Y11W28VC Good stress, bad stress
Sometimes stress sharpens you. You write better under a deadline, perform better in competition, think more clearly when something matters. Other times, stress wears you down — disrupts sleep, blunts concentration, makes everything harder. The difference between these two kinds of stress isn't about intensity. It's about something else. This week's article examines what good stress and bad stress actually are, and how to tell which you're dealing with.
Core Vocabulary
acute
/əˈkjuːt/|a·cute
adjective
Sharp and short-lived; reaching a high level of intensity quickly and lasting a brief time.
Word Breakdown: Latin: acutus = sharpened, from acuere = to sharpen; acus = needle
Word family: acutely (adv), acuteness (n)
Synonyms: sharp, intense, severe, immediate
Collocations: acute stress, acute pain, acute awareness, acute crisis
Example: An acute stress response — the surge of alertness before a difficult exam — can actually sharpen focus and improve performance.
chronic
/ˈkrɒnɪk/|chron·ic
adjective
Persisting over a long period; recurring or continuous rather than short-lived.
Word Breakdown: Greek: chronos = time; chronikos = relating to time → lasting through time
Word family: chronically (adv), chronicity (n)
Synonyms: persistent, ongoing, long-term, prolonged
Collocations: chronic stress, chronic illness, chronic pain, chronic condition
Example: Chronic stress — the kind that builds from financial insecurity, a difficult relationship, or a threatening work environment — operates very differently from its acute counterpart.
physiological
/ˌfɪziəˈlɒdʒɪkl/|phys·i·o·log·i·cal
adjective
Relating to the way living organisms function; concerning the physical processes of the body.
Word Breakdown: Greek: physis = nature + logos = study + -ical = adjective suffix; "relating to the study of nature/body function"
Word family: physiology (n), physiologist (n), physiologically (adv)
Synonyms: bodily, biological, somatic, physical
Collocations: physiological response, physiological arousal, physiological effects, physiological stress
Example: The physiological changes during an acute stress response — increased heart rate, heightened attention, faster breathing — are the body mobilising its resources.
mobilise
/ˈməʊbɪlaɪz/|mo·bi·lise
verb
To put resources, people, or systems into active use; to prepare and organise for action.
Word Breakdown: French: mobiliser; from Latin: mobilis = moveable; to make moveable, to put in motion
Word family: mobilisation (n), mobile (adj)
Synonyms: activate, deploy, prepare, galvanise
Collocations: mobilise resources, mobilise the body, mobilise energy, mobilise forces
Example: When a threat is perceived, the HPA axis mobilises the body's resources in seconds — releasing hormones that shift blood and energy toward the muscles.
reframe
/ˌriːˈfreɪm/|re·frame
verb
To interpret something in a different, usually more helpful, way; to change the perspective or meaning applied to an experience.
Word Breakdown: re- (again/differently) + frame (to set within a context or border)
Word family: reframing (n/gerund)
Synonyms: reinterpret, reconsider, shift perspective, reconceive
Collocations: reframe the situation, reframe stress, reframe a challenge, reframe a failure
Example: Research by Alison Wood Brooks suggests that reframing pre-performance anxiety as excitement — rather than nervousness — genuinely improves performance.
wear
/weə/|wear
verb (here: to erode)
To gradually deteriorate or damage through sustained use or friction; here used figuratively for the effect of chronic stress on the body.
Word Breakdown: Old English: werian = to use, bear; extended to include gradual erosion through friction
Word family: wear (n), worn (adj), wearing (adj)
Synonyms: erode, deteriorate, break down, exhaust
Collocations: wear down, wear out, wear away, begin to wear
Example: Chronic stress does not produce a single dramatic breakdown — it wears the body down gradually, like water wearing through stone.
modulate
/ˈmɒdjʊleɪt/|mod·u·late
verb
To adjust the level, intensity, or character of something; to regulate within a range.
Word Breakdown: Latin: modulari = to measure, regulate; modulus = a small measure
Word family: modulation (n), modulator (n)
Synonyms: adjust, regulate, vary, calibrate
Collocations: modulate the response, modulate stress levels, modulate output, modulate intensity
Example: The goal of stress management is not to eliminate stress but to modulate it — keeping the response proportionate to the actual threat.
cumulative
/ˈkjuːmjʊlətɪv/|cu·mu·la·tive
adjective
Increasing or building up through successive additions; growing in intensity or effect over time.
Word Breakdown: Latin: cumulare = to heap up; cumulus = a heap
Word family: accumulate (vb), accumulation (n), cumulatively (adv)
Synonyms: accumulating, compounding, building, progressive
Collocations: cumulative stress, cumulative effect, cumulative damage, cumulative burden
Example: The cumulative burden of chronic stress — built over months of unrelieved pressure — is far more damaging than a single acute event.
Technical Terms
acute stress
/əˈkjuːt strɛs/|a·cute stress
noun phrase
the short-term fight-or-flight response
Synonyms: short-term stress, immediate stress response, episodic stress
Collocations: experience acute stress, acute stress response, acute stress versus chronic stress
Example: Acute stress is the body's precisely calibrated response to immediate threat — mobilising resources rapidly and then disengaging once the threat passes, a mechanism that is adaptive when the stressor is real and time-limited.
chronic stress
/ˈkrɒnɪk strɛs/|chron·ic stress
noun phrase
long-term physiological activation
Synonyms: sustained stress, prolonged stress exposure, persistent stress load
Collocations: suffer from chronic stress, chronic stress damages health, chronic stress and cortisol
Example: Chronic stress — the state of sustained activation of the stress response without adequate recovery — progressively damages the body in ways that acute stress does not, because the systems designed for short bursts were never intended to run continuously.
cortisol
/ˈkɔːtɪzɒl/|cor·ti·sol
noun
the main hormone released during the stress response
Synonyms: stress hormone, glucocorticoid, adrenal stress signal
Collocations: elevated cortisol, cortisol levels, cortisol and the HPA axis
Example: Cortisol's role in the stress response is to mobilise energy by raising blood sugar, suppressing functions not needed in a crisis — including the immune system — which is why chronically elevated cortisol is associated with increased susceptibility to illness.
HPA axis
/ˌeɪtʃ piː ˈeɪ ˈæksɪs/|HPA ax·is
noun phrase
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the central stress-response system
Synonyms: hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, stress regulation system, neuroendocrine stress pathway
Collocations: HPA axis activation, regulate the HPA axis, HPA axis dysregulation
Example: The HPA axis orchestrates the hormonal stress response — the hypothalamus signals the pituitary, which signals the adrenal glands to release cortisol — a cascade that is efficient and precise in acute situations but costly when activated chronically.
allostatic load
/ˌæləˈstætɪk ləʊd/|al·lo·stat·ic load
noun phrase
McEwen's term for the cumulative wear and tear of chronic stress
Synonyms: cumulative stress burden, wear-and-tear cost, physiological cost of stress
Collocations: allostatic load increases, measure allostatic load, high allostatic load
Example: Allostatic load captures the cumulative physiological cost of adapting repeatedly to stress — the total wear on the body that accumulates across months and years of chronic activation, independent of whether any single stressor was severe.
Figurative Phrases
fight-or-flight
the acute stress response
Etymology/Type: idiom; often neither fight nor flight occurs literally
Synonyms: acute stress response, survival activation, emergency mobilisation
Example: The fight-or-flight response evolved to meet threats that were physical, brief, and resolved by action — which is why it is so poorly suited to the sustained cognitive stressors of modern working life, where neither fighting nor fleeing is available.
wear you down
gradually deplete
Etymology/Type: figurative 'wear', not physical
Synonyms: gradually exhaust, erode resilience over time, deplete through sustained pressure
Example: Chronic stress wears you down not through any single overwhelming event but through the cumulative effect of sustained activation — the physiological systems never returning fully to baseline before the next demand arrives.
