10/07/2025
Do you regularly find yourself feeling exhausted, wound up and on edge, even after you’ve tackled that demanding work project or finally got the children settled?
You’re not going mad – you might simply have an incomplete stress cycle.
Understanding the difference between stressors and stress is crucial for working parents in addressing potential burnout.
A stressor is the thing that causes your stress – whether it’s external like a crying baby, looming deadline, sick parent, sitting in traffic, or an internal feeling like your own assumptions, expectations, fears, or anger.
Stress, however, is your body’s physical and emotional response to that situation. It’s the racing heart, tense shoulders, and that feeling of being constantly “switched on” – your body’s ancient fight, flight, or freeze response activated by modern-day challenges.
Here’s what many of us don’t realise: removing the stressor doesn’t automatically switch off the stress response. Your body might still be stuck in fight-or-flight mode long after the crisis has passed. This happens because we haven’t completed what researchers call the “stress cycle.”
Read this article full of stress reducing tips here https://www.careeringintomotherhood.com/complete-your-stress-cycle-rachel-stern/
Do you regularly find yourself feeling exhausted, wound up and on edge, even after you’ve tackled that demanding work project or finally got the children settled?
You’re not going mad – you might simply have an incomplete stress cycle.
Understanding the difference between stressors and stress is crucial for working parents in addressing potential burnout.
A stressor is the thing that causes your stress – whether it’s external like a crying baby, looming deadline, sick parent, sitting in traffic, or an internal feeling like your own assumptions, expectations, fears, or anger.
Stress, however, is your body’s physical and emotional response to that situation. It’s the racing heart, tense shoulders, and that feeling of being constantly “switched on” – your body’s ancient fight, flight, or freeze response activated by modern-day challenges.
Here’s what many of us don’t realise: removing the stressor doesn’t automatically switch off the stress response. Your body might still be stuck in fight-or-flight mode long after the crisis has passed. This happens because we haven’t completed what researchers call the “stress cycle.”
Find out all about what you can do to address and minimise the impact of stress in this brilliant post today by Rachel Stern, The Parental Burnout Coach , and see our website for the free article.