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Here's an idea that not enough people are talking about.
Almost everything we're taught about reducing stress is really about coping.
Catch the spiral. Slow the breath. Open the app that talks you down on the drive home. Get through the day. Do it again tomorrow.
I've leaned on every bit of it. It's useful, sure. But I noticed something.
None of it changes how much it takes to rattle you in the first place.
It just gets you better at recovering after you’ve already been rattled.
Once you see it, you can’t unsee it. And it’s too important to ignore.
You see, we all have a threshold. A line. Cross it, and your patience goes right out the window. Your brain starts grabbing for fast relief - even if that relief comes at the cost of your long-term goals.
Coping tools live on the far side of that line, walking you back. The popular apps on your phone, for example, are good at that. They can calm you down for an hour or two.
But before you know it, you're back where you started. Overwhelmed, reaching for your coping mechanism.
So here’s an idea that could change the way you think about stress:
What if you could move the line?
What if you could improve the threshold itself?
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