Montreal Gazette

How students can handle stress

- JOE HEIM

Embrace your stress.

That’s the message Stanley Abbott has for students and teachers who are feeling overwhelme­d and behind just a month or so into the school year.

The retired Purdue University professor celebrates the upside of anxiety in his new book, Enjoy Stress, a 78-page tutorial on how to counter the forces that make people feel like they’re losing control.

To start off, Abbott says, remember that stress can be good and that everyone has it.

“People need to know that the clinical definition of no stress is death,” Abbott says, jokingly.

“We are all automatica­lly going to face stress, but are you able to cope?”

Although telling people to enjoy their stress may seem to be counterint­uitive advice, Abbott thinks that when you set the terms of your relationsh­ip with stress, you can control it rather than having it control you.

“The basic thing is to find simplicity,” he says. “There’s a lot of advice out there for dealing with stress. I wanted to teach my students how to handle stress, and I thought, ‘This needs to be simplified.’ ”

Abbott, who was a professor of performing arts, wanted to set out some straightfo­rward ways to prepare people for handling stress before it became a problem. His approach includes chapters that address goal setting, relaxation, exercise, attitude, diet and how to interact with other people.

“If you’re well prepared, practise relaxation, have a good diet, have a good attitude, you should be fine,” he says. “Remember some people have stress because they choose to have stress. They bring it on themselves.”

An overlooked antidote to stress, Abbott argues, is fun and a sense of humour. “The effects of humour and laughter on our physical and mental well-being are proven and extremely beneficial,” he writes. “A good laugh decreases levels of

stress hormones like cortisol and adrenal, causes endorphin levels to rise, and strengthen­s our immune system.”

As a professor, Abbott noticed that the one thing that created the most stress for his students was a lack of time management and the anxiety brought on by letting things go until the last minute.

“Deadline stress was very prevalent,” he says. “I was able to explain to them that if you can arrange your time and properly prepare and manage your work, you’re going to be fine. They grabbed on to that and it worked like a champ.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada