If there is one constant in the world today it is stress. The elevated stress levels for just about everyone these days seems like a simple fact of life that we can’t do anything about. However, some recent research has begun to take a serious look at how stress affects the brain and how it may lead to serious mental and emotional disorders.
The research was conducted at the Rotman Istitute at Baycrest Health Sciences found that stress not only permeates every facet of life but, if left untreated, can develop into serious and long lasting mental illness. The end result, the researchers declared, can be depression, and even dementia, if some manner of work-life balance can’t be achieved.
When studying the part of the human brain that reacts to fear, continuous stress and heightened anxiety, the scientists discovered what they called an “extensive overlap” in the neuro circuits of the brain. The brain becomes overwhelmed by these things and begins to develop certain responses and conditions as a result.
Stress has become an overwhelming normality for most people over and above just what may be considered as “normal” kinds of stresses. It is when people allow stress to integrate into their everyday life and the very fiber of their being, that it can cause untold amounts of physical and emotional damage. It can get to the point where people are barely able to function which just compounds the stress levels and affects everything in their lives from their relationships to their work to their actual brain function.