A study examining more than 7000 civil servants concluded that those people who feel that their health is affected "a lot or extremely" by stress have
double the risk of having a heart attack or dying from it
compared with those who does not feel that stress has an effect on their health. There can be two possible reasons for that.
First and more viable explanation for doctors is that people may have an
ability to feel the limits of their bodies and have an innate alarm
system that alerts when the owner of that body should stop undertaking
more stress. Second, people who are worried about living a stressful life can multiply the burden of stress by constantly focusing on it. This may induce negative feelings and attitudes which indeed may lead to a deteriorating health. At the same time those people who experience stress but are not anxious about its effects on their well-being may have a higher chance of getting away without negative consequences.
In either case the interconnectedness of body and mind seems obvious. Advocates of relaxation and meditation techniques usually emphasize that if you cannot solve a problem in your life, at least try not to focus on it all the time, you are still better off with that. These new findings may prove the validity of this concept.
Read more about the research here.
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