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STRESS
- What is happening to you
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It is
useful to understand what is happening to you….
When you
experience stress or danger, the body releases a cocktail of hormones
into your system including Adrenaline and Cortisol – generally known as
the two key ‘stress hormones’.
This is a
natural response mechanism which has evolved to prepare the body for a
stressful event, intended for ‘fight or flight’, or in this case –
competition.
Adrenaline works on the short term, whilst Cortisol has greater momentum
and works on the longer term.
Adrenaline
As
unusually high levels of
stress hormones
build in your system the sensation of ‘butterflies’ can sometimes be
felt in the stomach, trembling
and a cold clammy
sensation in the hands.
Do not be concerned about or fight this feeling.
If you learn to
welcome the sensation it can actually feel quite pleasant and will,
oddly enough, reduce the feeling of tension.
The fact
it is happening confirms the presence of an essential component – your
excitement about the forthcoming event.
It is
however something you should learn to control. Overexcitement or intense
anticipation will over-stimulate the release which varies in level
between individuals.
Adrenalin
(a hormone secreted by the adrenal glands situated on the kidneys) is a
neurotransmitter, affecting specific parts of your body.
-
Senses
become more acute
-
heart
rate and blood circulation increases
-
Glucose
and energy reserves are mobilized
-
Muscle
activity is stimulated, often causing tightening
This can
all be quite useful if your sport requires speed and strength (a boxer,
sprinter or weightlifter might rely on it), but if your sport requires
you to stay physically relaxed and/or demands concentration over
prolonged periods it can become a problem if you fail to control it
properly.
Your mood
will affect levels of Adrenalin released into your system. This is why
it’s important to be in control of your emotions.
If you
are prone to getting cross when things don’t work out, you get stressed.
You have probably heard the saying ‘don’t get up tight’. Getting
‘up tight’ refers to stress causing a burst of Adrenalin being released
into your system
resulting in muscles becoming tight.
Too much is obviously not a good thing if your sport demands you stay
physically relaxed!
(Ways to relax when you are stressed)
Cortisol
Cortisol is also
released into your system from the Adrenal Cortex at the same time as
Adrenaline.
Just as your
levels of adrenaline start coming down, so rises the amount of cortisol
flowing through your veins. Cortisol has a much greater momentum than
adrenaline, which means that even though it builds up slowly, levels
take a long time to go back to normal. Should you constantly engage
in activities which require adrenaline, your levels of cortisol increase
proportionally. You could think of the amount of cortisol in your system
as an average of your recent levels of adrenaline.

Together
with the rise of cortisol and the decrease of adrenaline, comes the
potential for the nasty side-effects of the stress hormones. Depression,
anxiousness, and negativity are symptoms that may be experienced. This
is perhaps one of the significant features of stress which flies against
common sense – you only feel its bad aspects when your body is
stressing down and progressing towards a more relaxed state. When
you are building up on adrenaline, in effect stressing up, you
might even be feeling good! This explains what is popularly known as the
adrenaline rush and the consequent adrenaline crash.
Higher and more
prolonged levels of Cortisol in the bloodstream can have other
undesirable effects.
Having too
much cortisol flowing through your veins has another nasty side-effect:
the recovery time from any adrenaline surge increases. In a sense, the
relationship between adrenaline and cortisol goes both ways: the
adrenaline curve influences the cortisol curve, and vice-versa.
Chronic
over-secretion of stress hormones adversely affects brain function,
especially memory. Too much cortisol can prevent the brain from laying
down a new memory, or from accessing those that already exist.
Excessive cortisol can
make it difficult to think or retrieve long-term memories. That's why
people get befuddled and confused in a severe crisis. Their mind goes
blank because "the lines are down." They can't remember where the fire
exit is, for example.
An exam or quiz might be considered another
useful illustration of this effect. Ever been into the exam hall to find
your mind has suddenly gone blank? This is likely to be the effect of a
high level of stress. Worry about how well you will do or a desperation
to pass has caused an oversecretion of hormones resulting in difficulty
accessing memory.
