Everyday Vitality : Turning Stress into Strength
Everyday Vitality : Turning Stress into Strength
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Author(s): Boardman, Samantha
ISBN No.: 9780735222298
Pages: 272
Year: 202208
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 26.22
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Chapter 1 The Pebbles in Your Shoe Supposedly, the worst time to get sick is in July, when brand-new interns flood the teaching hospitals. Although these interns have gained hands-on experience in medical school, dealing with patients on wards is a different proposition. These young doctors are expected to make decisions-big and small-all on their own. They decide which antibiotic to prescribe, whether or not to order a CT scan, how to stabilize a decompensating patient, and how to speak to an anxious family. When I graduated from medical school in late June 2000, the immediate upgrade to "Samantha Boardman, MD" boosted my confidence. After all those years wearing a short white student coat, I was finally allowed to put on a long one and walk proudly down the hospital hall. My honeymoon as the newly minted Dr. Boardman was short-lived.


As soon as I arrived for the first night shift, a nurse paged me. A patient had died, and a doctor was needed to fill out a death certificate, which I''d only done once before. It was also my responsibility to notify family members and explain that they could request an autopsy if they wished. Of course, no one wants an autopsy, so I''d be careful to choose my words. My beeper went off again. A different nurse informed me that I had to draw blood cultures from a leukemia patient who had a fever of 103 degrees. "I''ll be there right away," I said. When my beeper alerted me again, it was a third nurse, who was concerned about a patient with a rapid heart rate.


By now my own heart rate was rising, too, and the list of patients in need of my attention only continued to grow. My initial excitement at having become "Dr. Boardman" evaporated. Imposter syndrome kicked in. I felt like a fraud, playing "dress up" in my white coat. My face turned red, and tears pricked my eyes. I swallowed a big gulp of lukewarm black coffee and took a bite of a doughnut I had shoved into my pocket earlier that day. If a patient had been in a cardiac crisis, I would have known exactly what to do.


I would have swung into action: check the patient''s pulse and breathing. If the patient was in distress, I would call a CODE to alert the Rapid Response Team that a patient was in cardiac arrest and then begin chest compressions. I was well trained in the handling of major emergencies, but this was an unrelenting barrage of smaller challenges. "It isn''t the mountains ahead to climb that wear you out, it''s the little pebble in your shoe," Muhammed Ali once said. I could have handled a boulder, but the avalanche of tiny pebbles was overwhelming. I hear echoes of my first night working as an intern in the stories of many patients. They tell me that they are emotionally exhausted and feel pulled in a thousand different directions at once. Although their schedules are jam-packed, they long for a sense of genuine fulfillment.


When I ask them to describe their state of mind in a single word, they reply with "drained," "depleted," and even "dead." "It''s not that I am drowning," a patient in her early forties explained to me. "I am keeping my head above water, but the waves are big and I am getting constantly getting splashed in the face." Another patient summed it up this way: "Every day feels like a Sunday night-full of dread and emptiness." When I asked him to describe his mood in one word, he thought a moment and replied, "lackluster." Another patient quoted a line from a Robert Lowell poem to convey her exasperation with the demands of daily life: "How will the heart endure?" The Pebbles Can Pummel You Determining whether a person is clinically depressed is not an arbitrary decision. Psychiatrists follow strict guidelines specified by the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) and look for at least five of the following nine symptoms lasting at least two weeks: 1. Feels depressed most of the day, nearly every day, as indicated by subjective report (e.


g., feels sad, empty, hopeless) or observation made by others (e.g., appears tearful) 2. Feels markedly diminished levels of interest or pleasure when engaging in all, or almost all, activities most of the day, nearly every day (as indicated by subjective account or observation) 3. Significant weight loss when not dieting, or weight gain or decrease, or increase in appetite 4. Sleep disturbance 5. Psychomotor agitation or retardation nearly every day (observable by others, not merely subjective feelings of restlessness or being slowed down) 6.


Fatigue or loss of energy 7. Diminished ability to think or concentrate, or indecisiveness 8. Feelings of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt nearly every day 9. Recurrent thoughts of death (not just fear of dying), recurrent suicidal ideation without a specific plan, or a suicide attempt or a specific plan for committing suicide I include these criteria not only because I want readers to know that depression can manifest in many ways, but also to underscore the importance of seeking professional help if they apply to you or a loved one. Over the years I have diagnosed, hospitalized, and treated many patients with the full range of the symptoms described above. But there are also many who qualify for an "almost diagnosis"-not mentally ill by clinical standards but lacking positive mental health. When I first opened my private practice, most of the new patients I took on were at an inflection point. They sought help to assess a life-changing decision or to understand a relationship, or they were in the midst of a significant transition, often following a loss.


The chronic issues in their daily lives did not take center stage. Today more and more patients come to see me because of the ups and downs in their daily lives. They are feeling worn out and worn down by the daily grind. Women seem to feel it the most. Almost half of the women surveyed said they frequently experience daily stress, and more than 40 percent said they feel as if they don''t have enough time. Their lives are nonstop, with a to-do list that seems bottomless. Often a lack of vitality only amplifies their stress. Patients often just give up and sigh, "I guess that''s just life.


" The hassles of day-to-day living-the annoying, anxiety-provoking, and frustrating experiences that are embedded into everyday life-are a significant source of stress. Seemingly minor occurrences-an argument with a child or partner, an unexpected work deadline, arriving late for an appointment, missing a train, or dealing with a malfunctioning computer-all contribute. One study''s results indicated that watching the news and losing your cell phone are among the top ten daily events that stress people out. Even a long line at your local coffee shop or not having hot water for your morning shower can be enough to put you in a terrible mood. We know it''s absurd to allow something minor to ruin a minute, let alone a day. We try to dismiss these daily irritations as irrelevant or as the "first-world problems" they are. We tell ourselves that they don''t matter in the long run. But they do.


Many assume that major life events like divorce, the death of a spouse, and the loss of a job are the most virulent causes of stress, but a University of California, Berkeley, study confirmed that so-called microstressors are the ones we need to watch out for: "[T]hese kinds of stressors have been taken for granted and considered to be less important than more dramatic stressors. Clinical and research data indicate that these ''micro-stressors'' acting cumulatively, and in the relative absence of compensatory positive experience, can be potent sources of stress." The impact of challenges that occur during everyday living on both a person''s physical and mental health cannot be underestimated and are, in fact, better predictors of health than major life events. Researcher Richard Lazarus was one of the first to recognize how relatively minor incidences could have so strong an impact. He believed that the overall level of demands on a person and the perception of resources available to meet those demands were what determined if a potential hassle became an actual one. So if an individual is already feeling taxed, an event that might be typically ignored or overlooked-a leaky pen, a missed subway, spilled coffee-takes on a far more negative tone. If the individual is feeling strong, such annoyances may be easily shrugged off or simply pass unnoticed. During another study, people were asked to record their daily microstressors in a diary, and the results concluded, "Minor daily stresses affect well-being, not only by having separate, immediate, and direct effects on emotiona.



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