Stress is Good - Talk by Kelly
Identify Elements of Style and Elements of Persuasion
00:12
I have a confession to make. But first, I want you to make
a little confession to me. In the past year, I want you to just raise your
hand if you've experienced relatively little stress. Anyone?
00:32
How about a moderate amount of stress?
00:35
Who has experienced a lot of stress? Yeah. Me too.
00:40
But that is not my confession. My confession is
this: I am a health psychologist, and my mission is to help people be
happier and healthier. But I fear that something I've been
teaching for the last 10 years is doing more harm than good, and it
has to do with stress. For years I've been telling people, stress makes
you sick. It increases the risk of everything from the common cold to
cardiovascular disease. Basically, I've turned stress into the
enemy. But I have changed my mind about stress, and today, I want to
change yours.
01:20
Let me start with the study that made me rethink my whole
approach to stress. This study tracked 30,000 adults in the United States
for eight years, and they started by asking people, "How much
stress have you experienced in the last year?" They also
asked, "Do you believe that stress is harmful for your
health?" And then they used public death records to find out who
died.
01:47
(Laughter)
01:49
Okay. Some bad news first. People who experienced a
lot of stress in the previous year had a 43 percent increased risk of
dying. But that was only true for the people who also believed that
stress is harmful for your health.
02:07
(Laughter)
02:10
People who experienced a lot of stress but did not view
stress as harmful were no more likely to die.In fact, they had the lowest
risk of dying of anyone in the study, including people who had
relatively little stress.
02:24
Now the researchers estimated that over the eight
years they were tracking deaths, 182,000 Americans died
prematurely, not from stress, but from the belief that stress is bad
for you.
02:36
(Laughter)
02:38
That is over 20,000 deaths a year. Now, if that estimate is
correct, that would make believing stress is bad for you the 15th
largest cause of death in the United States last year, killing more people
than skin cancer, HIV/AIDS and homicide.
02:56
(Laughter)
02:59
You can see why this study freaked me out. Here I've been
spending so much energy telling peoplestress is bad for your health.
03:08
So this study got me wondering: Can changing how you think
about stress make you healthier? And here the science says yes. When
you change your mind about stress, you can change your body's response to
stress.
03:21
Now to explain how this works, I want you all to pretend
that you are participants in a study designed to stress you out. It's
called the social stress test. You come into the laboratory, and
you're told you have to give a five-minute impromptu speech on your
personal weaknesses to a panel of expert evaluators sitting right in front
of you, and to make sure you feel the pressure, there are bright
lights and a camera in your face, kind of like this.
03:51
(Laughter)
03:52
And the evaluators have been trained to give you
discouraging, non-verbal feedback, like this.
04:05
(Exhales)
04:06
(Laughter)
04:09
Now that you're sufficiently demoralized, time for part
two: a math test. And unbeknownst to you, the experimenter has been
trained to harass you during it. Now we're going to all do this
together. It's going to be fun. For me.
04:25
Okay.
04:26
(Laughter)
04:27
I want you all to count backwards from 996 in increments of
seven. You're going to do this out loud,as fast as you can, starting
with 996. Go!
04:39
(Audience counting)
04:41
Go faster. Faster please. You're going too slow.
04:45
(Audience counting)
04:46
Stop. Stop, stop, stop. That guy made a mistake. We
are going to have to start all over again.
04:51
(Laughter)
04:52
You're not very good at this, are you? Okay, so you get the
idea. If you were actually in this study,you'd probably be a little
stressed out. Your heart might be pounding, you might be breathing
faster, maybe breaking out into a sweat. And normally, we interpret these
physical changes as anxiety or signs that we aren't coping very well with
the pressure.
05:12
But what if you viewed them instead as signs that your body
was energized, was preparing you to meet this challenge? Now that is
exactly what participants were told in a study conducted at Harvard
University. Before they went through the social stress test, they
were taught to rethink their stress response as helpful. That pounding
heart is preparing you for action. If you're breathing faster, it's no
problem. It's getting more oxygen to your brain. And participants who
learned to view the stress response as helpful for their
performance, well, they were less stressed out, less anxious, more
confident, but the most fascinating finding to me was how their
physical stress response changed.
