Why Do We Fear Stress?
We hear it all the time: stress is bad for you.
It causes heart attacks, ulcers, migraines, broken marriages, addiction, and short tempers with our kids. We’re told stress weakens our immune system and slowly wears our bodies down. With a reputation like that, it’s no wonder stress feels like the enemy.
But what if stress itself isn’t the real problem?
The truth is, stress isn’t good or bad on its own. What really matters is how we see it and respond to it. Stress is actually one of the main reasons humans survived long enough to be here today. Without it, our ancestors wouldn’t have reacted fast enough to danger—and we’d never have made it past the saber-toothed tiger stage.
Stress pushes us to adapt. It motivates us, sharpens our focus, and sometimes even inspires us. The problem starts when stress stops helping us and starts controlling us. To understand that difference, we need to know what stress really is and how it works in our lives.
Two Kinds of Stress
There are two basic types of stress:
- Distress – the harmful kind
- Eustress – the helpful kind
Distress is the stress that makes us anxious, confused, tense, and sick. It’s the kind that keeps us awake at night and ties our stomachs in knots.
Eustress, on the other hand, is the stress that gets us moving. It’s what pushes us to take on new challenges, make changes, and grow. It’s the excitement before a big opportunity or the pressure that motivates us to improve our lives.
The key difference?
Distress happens to us. Eustress happens because of us.
When stress feels overwhelming, we feel trapped and powerless. When stress feels productive, we feel capable and in control. Which one we experience depends almost entirely on how we react to what life throws at us.
It’s Not the Event — It’s the Meaning We Give It
Imagine a prehistoric beast charging at you. You could see it as a disaster waiting to happen—or as a chance to use that shiny new spear you just got. Same event, completely different mindset.
The same thing applies today. If your boss treats you unfairly, you can shrink back in fear and dread going to work, or you can update your résumé and look for a healthier environment. One response leads to distress; the other creates eustress.
Distress corners us and convinces us there’s no way out.
Eustress opens doors and helps us look for solutions.
The difference comes down to self-worth, confidence, and belief in our ability to handle life. When we treat stress as a chance to improve or change direction, we’re saying, “I know who I am, and I trust myself.”
Learning to Respond Instead of React
Most of us wouldn’t say we love stress—and that’s okay. Some people thrive on public speaking or extreme sports; others find those ideas terrifying. The same event can feel thrilling to one person and unbearable to another.
That’s because stress isn’t about what happens.
It’s about how we’re wired to think about what happens.
The good news? We can re-wire that thinking.
When we face a stressful situation, we usually have three options:
1. Face It (Fight)
Facing a problem head-on takes confidence. It means accepting the situation and choosing to deal with it directly. It’s not always easy, but taking action often reduces stress instead of increasing it. This is the “handle it now so it doesn’t come back later” approach.
2. Avoid It (Flight)
Sometimes avoidance feels safer, but it rarely solves anything long-term. Avoiding stress usually means postponing it. The problem doesn’t disappear—it just waits. Avoidance often comes from self-doubt and leads to more anxiety down the road.
3. Change It (Adapt)
This is often the smartest option. Changing how we deal with a stressful situation allows us to think creatively and find new solutions. If we can’t fight it and can’t run from it, we might be able to work around it—by adjusting expectations, finding alternatives, or asking for help.
Control Reduces Stress
Most modern stressors don’t allow simple fight-or-flight responses. We can’t punch traffic jams or run away from bills. Instead, we’re forced to think, adapt, and problem-solve.
That may seem harder at first, but it gives us something incredibly important: control.
Take a daily traffic jam. You can yell at other drivers (fight), stay home (avoid), or take control by finding a new route, adjusting your schedule, or using the time to listen to audiobooks or music you enjoy. Only the last option actually improves your experience.
Stress feels worst when we believe we have no control. When events control us, we feel helpless—and helplessness is the true root of stress.
Why Stress Can Actually Be a Good Thing
Stress forces us to choose, act, and grow. Without challenges, we wouldn’t develop strength, confidence, or resilience. Without obstacles, success wouldn’t feel rewarding.
Stress shows us where we need to change, recommit, or take responsibility for our lives. It pushes us to become more capable, more aware, and more fully alive.
That’s why, in a strange way, stress deserves our appreciation. It’s not here to destroy us—it’s here to shape us.
Why Do I Get Upset So Easily?
A famous philosopher once said, “I think, therefore I am.” Another later added, “As a person thinks, so they become” These ideas point to a powerful truth: our thoughts shape our reality.
If happiness were just a switch we could flip, why don’t we do it? The answer is simple—we don’t believe it’s possible. We distrust solutions that seem too easy.
But here’s the truth: our happiness depends largely on our expectations. If we believe a situation is bad, it will feel bad. If we believe we have no control, we feel anxious and overwhelmed. If we believe we can influence the outcome, we feel calmer and more confident.
Happiness, at its core, is the feeling of being in control.
Events themselves don’t create stress—our reactions do. We may not be able to change everything that happens to us, but we can always change how we interpret it and respond to it.
Stress is simply a demand to adapt. We suffer when we resist that adaptation instead of trusting ourselves to handle it.
The more responsibility we take for our responses—and the more committed we are to shaping our outcomes—the less power stress has over us.
In the end, stress isn’t the enemy.
Losing control is.
And the moment we take control back—through our thoughts, attitudes, and choices—stress becomes a tool instead of a threat.