Coping With Stress At Work
by Ngeow Yoke Meng
Today, as society moves at a much faster pace, employees and even employers find that they are often under pressure due to stressful work conditions and undesirable environment in and out of their workplaces. Here are some useful suggestions by the Health Education Authority in the UK to cope with, and finally to break the stress we face at work.
However, following some of these measures does not necessarily mean that you can run away from stress or problem at work. You are likely to be digging yourself even deeper into the mire if you deal with it using the negative ways such as the following.
1. Denial
A refusal to admit that anything is wrong in the hope that it will go away. Often it does not; in fact it will probably get worse.
2. Escapism
Moving from one situation to another - a new job, a new marriage - in an attempt to make a 'fresh start' and leave problems behind. But a it's the way you habitually behave that is usually the problem, you troubles travel with you.
3. Avoidance
Arranging your life so that you avoid stressful situations - or indeed, any kind of challenge that might be uncomfortable in the short run. As you're always canceling appointments, it puts a strain on your personal and business relationships.
4. Projection
You blame everyone but yourself for whatever goes wrong. It's your partner's fault the car is out of petrol even though you drove it last.
5. Displacement
Feelings of aggression and frustration are dumped on other people (usually those who know you and love you best) and things instead of the source of trouble can be disastrous.
6. Rationalization
You explain away your conduct with any number of plausible reasons - except the real ones.
7. Nostalgia
Things were better in the past. You avoid present stresses by contemplating past happiness and success.
8. Regression
When stress is very severe, people may escape by reverting to childhood behavior. They were dependent on others then to protect them and order their life.
9. Repression
Sometimes we bury past traumas in our unconscious and forget they ever happened. But the weight of them is still with us, and they can surface as nightmares, depression, phobias and obsessions.
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