And we think that the regulation of those cells that results in behaving as if we are in a chronic
stress kind of environment is explained by this field that's burgeoning right now that's referred to as epigenetics that talks about the programming of our cells.
Not exact matches
Like the late Jobs, more and more leaders are adapting this
kind of «mindfulness» into their work
environment to help decrease
stress while boosting their mental state.
The scientist Lynn White, for example, has
stressed the connection
of this idea to the
kind of values that have led to our despoliation
of the
environment.
One thing that we've learned, especially from research in neuroscience over the past decade or so, is that when children grow up in
environments of intense and chronic
stress — what doctors call «toxic
stress» — it makes it very difficult for them to develop the
kinds of skills that they need to succeed.
Perceived
stress, meanwhile, is almost exclusively related to the
kind of environment a person was raised in, not genetics or caregiver status, he said.
What I do believe is that people have allergies because they put their bodies through a certain level
of stress (through food, work, relationships or their physical
environment) to such an extent that the immune system can not cope with the LATENT dislike
of the body
of a particular
kind of food.
Hypoglycemic incidents in Yorkie puppies are always preceded by a
stress of some
kind, such as: weaning, teething, vaccinations, a change in
environment, shipping, over-handling, cold temperatures, intestinal parasites, infections, etc..
Many dogs develop these
kinds of behaviors as a result
of past scary experiences,
stress in a recent shelter
environment, or their natural inherited or breed specific traits; not always stemming from past abuse.
Nick Mansfield has created an
environment where sensory inputs produce the same
kinds of emotions, anxiety, heightened sensitivity, and general
stress that is felt by those living with PTSD, offering the viewer a unique look into a world often unexplored and misunderstood by the general public, raising awareness
of what the world behind the curtain
of PTSD looks and feels like
Ryerson also
stresses that the university's «innovative and entrepreneurial»
environment, including the Legal Innovation Zone legal incubator and the Law Practice Program, will help foster a different
kind of law school.
But this
kind of mobile monitoring also helps catch two types
of people who are easily misdiagnosed — those with «white coat» syndrome, who get nervous in doctor's offices and experience artificially high blood pressure at precisely the time
of monitoring (a condition that may affect as many as 30 percent
of people thought to be hypertensive), and those who react oppositely, with lower readings either because they take their meds before going to the doctor's or because they experience more
stress in their home
environment.
Environments where the impact
of daily
stress, particularly if compounded by exposure to violence or mental illness in the family, particularly maternal depression, which is very common, or substance abuse, that level
of stress, that
kind of toxic
stress in the
environment of a young child, is actually interfering with the development
of the brain.
Unsurprisingly, that
kind of attitude makes partners feel worthless, invisible, unloved and undervalued, apart from the physical
stress that a negative emotional
environment can cause.