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Most of what we’ve been taught about stress is wrong. We treat it like a toxic force to avoid at all costs—something to numb, suppress, or escape. Yet research in psychology, neuroscience, and even ancient philosophy reveals a startling truth: stress itself is not the enemy. In the right amounts and with the right mindset, good stress—or eustress—is the very fuel that drives growth, creativity, and resilience. The danger comes not from stress itself, but from misunderstanding it, mismanaging it, and letting it harden into destructive bad stress.
This book uncovers the science of how pressure shapes human performance and why the stress paradox—that pressure can both harm and heal—may hold the key to thriving in today’s age of constant demands. Through compelling case studies, historical lessons, and cutting-edge research on the Yerkes-Dodson curve, you’ll see why some people crumble under pressure while others enter the elusive flow state where focus, energy, and clarity peak.
It explores how small, intentional challenges can act as hormesis, strengthening both body and mind, while unchecked distress drains health and joy. It also reveals how cultural narratives—whether the Stoic embrace of hardship, Eastern approaches to balance, or modern productivity culture—shape the way we interpret and respond to stress.
This book is for professionals, entrepreneurs, leaders, athletes, and anyone who feels pulled between the promise of success and the weight of burnout. By its final pages, you’ll walk away with a new resilience mindset and a practical framework for turning pressure into power, learning to channel stress not as a threat but as a guide toward mastery, meaning, and sustainable achievement.
The pressures of life are not going away. But with the right lens, they can stop breaking you—and start building you.

Good Stress, Bad Stress

SKU: 9789374125649
$24.99 Regular Price
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  • Kenji Rao is a writer and researcher who explores how ancient wisdom and modern science converge to shape human resilience. Raised between East and West, he draws on both contemplative traditions and contemporary psychology to reveal how challenge and pressure can fuel growth rather than diminish it. His work blends historical case studies, neuroscience, and lived experience to show that stress is not merely something to escape, but a force that—when understood and harnessed—can forge strength, clarity, and purpose. Guided by a deep curiosity about how people adapt in times of uncertainty, he writes with the conviction that resilience is not a fixed trait but a practice we can all cultivate.

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