What is the definition of stress?!


Question: Life comes with little problems for everyone. With school or work or family. Sometimes it can be a little to much. That's when people become stressed out. Not everyone shows it in the same way-- some people have headaches, while others may find it hard to sleep.Stree is basically when your emotions are stretched to there limit. Luckily there are ways to deal with stress besides emotional. The word stress also has a science and language meaning that are related to pressure, strain or emphasis


Answers: Life comes with little problems for everyone. With school or work or family. Sometimes it can be a little to much. That's when people become stressed out. Not everyone shows it in the same way-- some people have headaches, while others may find it hard to sleep.Stree is basically when your emotions are stretched to there limit. Luckily there are ways to deal with stress besides emotional. The word stress also has a science and language meaning that are related to pressure, strain or emphasis

3 kids under the age of 3.

Dealing with Optus.

Stress is the condition that results when person-environment transactions lead the individual to perceive a discrepancy, whether real or not, between the demands of a situation and the resources of the person's biological, psychological or social systems.

In medical terms, stress is the disruption of homeostasis through physical or psychological stimuli. Stressful stimuli can be mental, physiological, anatomical or physical[1] reactions. The term 'stress' in this context was coined by Austro-Canadian endocrinologist Hans Selye, who defined the General Adaptation Syndrome or GAS paradigm in 1936.

Force divided by Area.

this

1. importance or significance attached to a thing; emphasis: to lay stress upon good manners.
2. Phonetics. emphasis in the form of prominent relative loudness of a syllable or a word as a result of special effort in utterance.
3. Prosody. accent or emphasis on syllables in a metrical pattern; beat.
4. emphasis in melody, rhythm, etc.; beat.
5. the physical pressure, pull, or other force exerted on one thing by another; strain.
6. Mechanics.
a. the action on a body of any system of balanced forces whereby strain or deformation results.
b. the amount of stress, usually measured in pounds per square inch or in pascals.
c. a load, force, or system of forces producing a strain.
d. the internal resistance or reaction of an elastic body to the external forces applied to it.
e. the ratio of force to area.
7. Physiology. a specific response by the body to a stimulus, as fear or pain, that disturbs or interferes with the normal physiological equilibrium of an organism.
8. physical, mental, or emotional strain or tension: Worry over his job and his wife's health put him under a great stress.
9. a situation, occurrence, or factor causing this: The stress of being trapped in the elevator gave him a pounding headache.
10. Archaic. strong or straining exertion.
–verb (used with object)
11. to lay stress on; emphasize.
12. Phonetics. to pronounce (a syllable or a word) with prominent loudness: Stress the first syllable of “runner.” Stress the second word in “put up with.” Compare accent (def. 18).
13. to subject to stress or strain.
14. Mechanics. to subject to stress.

The frustration that comes when one part of the brain overrides another part's urge to choke to death someone that dearly deserves it.

Living in stress is better than living in prison, though.

me

my routine



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