āHow do you manage your stress?ā
Whenever Iām asked this, a deep pit of shame wells up inside of me, threatening to engulf my organs. āPretty well!ā I lie āIām a therapist, so, you know, I talk about it all day.ā
I even used to give presentations on a college campus about stress management and coping skills. So very cute of me. It wasnāt until recently when I started seeing a physical therapist who specializes in migraines and headaches, along with some well-timed questions from my beloved dietician about my adrenal system and how stressed my body feels that I realized, I am actually pretty bad at managing my own stress. (I type this through clenched teeth and a tight jaw, by the way.)
āStress is the feeling that occurs when a resource is threatened. Whether real or imagined, when we perceive a threat to our resources, we feel stress. This impact is physical, mental, and emotionalā Iāve thought about this often in the last several months as Iāve tried to unlock what is happening for me, specifically around migraines.
It all came to a head a couple of weeks ago the night before a completely overscheduled day. Michael and I talked about some very hard, but very important things, I slept terribly, and I was running about 10 minutes late as soon as I started the day. After my first appointment, my low tire pressure light came on. Then, as I went to my third appointment, I got notice I had to help someone whoād locked themselves out, and the keys Iād need were across town at my house. I pulled into my parentsā driveway, determined to suppress my stress, and then the thing that always makes me lose my composure happened.
My dad walked outside to meet me in their front yard and said āHey kiddo! How are you?ā The floodgates broke and I sobbed. āAwww, whatās wrong?ā he asked, letting me smash my face into his shoulder. āIām just overwhelmed.ā āGo inside and sit with your mom. Iāll put air in your tire and weāll figure everything out.ā I walked inside and was met with the same open heart and warm hug from my mother.1
I sat down and poured my heart out. Telling her every detail of all that ailed me. She nodded, listened, and held it all. āYouāre doing too much again, Jesieā she preached. āYou have to start prioritizing yourself. But actually being present for when you do it.ā It wasnāt the first time Iād heard that advice, but hearing it from my motherāwith all her unwavering empathyāmade it harder to brush off. 'But actually be presentā¦ā That part lingered.
I do make the appointments for massages, I do go to therapy. I even do a group now! I write. I eat sweet potatoes and drink adrenal cocktails. I take magnesium and I have an ergonomic memory foam pillow!
But all of those things actually fit in around the other ways I outsource my own energy. I slide them in around all the other commitments, or time wastes, if Iām honest. I am rarely the center of my own healing energy.2 And that is how I am actually not managing stress well, because I am not regulating how much stress I put myself through. I habitually overestimate my capacityāespecially when it comes to my future self.
Iāve come to believe we each have our own āStress Liabilityāāthat one pattern or tendency that turns up the heat on us. Maybe it is underestimating the time something will take and then stressing about urgency. Maybe itās putting everything off and then planning one terribly busy day. Maybe itās overpromising so that you can stay in relationshipā¦determined to ābe a really good personā when really you need to be a human person.3 Maybe itās planning each week as if weāre superhuman, or endlessly rearranging priorities to please everyone but ourselves. Whatever form it takes, our 'Stress Liability' has a way of catching up with us.
As I left my parentās house that day, I felt charged with the mission of finding space for myself, from myself. I want to embody what I teach my clients. That our well-being is paramount, and that there is no better investment than in ourselves. And at the bottom of all of it, we are our number one responsibility.
So, next time Iām asked, āHow do you manage your stress?ā I might just answer, āIām still figuring it outābut Iām learning to start with myself.ā
If you are so fortunate to have parents that feel like home, whose soul-casing vaporizes in their presence, hold them so damn close, and extend your hugs at least 7 seconds longer than you think you need to.
Here is where it would make sense to remind you to put on your own oxygen mask first, and how it allows us to help peopleā¦yada yadaā¦but you know that already.
Iām just dropping this here casually, but there is so much more to explore about how our desire to stay āworthyā in relationship often overrides our actual need for adequate care for ourselves.
āBut actually being present when you do it.ā Wow! The wisdom from that woman. š And the text from your dad. Love it. Thank them both for their wisdom from me. :)
So valid!! This is the work--and I love when my teachers are learners. With you!