📌 Snapshot
- Defines stress as the pattern of responses an organism makes to a stimulus event that disturbs equilibrium and exceeds a person's ability to cope; distinguishes eustress (peak-performance level) from distress (wear-and-tear).
- Builds on Lazarus's cognitive-appraisal theory (primary and secondary appraisal) and lists three types of stress — physical/environmental, psychological, social — plus four sources: life events, hassles, traumatic events, and major stressors.
- Catalogues four effects of stress — emotional, physiological, cognitive, behavioural — and links chronic stress to immune-system suppression via psychoneuroimmunology.
- Explains Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome (alarm → resistance → exhaustion) and Endler-Parker's three coping strategies (task-, emotion-, avoidance-oriented), alongside Lazarus-Folkman's problem-focused vs emotion-focused dichotomy.
- Closes with life skills, stress-management techniques (relaxation, meditation, biofeedback, creative visualisation, cognitive-behavioural, exercise) and Kobasa's "three Cs" of hardiness — commitment, control, challenge — as foundations of positive health.
📖 Detailed Notes
2.1 Core concepts
The word stress comes from two Latin roots — strictus (meaning tight or narrow) and stringere (the verb meaning to tighten) — both reflecting feelings of constriction (NCERT §Nature of Stress, p. 52). When external pressures (called stressors) act on a person, the reaction they produce is technically called strain. Hans Selye, often considered the father of modern stress research, defined stress as the "non-specific response of the body to any demand"; later researchers softened this view, arguing that different stressors actually produce different reaction patterns. NCERT presents stress as a dynamic cognitive state — a disruption in homeostasis that demands restoration — and emphasises that the perception of stress depends on Richard Lazarus's cognitive appraisal of events and resources rather than on objective severity alone. Eustress (the level of stress that helps achieve peak performance) is distinct from distress (the wear-and-tear form of stress) (NCERT pp. 51-52).
The Lazarus model identifies two stages of appraisal. Primary appraisal assesses an event as positive, neutral or negative — and, if negative, as a harm (damage already done), a threat (potential future damage) or a challenge (opportunity for growth). Secondary appraisal is the assessment of one's coping abilities and resources to meet the harm, threat or challenge (NCERT §Nature of Stress, p. 53). Stress also varies on four dimensions: intensity (low vs high), duration (short-term vs long-term), complexity (simple vs complex) and predictability (unexpected vs predictable). More intense, prolonged, complex and unanticipated stressors generally produce worse consequences (NCERT p. 54).
The physiological stress response runs through two hypothalamus-driven pathways. Pathway 1 activates the autonomic nervous system, which signals the adrenal gland to release catecholamines (epinephrine and norepinephrine) — the chemistry of the classical fight-or-flight reaction. Pathway 2 activates the pituitary gland, which triggers release of corticosteroids (especially cortisol) that provide energy by mobilising stored fuels (NCERT §Nature of Stress, p. 54). The two glands and the two chemical families are a recurring NTA matching item.
NCERT lists three types of stress (NCERT §Types of Stress, pp. 55-56). Physical and environmental stress arises from overexertion, pollution, natural disasters and similar conditions. Psychological stress arises from one's own mind — frustration, conflicts, internal pressures and social pressures internalised by the person. Social stress arises from external interactions with others — bereavement, strained relationships, social isolation. The sources of stress include major life events (assessed by Holmes and Rahe's life-event scale, and in India by Singh, Kaur and Kaur's Presumptive Stressful Life Events Scale of 51 items in which "death of spouse" carries the highest weight of 95), daily hassles and acute traumatic events (NCERT pp. 56-57; Box 3.1).
Stress affects the person on four dimensions (NCERT §Effects of Stress, pp. 57-58): emotional (mood swings, irritability, anxiety), physiological (raised heart rate, blood pressure, headaches), cognitive (mental overload, poor concentration, reduced short-term memory) and behavioural (changes in diet, sleep disruption, increased use of stimulants). Box 3.2 (p. 58) describes examination anxiety as a form of "evaluative apprehension" — high test-anxious students experience attentional blocks and self-centred negative cognitions that further impair performance. Prolonged stress can also produce burnout — a state of physical, emotional and psychological exhaustion — and contributes to cardiovascular disease, ulcers, asthma and allergies (NCERT §Stress and Health, pp. 58-59).