05:55
Now, in a typical stress response, your heart rate goes
up, and your blood vessels constrict like this.And this is one of the
reasons that chronic stress is sometimes associated with cardiovascular
disease. It's not really healthy to be in this state all the
time. But in the study, when participants viewed their stress
response as helpful, their blood vessels stayed relaxed like
this. Their heart was still pounding, but this is a much healthier
cardiovascular profile. It actually looks a lot like what happens in
moments of joy and courage. Over a lifetime of stressful
experiences, this one biological change could be the
difference between a stress-induced heart attack at age 50 and living
well into your 90s. And this is really what the new science of stress
reveals, that how you think about stress matters.
06:53
So my goal as a health psychologist has changed. I no
longer want to get rid of your stress. I want to make you better at
stress. And we just did a little intervention. If you raised your
hand and said you'd had a lot of stress in the last year, we could
have saved your life, because hopefully the next time your heart is
pounding from stress, you're going to remember this talk and you're
going to think to yourself, this is my body helping me rise to this
challenge. And when you view stress in that way, your body believes
you, and your stress response becomes healthier.
07:30
Now I said I have over a decade of demonizing stress to
redeem myself from, so we are going to do one more intervention. I
want to tell you about one of the most under-appreciated aspects of the
stress response, and the idea is this: Stress makes you social.
07:49
To understand this side of stress, we need to talk about a
hormone, oxytocin, and I know oxytocin has already gotten as much hype as
a hormone can get. It even has its own cute nickname, the cuddle
hormone, because it's released when you hug someone. But this is a
very small part of what oxytocin is involved in.
08:09
Oxytocin is a neuro-hormone. It fine-tunes your brain's
social instincts. It primes you to do things that strengthen close
relationships. Oxytocin makes you crave physical contact with your friends
and family. It enhances your empathy. It even makes you more willing
to help and support the people you care about. Some people have even
suggested we should snort oxytocin... to become more compassionate and
caring. But here's what most people don't understand about
oxytocin. It's a stress hormone. Your pituitary gland pumps this
stuff out as part of the stress response. It's as much a part of your
stress response as the adrenaline that makes your heart pound. And
when oxytocin is released in the stress response, it is motivating you to
seek support. Your biological stress responseis nudging you to tell
someone how you feel, instead of bottling it up. Your stress response
wants to make sure you notice when someone else in your life is
struggling so that you can support each other. When life is
difficult, your stress response wants you to be surrounded by people
who care about you.
09:32
Okay, so how is knowing this side of stress going to make you
healthier? Well, oxytocin doesn't only act on your brain. It also
acts on your body, and one of its main roles in your body is to
protect your cardiovascular system from the effects of stress. It's a
natural anti-inflammatory. It also helps your blood vessels stay relaxed
during stress. But my favorite effect on the body is actually on the
heart.Your heart has receptors for this hormone, and oxytocin helps heart
cells regenerate and heal from any stress-induced damage. This stress
hormone strengthens your heart.
10:15
And the cool thing is that all of these physical
benefits of oxytocin are enhanced by social contact and social
support. So when you reach out to others under stress, either to seek
support or to help someone else, you release more of this
hormone, your stress response becomes healthier, and you actually
recover faster from stress. I find this amazing, that your stress
response has a built-in mechanism for stress resilience, and that
mechanism is human connection.
10:50
I want to finish by telling you about one more study. And
listen up, because this study could also save a life. 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?"They also asked, "How much
time have you spent helping out friends, neighbors, people in your
community?" And then they used public records for the next five
years to find out who died.
11:27
Okay, so the bad news first: For every major stressful life
experience, like financial difficulties or family crisis, that
increased the risk of dying by 30 percent. But -- and I hope you are
expecting a "but" by now -- but that wasn't true for
everyone. People who spent time caring for others showed absolutely
no stress-related increase in dying. Zero. Caring created resilience.
12:00
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. Stress gives us access to our hearts. The
compassionate heart that finds joy and meaning in connecting with
others, and yes, your pounding physical heart, working so hard to
give you strength and energy. 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. You're saying that you can trust yourself to
handle life's challenges. And you're remembering that you don't have to
face them alone.
13:21
Thank you.
13:22
(Applause)
13:31
Chris Anderson: This is kind of amazing, what you're telling
us. It seems amazing to me that a belief about stress can make so
much difference to someone's life expectancy. How would that extend to
advice, like, if someone is making a lifestyle choice between, say, a
stressful job and a non-stressful job, does it matter which way they
go? It's equally wise to go for the stressful job so long as you
believe that you can handle it, in some sense?
13:59
KM: Yeah, and one thing we know for certain is that chasing
meaning is better for your health than trying to avoid
discomfort. 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.
14:15
CA: Thank you so much, Kelly. It's pretty cool.
14:17
(Applause)
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