| WOMEN, MEN AND
STRESS
Just in case you missed the memo, men and women are different.
Now, after compiling data from thousands of biological and
behavioral studies of humans and animals, UCLA researchers have
identified a broad pattern that describes yet another important
difference between the sexes…how they manage stress. Not only
are their behavioral differences, these differences appear to
have their roots in biology.
FIGHT OR FLIGHT…UNIVERSAL?
I was recently interviewed by a newspaper reporter who was doing
a series on police chases. She wanted me to comment on “the
psychology of the police chase”…e.g., what happens to the
officer who is involved in a chase. (The series was
precipitated by an alleged incident of poor judgment on the part
of a patrolman in such a situation.)
I discussed the impact of the well-known “fight or flight
syndrome.” This paradigm has prevailed in the stress literature
for over 60 years. If you think back to your last extremely
stressful crisis, I’m sure you’ll recognize some of the symptoms
I described to the reporter.
In the Fight or Flight response, a series of nerve cell firings
and chemical releases prepares the body for fight or flight.
Blood is directed away from the digestive tract and toward the
muscles and limbs. Pupils dilate, sight is sharpened, and
awareness is intensified. The person becomes prepared,
physically and psychologically, for fight or flight.
In addition, the individual’s perception changes as the
environment is scanned and searched for “the enemy.” The
rational mind is bypassed and there is a move into “attack
mode.” Everything tends to be perceived as a threat. Think
about the behavior of an airport security person during a
terrorist threat, on the lookout for every possible danger.
Fear is exaggerated and the individual may overreact to the
slightest move or comment. Focus is narrowed to things that
could possibly harm.
In summary, the body goes into alarm mode, preparing to
aggressively confront or run from/avoid the danger.
You’ve been there. I have, too.
But does this widely-accepted model present a complete picture
of the stress response? The ground-breaking UCLA studies
suggest that it does not. In fact, there may be some
biologically-based gender differences that help to explain some
of the struggles men and women experience when trying to relate
with each other in stressful times.
Psychologist Dr. Shelley Taylor and her UCLA colleagues
discovered that almost all the stress studies have been
conducted on males (only 17% had women in them)…upholding
fight-or-flight as the main response to stress. However, when
they began to re-examine existing evidence from research with
animals, neuroendocrine studies, and human-based social
psychology, they found a different pattern for females.
TEND AND BEFRIEND
Females respond to stressful situations by protecting themselves
(and their young) through nurturing behaviors (‘tending”), and
by friendship, forming alliances with a larger social group
(“befriending”). In other words, the traditional
“fight-or-flight” explanation may be inaccurate when it comes to
women.
Let me describe the female’s physiological response to stress.
The female brain’s attachment/caregiving system counteracts the
metabolic activity associated with the traditional
fight-or-flight response. In other words, though females show
the same immediate hormonal and sympathetic nervous system
response to acute stress, other physical factors intervene to
make fight-or-flight less likely in women.
Animal studies show that, under stress, oxytocin is released,
enhancing relaxation and reducing fearfulness. Further, animal
and human studies show that oxytocin promotes caregiving
behavior and underlies attachment between mothers and infants.
In addition, some studies have found that mothers under the most
stress tend to become more nurturing and caring toward their
children.
Taylor explained, “Men secrete oxytocin too, but the effects of
oxytocin seem to be reduced by male hormones, so oxytocin may
have reduced effects on men’s physiology and behavior under
stress. Women, lacking dominant amounts of testosterone,
generally have higher levels of oxytocin than men.
Research also shows that, when they are stressed, females tend
to prefer being with others, especially other females, whereas
males don’t. Women are more likely to seek out and use social
support in all kinds of stressful situations, like health, work,
and relationship concerns. Injections of oxytocin produce the
same behaviors in males, but males are less likely to have
naturally occurring high levels of oxytocin.