How often have you watched a quiz show on TV
and heard a contestant say "...I can answer all the questions when I
watch the program at home, but it's so much more difficult in real
life". In reality it is only the way the contestant perceives the event
that has changed. At home it really doesn't matter if you blurt out the
wrong answer, so an air of relaxation prevails. In the studio the goal
posts seem to move. This is it, the real deal, your chance to show the
nation how smart you are and run off with the big cash prize. The
contestant is now under scrutiny and fun gives way to competitive
tension. When asked a question a competitor can have worked themselves
up so much that every day common knowledge like "What K would you boil
water in?" (answer: Kettle) can come out as Saucepan! The brain has
become unable to compute the question and retrieve a known fact from
memory.
Stress
hormones divert blood glucose to exercising muscles, therefore the
amount of glucose – hence energy – that reaches the brain’s
hippocampus
is diminished. This creates the energy crisis in the hippocampus which
compromises its ability to create new memories or access the old. This
could be why getting cross (stressed) after a bad shot is a stupid idea.
If the brain is unable to generate any meaningful memory of the event,
how can you analyse the cause or avoid making the same mistake again?
This could be one reason for making ‘stupid’ or repetitive mistakes.
An example might be
leaving home in a hurry because you are late. Being late is a common
cause of stress. Have you ever been rushing around, to find when you
arrive at your destination you have forgotten something you meant to
take? Stress hormones, and their ability to seriously affect the
creation of, or access to memory, may have either prevented you from
creating or recalling the thing you wanted to remember.
The consequence of
long-term stress is maintained exposure to high levels of Cortisol in
your system. This results in long-term damage to brain cells and
impaired ability to create or retrieve memory. This is why short-term
memory is usually the first casualty of age-related memory loss
resulting from a lifetime of stress, and has been associated with
Alzheimer's disease and Dementia.
Another symptom of
chronic stress is suppression of the immune system. Sufferers are more
prone to sickness than a relaxed person. Symptoms may include:
§
Higher
blood pressure
§
Suppressed thyroid function
§
Blood
sugar imbalance
§
Lowered
immunity and other health consequences
§
Impaired
mental and physical performance
Tiredness
As
mentioned, glucose and energy reserves are mobilised when Adrenaline is
released into your system. It therefore follows that unless you learn to
control this release by controlling your mental state you will also be
burning energy unnecessarily. The effect of wasting energy will only
become apparent later in your day.
Tiredness
demands adrenaline, but as your adrenaline and energy levels run low you
feel more tired. You enter a vicious circle.
Physical
tiredness affects our ability to think clearly.
-
When you
fail to think clearly you make mistakes
-
When you
make mistakes you can get stressed or cross
-
When you
get cross you waste more energy.

You may
see how tiredness can cause you to ‘self-destruct’ as you begin the
downward spiral.
A
relationship exists between fitness and the mental game. A physically
fit person will not tire as quickly and therefore has the capacity to
think more effectively for longer.
Tiredness
is a big problem to the sportsperson. Whilst you can train to become
physically stronger and fitter, this can be negated if you unwittingly
burn up energy through poor control of your emotions.
Concentration has been likened to a bottle of water in another section.
Consider your reserves of Adrenalin and energy in much the same way.
Drink sensibly so you’re not dry before the end of the day!
Consider
A pilot
of an aircraft commits to achieving take-off and applies full trust.
Shortly after take-off, when optimum cruising airspeed is achieved,
throttle settings are backed-off to conserve fuel and prevent engine
overheat. The Pilot knows if he maintains full throttle not only will he
cause damage to his engines, will burn fuel inefficiently and might also run out of fuel before the
destination.
Like the
fuel on the aircraft, Adrenaline is a limited resource in your body.
Whilst you need it to get you up to a heightened state, you need to be
able to throttle back to prevent burnout once optimum height has been
achieved.
A
poignant example:
Tiredness
can be used as a primary instrument during interrogation. Captured
soldiers under interrogation are deprived of sleep – sometimes for days
at a time. Their resolve to withhold information is gradually weakened
as their energy levels fall and their thought processes become impaired
through stress. Whilst a somewhat extreme example, you might appreciate
how difficult it is to function with a tired mind.
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