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS) describes the body's response to prolonged stress in three sequential stages (NCERT §General Adaptation Syndrome, p. 59; Fig. 3.3). The alarm reaction mobilises the adrenal-pituitary-cortex system; fight-or-flight is at full alert. The resistance stage follows: the parasympathetic nervous system takes over, conserving resources for sustained coping; resistance to the original stressor is high but resistance to other stressors is lowered. Finally, the exhaustion stage depletes physiological resources, and the person becomes susceptible to stress-related illness.
Psychoneuroimmunology is the branch of science that studies links between the mind, the brain and the immune system (NCERT §Stress and the Immune System, pp. 59-60). The immune system uses leucocytes (white blood cells) that identify foreign antigens and produce antibodies. T cells destroy invaders; T-helper cells boost the immune response and are the cells attacked by HIV (producing AIDS). B cells produce antibodies, and natural killer (NK) cells combat viruses and tumours. Chronic stress reduces NK-cell cytotoxicity in highly stressed individuals — empirical evidence for stress-induced immune suppression.
Now the coping strategies. Endler and Parker distinguish three styles: task-oriented coping acts directly on the problem (gather information, plan, prioritise); emotion-oriented coping manages the emotions surrounding the stressor (hope, ventilation of feelings); and avoidance-oriented coping denies or minimises the seriousness of the situation and substitutes self-protective thoughts such as watching television (NCERT §Coping with Stress, pp. 61-62). Richard Lazarus and Susan Folkman distinguish two coping responses — problem-focused strategies that attack the problem itself by planning action, and emotion-focused strategies that try to limit emotional disruption. NCERT notes that people generally use problem-focused coping more often. Stress-management techniques include relaxation (progressive lower-to-upper body relaxation with deep breathing), meditation (yogic concentration leading to altered consciousness), biofeedback (monitoring physiological signals to gain voluntary control), creative visualisation (mental imagery of a realistic goal being achieved), Donald Meichenbaum's cognitive-behavioural stress inoculation (assessment → stress reduction → application), and regular exercise (at least four times a week, about 30 minutes a session) (NCERT pp. 62-63).
Stress management links to positive health. Life skills include assertiveness, time management, rational thinking, improving relationships, self-care and overcoming unhelpful habits such as perfectionism, avoidance and procrastination (NCERT §Life Skills, pp. 64-65). Positive health is built on a healthy body, high-quality relationships, a sense of purpose, self-regard, mastery of tasks and resilience. Diet, exercise, positive attitude, positive thinking and social support all buffer against stress (NCERT §Promoting Positive Health, pp. 65-66). Suzanne Kobasa's hardiness construct identifies three personality characteristics — the "three Cs" of commitment, control and challenge — shared by people who experience high stress but show low illness; these characteristics buffer against the negative effects of stress (NCERT p. 63). Social support has three forms: tangible (material aid), informational (advice) and emotional (reassurance of being loved and valued). Importantly, perceived support correlates with well-being but the size of one's social network does not (NCERT pp. 66-67). Box 3.3 (p. 65) introduces resilience — the capacity to "bounce back" — drawing on three internal resources: I HAVE (social and interpersonal strengths), I AM (inner strengths such as self-respect) and I CAN (problem-solving skills).