on edge
in a state of heightened anxiety
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal edge
Synonyms: in a state of tension, nervous and reactive, easily startled or irritated
Example: People living under chronic stress typically feel on edge in the absence of any specific threat — the nervous system calibrated for a danger level that no longer matches the actual environment but that the body has learned to expect.
running on empty
depleted
Etymology/Type: idiom from fuel tanks
Synonyms: operating without reserves, depleted of resources, functioning without adequate rest
Example: Running on empty describes the state of allostatic overload — the body continuing to function but without the physiological reserves that buffer the effects of the next stressor, making recovery from each new demand progressively slower.
take it in stride
handle without disruption
Etymology/Type: idiom; not literal striding
Synonyms: handle calmly, manage without being disrupted, absorb without overreacting
Example: People with high stress resilience take setbacks in stride not because they are unaffected but because their nervous system recovers rapidly — the return to baseline quick enough that the next challenge does not arrive before the previous one has been processed.
the tipping point
the moment where accumulation becomes change
Etymology/Type: metaphor, not literal tipping
Synonyms: the threshold at which a change becomes irreversible, the critical point of no return, the moment a cumulative process crosses a threshold
Example: Allostatic load has a tipping point — a level of accumulated stress burden beyond which the body's ability to restore equilibrium becomes compromised, and what had been manageable stress begins to produce measurable pathological change.
Confusing Words
acute vs chronic
In medical and psychological contexts, these terms describe opposite ends of a spectrum of duration and onset — a distinction that matters enormously for understanding the mechanism and consequences of stress.
- acute — sudden in onset, severe in intensity, and brief in duration. An acute condition comes on sharply and is either resolved or resolves itself relatively quickly. Acute stress is the body's immediate response to a specific threat — intense, mobilising, and designed to be temporary.
- chronic — long-lasting, persistent, and recurring over an extended period. A chronic condition endures without resolution, often as a permanent or recurring feature of a person's state. Chronic stress is characterised not by intensity but by relentlessness — the activation that never fully deactivates.
If describing a condition that is sudden, intense, and time-limited, use acute. If describing a condition that is persistent, recurring, and extended in duration, use chronic.
physiological vs psychological
These words describe two domains of human experience — bodily and mental — whose apparent separateness is increasingly challenged by research showing that the two systems are deeply integrated.
- physiological — relating to the physical and chemical processes of the body; pertaining to how biological systems function. Physiological stress responses involve measurable changes in heart rate, cortisol levels, and immune function. Physiological refers to the body's mechanisms, not the mind's experience.
- psychological — relating to the mind, emotions, and behaviour; pertaining to how mental processes function. Psychological stress is experienced as worry, anxiety, or overwhelm. The distinction matters in research because physiological and psychological measures of stress can diverge — a person can show elevated cortisol without feeling stressed, or feel anxious with normal biomarkers.
If referring to processes of the body — hormonal, neural, cardiovascular — use physiological. If referring to processes of the mind — cognitive, emotional, behavioural — use psychological.
mobilise vs mobile
These near-homonyms share a root in the Latin mobilis but serve different grammatical functions and describe different things — one is a verb describing an action, the other an adjective describing a state.
- mobilise — to organise, activate, or set in motion for a purpose; to ready for deployment. The HPA axis mobilises resources in response to stress — the verb capturing the active coordination of systems that the noun 'mobilisation' names. Mobilise always implies deliberate or purposive activation.
- mobile — able to move, or being in motion; not fixed in place. A mobile unit can move; a mobile phone moves with its owner; a person who is mobile can get around independently. Mobile describes the capacity for movement rather than the act of organising something for deployment.
If describing the act of activating, organising, or deploying resources toward a purpose, use mobilise. If describing the quality of being capable of movement or not fixed in place, use mobile.
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