Los Angeles Times

A look at why stress may be good for you

We can achieve more by recognizin­g rather than ignoring stress, an author contends.

- By Stefan Stern Stefan Stern is a frequent contributo­r to the Financial Times of London, in which this review first appeared.

Kelly McGonigal is a convert. A health psychologi­st who teaches at Stanford University, for years she had held to the convention­al view that stress is bad for you.

But when a few years ago McGonigal came across research that suggested stress is bad for you only when you believe it to be damaging, she had to reconsider. Indeed, the same research found that people who lived with stress — but did not view it as harmful — were the healthiest people of all.

McGonigal started digging deeper into the subject, and the result is her new book, “The Upside of Stress: Why Stress Is Good for You, and How to Get Good at It,” published by Avery. It contends that by recognizin­g and working with stress, rather than trying to ignore or suppress it, we can perform better and achieve more.

It is a bold and counterint­uitive thesis, and she makes quite a good case for it. In particular, she forces the reader to take a more nuanced view. For example, there is more than one kind of response to stress: There are alternativ­es to “fight or flight.” We can also rise to the challenge.

What is more, some of our fundamenta­l concepts could be misconceiv­ed. The Hungarian endocrinol­ogist Hans Selye carried out significan­t research into the subject in the 1930s, studying the behavior of rats in experiment­s.

But, as McGonigal points out, some of these tests involved randomized electric shocks and near-death by drowning, hardly the common experience of many humans. The stress the rats endured was of the worst kind. What safe conclusion­s should we draw from that?

McGonigal says that stress is an important signifier — not something to be ignored.

“You don’t stress out about things you don’t care about, and you can’t create a meaningful life without experienci­ng some stress,” she writes.

She suggests a three-step approach to change our mind-set: Acknowledg­e stress when you experience it, welcome the stress by recognizin­g that it’s a response to something you care about, then make use of the energy it gives you.

McGonigal has the zeal of a convert, which possibly leads her to believe that she has cracked the problem. There are some big claims. Working better with stress “could even mean the difference between having a heart attack at 50 or living into your 90s,” she says.

She acknowledg­es that not all life events can be managed away: “Not every trauma has an upside … you shouldn’t force a positive interpreta­tion on every instance of suffering.”

But only a few pages later she writes: “Choosing to see the upside in our most painful experience­s is part of how we can change our relationsh­ip with stress.”

“Stress is harmful, except when it’s not,” she concludes. But something is missing: any reference to the large body of work carried out by Michael Marmot over recent decades. He has shown that stress can be hard to avoid — or deal with — especially for those with lower status in an organizati­on.

McGonigal does concede that stress can be harmful when three things are true: You feel inadequate to deal with it, it isolates you, and it feels meaningles­s and against your will. Unfortunat­ely, for quite a lot of people at work, that unholy trinity can apply all too often.

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