2.2 Definitions to memorise
| Term | Definition | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Stress | Pattern of responses an organism makes to a stimulus event that disturbs equilibrium and exceeds a person's ability to cope | 52 |
| Eustress | Level of stress that is good for one and helps achieve peak performance | 51–52 |
| Distress | Manifestation of stress that causes the body's wear and tear | 52 |
| Stressors | Events that cause the body to give the stress response | 52 |
| Strain | Reaction to external stressors | 52 |
| Primary appraisal | Perception of an event as positive, neutral or negative (harm/threat/challenge) | 53 |
| Secondary appraisal | Assessment of one's coping abilities and resources | 53 |
| Burnout | State of physical, emotional and psychological exhaustion due to prolonged stress | 59 |
| General Adaptation Syndrome | Selye's three-stage bodily response: alarm → resistance → exhaustion | 59 |
| Psychoneuroimmunology | Study of links between mind, brain and immune system | 59 |
| Leucocytes | White blood cells of the immune system | 59 |
| T cells | Lymphocytes that destroy invaders directly | 60 |
| T-helper cells | Lymphocytes that boost immunity; attacked by HIV → AIDS | 60 |
| B cells | Lymphocytes that produce antibodies | 60 |
| Natural killer cells | Lymphocytes that fight viruses and tumours; cytotoxicity reduced by chronic stress | 60 |
| Hardiness | Kobasa's set of beliefs — commitment, control, challenge — that buffer stress | 63 |
| Resilience | Dynamic developmental process of positive adjustment under challenging conditions | 65 |
| Coping | Dynamic situation-specific reaction to stress; constantly changing efforts to master internal/external demands | 61–62 |
| Life skills | Abilities for adaptive and positive behaviour to deal with everyday demands | 64 |
| Stress inoculation | Meichenbaum's three-step cognitive-behavioural training — assessment, stress reduction, application | 63 |
| Tangible support | Material aid form of social support | 66-67 |
| Informational support | Advice/information form of social support | 66-67 |
| Emotional support | Reassurance of being loved/valued form of social support | 66-67 |
2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember
- Fig. 3.1 — Psychological Meaning of Stress (p. 52): Cause (external/internal stressor) → Internal State (biological-psychological reactions, coping/defence) → Result (challenge overcome or illness/strain). A simple input-process-output model that frames the rest.
- Fig. 3.2 — General Model of the Stress Process (p. 53): Stressors (types + dimensions) ↔ Person Characteristics (physiological, psychological, cultural) ↔ Resources (physical, personal, social) → Stress Appraisal → four kinds of responses (physiological, behavioural, emotional, cognitive). Emphasises that appraisal mediates between stressor and response.
- Fig. 3.3 — General Adaptation Syndrome (p. 59): Graph of "level of normal resistance" dipping at the Alarm Reaction stage, rising sharply above baseline during the Resistance stage, then plunging below baseline in the Stage of Exhaustion — a visual aid to remember the GAS sequence and its rise-and-fall pattern.
- Fig. 3.4 — Relation of Stress with Illness (p. 60): Fear/Anger/Hostility → outward expressions (angry outbursts + tantrums + withdrawal + hopelessness) AND stress hormones → weakened immune system → mental or physical illness — the diagram makes the psychoneuroimmunology pathway concrete.
- Box 3.1 — Presumptive Stressful Life Events Scale (p. 56): The Indian 51-item scale by Singh, Kaur and Kaur; sample weights — death of spouse 95, personal illness 56, examination failure 43, change in sleeping habits 33; mean events per year in healthy persons ≈ 2.
2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points
- Eustress vs distress — both are stress, but eustress is helpful (peak performance) while distress causes wear and tear. NTA likes flipping these.
- Primary vs secondary appraisal — primary assesses the event (harm/threat/challenge); secondary assesses your resources. Don't reverse them.
- Hypothalamus pathways — pathway 1 uses the autonomic nervous system → adrenal gland → catecholamines; pathway 2 uses the pituitary gland → corticosteroid (cortisol). Mixing the glands is a classic trap.
- GAS stages order — alarm → resistance → exhaustion. In resistance, the parasympathetic (not sympathetic) NS takes over for cautious resource use.
- Endler-Parker (three coping strategies) vs Lazarus-Folkman (two coping responses) — don't confuse the authors or the count.
- Hardiness "three Cs" — commitment, control, challenge (Kobasa). Not "competence" or "creativity".
- Perceived support vs social network — perceived support is linked to well-being; network size is not.
- T-helper cells are attacked by HIV — students sometimes name B cells instead.
- Holmes & Rahe = international life-event scale; Singh, Kaur & Kaur = Indian adaptation. Both must be remembered separately.
- Resilience three resources — I HAVE (interpersonal), I AM (inner), I CAN (skills). NTA may pair them incorrectly.
