The damage that stress can do to us has been much reported. Not long ago the media was focused on workplace stress being experienced by States workers, in particular
those working for Health and Education. Much of that focus was on the potential
impact of stress on the way they acted with patients and students.
Last year the UK Health & Safety Executive reported that 43% of all
working days lost were due to ill health. It seems unlikely that Jersey’s
figures would be much different to this. The impact then, of something so
widely experienced is significant. These are important considerations but
perhaps they miss a very important element to these news stories. What about the
individuals experiencing that stress?
However, for many stress can
stop being useful and become toxic. It is no longer the servant of our need and
can become the master bringing with it anxiety and depression, negatively
impact our relationships and preventing us from being able to function at work
and at home. Being told that stress is part of life is no help and support can
be hard to find. That seems odd given how much stress is around us all.
The start to recovery is to
acknowledge the stress and accept it isn’t necessarily something to simply deal
with, alone. Seek help and begin a path to a healthier way of being.
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