the area of stress
reaction, the remarkable elevation in biological status
is yet to be satisfactorily accompanied by a progressive
elevation in Consciousness. It is high time we outgrew our
habitual reactions and responded with more maturity to stress.
Man is a mental being and we do of course psychologically
react to stress, though this
reaction appears immature. In fact, we use a number of psychological
manoeuvring techniques like blaming others (projection),
minimizing the importance of the situation (denial), or
avoiding the stressor (repression)(5). Such skills are based
on internal defence mechanisms.
The study of psychopathology has shown how the use of defence
mechanisms can in turn be decompensatory and give rise to
mental illness. In the Integral Yoga, psychological defence
mechanisms are considered to be features of the vital mind.
One must acknowledge that our present coping skills are
at best compromise formulas that do not aim at mastery -
one remains at the same level of consciousness.
The Integral Approach
Therapists are busy with methods that could help us to
face 'stress without duress'. None, however, feels the necessity
of doing away with the stress reaction altogether. It is
too utopian to surpass; it is easier to repress.
Integral Yoga which envisages not only a mechanical evolution
of forms but also a psychological evolution of consciousness
holds the promise that the hiatus between our achieved biological
status and an idealised utopian state of perfection can
be progressively bridged. Instead of make-shift compromises
that may break down at any point, a radical transformation
of consciousness can alone help us to unlearn and outgrow
our habitual reaction to stress. This would free us from
stress-linked diseases.
The Mother points out:
"
.And it is only with this spiritual capacity
of rising to a higher level and replacing the animal's unconsciousness
by a spiritual super-consciousness that there comes into
the being not only the capacity to see the goal of existence
and to foresee the culmination of the effort but also a
clear-sighted trust in a higher spiritual power to which
one can surrender one's whole being, entrust oneself, give
the responsibility for one's life and future and so abandon
all worries.
"Of course, it is impossible for man to fall back to
the level of the animal and loose the consciousness he has
acquired; therefore, for him there is only one means, one
way to get out of this condition he is in, which I call
a miserable one, and to emerge into a higher state where
worry is replaced by a trusting surrender and the certitude
of a luminous culmination - this way is to change the consciousness"(6).
Surpassing the Role of Anxiety
It is interesting to note that while anxiety is still an
important feature of the struggle for existence - it motivates
us to goal-oriented activities and has a survival value
in activating us during an emergency - anxiety fails to
develop in a tamasic environment devoid of motivation and
striving. This was demonstrated by Kral's study of a concentration
camp near Prague where stress-related disorders failed to
develop, even in anxietyprone individuals, in the absence
of the ruthless struggle for survival. On return home, some
of the subject.s again developed anxiety-related symptoms
as they were back in a world of competition that required
motivation and striving(7).
Integral Yoga points out that with a progressive evolution
of consciousness, the soulpersonality (the Psychic) will
come forward to replace the ego-personality as the centre
of our life. This would automatically surpass the source
of our activation and motivation and give a new orientation
to life.
It could be argued that an easier solution would be an
elimination of all stress-provoking situations. This again
is difficult to conceive; after all, a shift from the savage
to the modern man has meant a shift from a largely physical
to a largely psychological basis of stress. One cannot regress
to a stressfree vegetative existence; the only other way
for a life free of stressors is a gnostic society that comes
as a culmination of a mutant transformation - a radical
change of consciousness.
References
1. A.S. Dalal. Introduction in Living Within -The Yoga
Approach to Psychological Health and Growth.Selections from
the Works of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother. Pondicherry:
Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 1987.
2. Sri Aurobindo. Letters on Yoga. Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary
Library, Vol. 24. Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 1970.
3. S. Basu and S. Ghosh. 'Children Lost and Found'. Calcutta:
Bulletin, Psycho-Social Research and Training Centre, 1989.
4. H. Selye. Selye's Guide to Stress Research, Vol. I. New
York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. 1980.
5. R. Plutchik. Emotion: A Psychoevolutionary Synthesis.
New York: Harper & Row, 1980.
6. The Mother. Questions and Answers, 195758. Collected
Works of the The Mother, Vol. 9, p. 304. Pondicherry: Sri
Aurobindo Ashram, 1977.
7. V.A. Kral. Psychiatric Observations under Chronic Stress.
American Journal of Psychiatry, 108: 185, 1951.
-Dr. Soumitra Basu
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Blessing in Disguise
I used to hate and avoid pain and resent its infliction;
but now I find that had I not so suffered, I would
not now possess, trained and perfected, this infinitely
and multitudinously sensible capacity of delight
in my mind, heart and body. God justifies Himself
in the end even when He has masked Himself as a
bully and a tyrant.
-
Sri Aurobindo
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Perspective
Anonymous
Administratium
The heaviest element
known to science was recently discovered at the Watson Research
Center. The element, tentatively named Administratium, has
no protons or electrons and so has an atomic number of 0.
However, it does have 1 neutron, 125 assistant neutrons,
75 vice-neutrons and 111 assistant vice-neutrons. This gives
it an atomic weight of 312. These 312 particles are held
together in a nucleus by a force that involves the continuous
exchange of meson-like particles called morons.
Since it has no electrons, the Administratium is inert.
However, it can be chemically detected as it impedes every
reaction with which it comes into contact. According to
its discoverers, a minute amount of Administratium caused
one reaction to take over four days to complete, when it
would normally occur in less than a second.
The Administratium has a normal half-life of approximately
three years, at which time it does not decay but, instead,
undergoes a reorganization in which assistant neutrons,
vice-neutrons and assistant vice-neutrons exchange places.
Some studies have already shown that the atomic weight actually
increases after each reorganization.
Research at other laboratories indicates that the Administratium
develops naturally in the atmosphere. It tends to concentrate
at certain points such as governments, large corporations
and universities. It will most often be found in the newest,
best maintained buildings.
Scientists point out that the Administratium is known to
be toxic at any level of concentration and can easily destroy
any productive reaction where it is allowed to accumulate.
Attempts are being made to determine how the Administratium
can be controlled to prevent irreversible damage, but results
to date are not promising.
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