2.5 Thinkers and theories at a glance
| Name | Theory / Contribution | Key idea | NCERT page |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hans Selye | General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS) | Three-stage bodily response — alarm reaction → resistance → exhaustion | 52, 59 |
| Richard Lazarus | Cognitive appraisal theory of stress | Stress depends on primary appraisal (event) and secondary appraisal (resources) | 52-53 |
| Lazarus & Folkman | Problem-focused vs emotion-focused coping | Two coping responses — attack the problem or regulate the emotion | 62 |
| Endler & Parker | Three coping strategies | Task-oriented, emotion-oriented, avoidance-oriented coping | 61-62 |
| Suzanne Kobasa | Hardiness (three Cs) | High-stress, low-illness people share commitment, control and challenge | 63 |
| Donald Meichenbaum | Stress inoculation training | Three-step cognitive-behavioural method — assessment, stress reduction, application | 63 |
| Holmes & Rahe | Social Readjustment Rating Scale | Life-event scale assigning numerical weights to stressful life events | 56 |
| Singh, Kaur & Kaur | Presumptive Stressful Life Events Scale | Indian 51-item adaptation; "death of spouse" weighted 95 | 56 |
🎯 Practice MCQs
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Q1. The word "stress" originates from which two Latin roots that reflect feelings of tightness and constriction?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
The text explicitly names *strictus* (meaning tight or narrow) and *stringere* (the verb meaning to tighten); the other pairings are distractors.
Q2. According to Lazarus's cognitive theory of stress, "secondary appraisal" refers to:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
Secondary appraisal is precisely the assessment of coping abilities and resources. Option A describes primary appraisal; option B is the definition of "harm" within primary appraisal.
Q3. Which of the following statements about the physiological response to stress is correct?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
Pathway 1 = autonomic NS → adrenal gland → catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine) and pathway 2 = pituitary → corticosteroid (cortisol). Option A swaps the pathway order; C and D mislabel the gland.
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Q4. Match the dimensions of stress (List I) with their meanings (List II): | List I | List II | |---|---| | (i) Intensity | (1) Short-term vs long-term | | (ii) Duration | (2) Unexpected vs predictable | | (iii) Complexity | (3) Low vs high | | (iv) Predictability | (4) Less complex vs more complex |
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
The text pairs intensity with low/high, duration with short-/long-term, complexity with less/more complex, and predictability with unexpected/predictable — directly matching option A.
Q5. The three stages of Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome occur in which order?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
The stages follow the fixed order alarm reaction → resistance → exhaustion (also illustrated in Fig. 3.3).
Q6. **Assertion (A):** Stress can cause illness by impairing the workings of the immune system. **Reason (R):** Psychoneuroimmunology studies the effects of stress on the immune system, and stress has been shown to reduce natural killer cell cytotoxicity in highly stressed individuals.
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: A
Both claims and presents reduced NK-cell cytotoxicity in stressed people as evidence for the immune-impairment effect — so R correctly explains A.
Q7. The Indian adaptation of Holmes and Rahe's life-event scale — the *Presumptive Stressful Life Events Scale* — was developed by:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
Singh, Kaur and Kaur created the 51-item Indian self-rating scale. Lazarus/Folkman gave the coping model, Endler/Parker the three coping strategies, and Kobasa the hardiness construct.
Q8. Which of the following coping strategies, as classified by Endler and Parker, involves denying or minimising the seriousness of the situation and replacing stressful thoughts with self-protective ones such as watching TV?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
Avoidance-oriented coping is defined precisely by denial/minimisation and self-protective substitutes like watching TV. Task-oriented acts directly; emotion-oriented manages feelings; problem-focused belongs to the Lazarus-Folkman dichotomy.
Q9. Recent studies by Kobasa identified three characteristics — referred to as the "three Cs" of *hardiness* — shared by people with high stress but low illness. They are:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
Hardiness consists of commitment (to work, family, hobbies), control (sense of purpose and direction), and challenge (seeing change as positive rather than threatening).
Q10. Raj, a Class XII student, has prepared a study schedule, made a revision timetable, listed his strengths and weaknesses for each subject and is reading his notes systematically before the board exam. Which coping approach best describes Raj's response?
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: C
Raj is directly attacking the source of stress through information-gathering, planning, prioritising and acting — the hallmarks of task-oriented (Endler-Parker) or problem-focused (Lazarus-Folkman) coping. Emotion-focused/oriented responses would aim to regulate feelings rather than alter the situation; avoidance would involve denial or distraction.
Q11. According to Box 3.3, resilience is built on three resources commonly remembered as:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
The three resilience resources are I HAVE (interpersonal/social), I AM (inner strengths) and I CAN (problem-solving skills) — together producing the "bounce-back" capacity.
Q12. The cognitive-behavioural stress-management technique known as "stress inoculation" was developed by:
▸ Show answer & explanation
Answer: B
Meichenbaum's stress inoculation training is a three-step cognitive-behavioural method — assessment, stress reduction and application — designed to "inoculate" the person against future stress.
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