IMPLICATIONS OF THESE FINDINGS
In a May 2000 New York Times article entitled, “Scientists Find
a Particularly Female Response to Stress,” Erica Goode reported
that the differences in how men and women respond to stress may
shed some light on why men suffer more from stress-related
illnesses and effects such as hypertension and alcohol and drug
abuse.
Others have suggested that, given the powerful link between
poorly managed stress and the development and/or worsening of
all kinds of physical ailments, these findings on gender
differences may help to explain why women generally outlive
men. The UCLA researchers say that strong social ties and the
ability to cope with stress may prolong one’s life and reduce
blood pressure, heart rate, and cholesterol.
Professor Marc Cohen, Head of the Department of Complementary
Medicine at RMIT, said isolation and depression were just as
important risk factors for heart disease as smoking, obesity,
and diabetes. He added, “Social intimacy is very important as a
way of offsetting the negative effects of stress. One of the
things that women tend to do is pop on the phone and chat to
people about it, whereas men tend to be more reserved when it
comes to their feelings. Men tend to get on the defensive, or
they flee or retreat into their cave and they don’t tend to be
as forthcoming about what’s bothering them.
CULTURAL MESSAGE
Social conditioning also plays a big part in these differences.
Girls from a young age learn to talk about what’s bothering
them. On the other hand, males tend to hear messages like…
~Big boys don’t cry…
~Be a man about it…
~Never let ‘em see you sweat…
~Real men don’t ___ (fill in the blank…
~I don’t get ulcers…I give them!”
Could it be true that we’ve done males a huge disservice,
robbing them of societal permission to use valuable coping
strategies that can make them healthier…emotionally,
relationally, and physically?
OTHER STRESS-RELATED GENDER FACTOIDS
~ Exercise seems to benefit heart health more for women than
men. Research at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center in
Chicago found that, in women, every one-point increase in
fitness level resulted in a 17-percent decrease in overall risk
of death over the next eight years. For men, only about an 8
percent decrease in deaths resulted from roughly the same level
of fitness improvement.
~Work is a bigger source of stress for men (48 percent) than
women (32 percent). (National Consumers League 2003 study)
~Family is a greater source of stress among women than men (37
percent vs. 21 percent). (National Consumers League 2003 study)
~Despite the data on the benefits of “tend and befriend”, women
seem to be perceiving that they are suffering more. Sixty-two
percent of those who experience stress say that it’s at a level
higher than they would like it to be (vs. 51 percent of men).
Women are more likely than men to have experienced headaches as
a result of stress (67 percent vs. 53 percent.) (National
Consumers League 2003 study)
~Women are more sensitive to negative marital interactions than
men, according to an Ohio State University study by Janice
Kiecolt-Glaser, professor of psychology, and her husband, Ronald
Glaser. When married couples were asked to spend 30 videotaped
and physically-monitored minutes discussing an area of
disagreement, women showed a faster and more enduring response
to hostility. Women’s stress hormones rose more sharply and
stayed up longer than men’s. Women also showed a lowering of
certain aspects of immune function.
~In a follow-up study, the Ohio team found that women whose
stress hormones had risen the highest during the earlier phase
of the study were the most likely to get divorced. The
researchers said that this could not be chalked up to
over-reacting, or to some female hypersensitivity to stress in
general because in other non-relational situations designed to
induce stress in the lab, men showed larger increases in stress
than women. In other words, in a marriage, women are actually
more accurate judges of what’s going on emotionally. It appears,
then, that relationships can be both a stress buffer and a
stress-maker for women.
IS GENDER DESTINY?
No, we are discussing tendencies, not absolutes. There is wide
variability among individuals of both sexes. And, as you can
see from the studies I’ve cited, the impact of various responses
can be mixed.
Here’s the bottom line…
All humans, male and female, have the task of using their
natural strengths, as well as learning other responses that may
be more effective in various contexts. You can learn
stress-relieving skills and gain comfort with them as you
practice them in emotionally safe environments.
You don’t have to “go with the gut.” No matter what your gender,
you can stop, think, and choose.
Your body, your mind, your emotions, and the people you love
will thank you for it.
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