Mind the Gap: Coping with Stress in the Modern World explores the stress of modern life and how thoughts and feelings can both create and bridge the gap between what we have and what we want. Unlike standard textbooks in the field that tend to take a theoretical approach to stress, this conversational, accessible book focuses on helping readers identify and understand the sources of stress in their life from a practical perspective. The text explores how stress is generated in the brain and body, and provides realistic suggestions for learning to manage these responses. Topics include:
- Technology and Stress
- The Media and Stress
- Time as a Source of Stress
- Diet, Exercise, and Stress
- Stress, Health, and Aging
- Social Support and Stress
- The Four Corners of Stress
Each chapter begins with an outline of key points and end with a set of “What Do You Think?” questions designed to give readers the opportunity to reflect on what they have learned and to develop a personal stress management strategy.
Mind the Gap can be used in courses dealing with stress management, health psychology, and personal growth, or simply as a means for individuals to understand and manage their own stress.
Mary McNaughton-Cassill earned her Ph.D. in psychology through the Joint Doctoral Clinical Program at the University of California, San Diego and San Diego State University. A recognized authority on stress, Dr. McNaughton-Cassill is now a professor of clinical psychology at the University of Texas, San Antonio and a licensed psychologist in the state of Texas. Her writing has appeared in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, and Marriage and Family Review. Dr. McNaughton-Cassill's current research interests include the impact of stress and coping on physical and psychological well-being.