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| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| February 20, 2003 |
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A FREE EXTRA DECADE OF LIFE #14
NOT STRESSING THE SMALL STUFF Baseball pitcher Tug McGraw first came up with the
concept of the “frozen iceball theory.” It’s Game Seven of the World Series,
bottom of the ninth, two outs, you’re ahead by one run, but the bases
are loaded with Yankees, and the best slugger in the world is standing
at the plate. Back in Tug’s era, a hitter like Reggie Jackson would have
come to mind. And you have a full count on him, but you know full well
that Mr. October is up there, just COILED, ready to put 225 pounds of
pure muscle into this next and final pitch. It’s either going to be a
strikeout or a monster grand slam. There’s no third alternative. These two marvelous authors, Jan Kuzma and Cecil Murphey,
have so many incredible insights to share here in Chapter Fourteen of
their book, Live 10 Healthy Years Longer. There’s a story about a lady
named Barbara, who had a job taking reservations for Delta Airlines. And
you can imagine some of the stress levels she faced: customers screaming
at her, flights being canceled — with her taking the flak. She actually
liked the work, and the people. Most of the time. “But why am I feeling
so stressed?” she wondered. “One way to look at stress,” they write, “is to think of it as the result of a misfit. Stress builds when you feel uncomfortable, unwanted, overwhelmed, or fearful. . . . To be free of stress, you need to live in an environment that fits you. This may mean you need to change jobs. Why be imprisoned in a vocation of drudgery?” One aspect of stress that they describe was quite an interesting metaphor, and I’d like to pass it along to all of you. In a sense, they write, we all have two bank accounts. We have a certain amount of physical energy and strength which, as the years go by, tends to slowly wear down. Obviously, the more we embrace this Live-Longer Lifestyle, and the more we follow some of the ideas in this book, Live 10 Healthy Years Longer, the more we’re going to have in that physical bank account. But the second account is a psychological one; they describe it as our psychological energy level, so it’s a fluctuating bank account. And some things actually work out to be DEPOSITS in that account: a raise at work, a good vacation, happy moments in your marriage. It can grow stronger as the years go by; you can consciously work to get compound interest, so to speak. Now, our reactions to the stressors of life largely depend on the overall balance in those two accounts: physical and psychological. True, we’re going to get old; we’re going to use up some of that so-called physical “vital force.” But we can get stronger physically by following these plain laws of health, and we can also choose attitudes and a lifestyle that will keep our psychological account full as well. Here’s the flip side to that metaphor of the bank accounts. True, being physically “bankrupt” can lead to stress, and cause you to react badly to it. It’s equally true that stress turns around and can make us physically ill. The train runs both ways on the tracks. They quote the late Dr. Hans Selye, known as the “father of stress research,” who did so much study on the “fight or flight” syndrome, and all the physical changes that happen in your body when you face stressors. If you let unresolved stress just keep building up, it can actually go like this: “Over a period of time, your system self-exhausts. You use up your reserves” — remember those twin bank accounts — “and you feel fatigued, disoriented, detached, or depressed. You may develop psychosomatic symptoms, such as headaches, backaches, muscle twitching, rashes, or wheezing.” Then Selye adds: “Sometimes you name this energy-deficient syndrome burnout.” Meyer Friedman, a psychologist who coined the term
“Type A personality,” tells us that high stress levels do more than high
fat, hypertension, lack of exercise, or even smoking to bring on coronary
artery disease in Type A people. “How you react in bad situations is your choice. By making the choice yourself, you build your energy level.” Last suggestion: Think Spiritually. Someone once said about stress: “First of all, don’t stress the small stuff. Secondly, it’s all small stuff.” And really, that’s true. You and I are going to live forever. You and I have Calvary. You and I have Jesus. Does it really matter SO MUCH if someone hits a home run off us, or complains because we made their plane late? |
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