Stress
in sentence
1071 examples of Stress in a sentence
I find this amazing, that your
stress
response has a built-in mechanism for
stress
resilience, and that mechanism is human connection.
This study tracked about 1,000 adults in the United States, and they ranged in age from 34 to 93, and they started the study by asking, "How much
stress
have you experienced in the last year?"
And so we see once again that the harmful effects of
stress
on your health are not inevitable.
How you think and how you act can transform your experience of
stress.
When you choose to view your
stress
response as helpful, you create the biology of courage.
And when you choose to connect with others under stress, you can create resilience.
Now I wouldn't necessarily ask for more stressful experiences in my life, but this science has given me a whole new appreciation for
stress.
And when you choose to view
stress
in this way, you're not just getting better at stress, you're actually making a pretty profound statement.
It seems amazing to me that a belief about
stress
can make so much difference to someone's life expectancy.
And so I would say that's really the best way to make decisions, is go after what it is that creates meaning in your life and then trust yourself to handle the
stress
that follows.
Chasing 250,000 pieces of malware a day is a massive challenge, and those numbers are only growing directly in proportion to the length of my
stress
line, you'll note here.
This short psychological intervention decreases the prevalence of post-traumatic
stress
disorder and other mental health issues in the future, preparing Omar to get an education, join the workforce, raise a family and beyond.
Sometimes disease, stress, and even diet can disrupt that regulatory function, however, altering the quantity of hormones that glands secrete or changing the way that cells respond.
This results in eight billion dollars in costs for the airline industry globally every year, not to mention the impact on all of us: stress, inconvenience, missed meetings as we sit helplessly in an airport terminal.
But let me
stress
two things here.
This phenomenon, called post-traumatic
stress
disorder, or PTSD, isn’t a personal failing; rather, it’s a treatable malfunction of certain biological mechanisms that allow us to cope with dangerous experiences.
These signals start a chemical cascade that floods the body with several different
stress
hormones, causing physiological changes that prepare the body to defend itself.
Even after a crisis is over, escalated levels of
stress
hormones may last for days, contributing to jittery feelings, nightmares, and other symptoms.
We don’t completely understand what’s happening in the brain, but one theory is that the
stress
hormone cortisol may be continuously activating the “fight-flight-freeze” response while reducing overall brain functioning, leading to a number of negative symptoms.
Genetics, on-going overwhelming stress, and many risk factors like preexisting mental illnesses or lack of emotional support, likely play a role in determining who will experience PTSD.
And as a consequence, across the Western world, the over-simplistic policies of the parties of protest and their appeal to a largely disillusioned, older demographic, along with the apathy and obsession with the trivial that typifies at least some of the young, taken together, these and other similarly contemporary aberrations are threatening to squeeze the life out of active, informed debate and engagement, and I
stress
active.
Although, again, I stress: we don't know.
The companies that win awards for workplace flexibility in the United States include some of our most successful corporations, and a 2008 national study on the changing workforce showed that employees in flexible and effective workplaces are more engaged with their work, they're more satisfied and more loyal, they have lower levels of
stress
and higher levels of mental health.
However, our brains are also exquisitely sensitive to
stress
in our environment.
The more stress, the less brain development, which in turn causes less adaptability and causes higher
stress
levels.
However, by instead embracing it and rethinking weight and
stress
distribution, they came up with a design that only works if there's a big hole in the roof.
Parents experience more
stress
than non-parents.
Which is fitting, seeing as today, one in five soldiers develop depression, or post-traumatic
stress
disorder or both.
And they work by increasing
stress
resilience, so let's call them resilience enhancers.
Stress
resilience is the active biological process that allows us to bounce back after
stress.
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