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A
landmark UCLA study suggests friendships between women are special.
They shape who we are and who we are yet to be. They soothe our
tumultuous inner world, fill the emotional gaps in our marriage,
and help us remember who we really are.
By the way,
they may do even more. Scientists now suspect that hanging out
with our friends can actually counteract the kind of stomach-quivering
stress most of us experience on a daily basis. A landmark UCLA study
suggests that women respond to stress with a cascade of brain chemicals
that cause us to make and maintain friendships with other women.
It's a stunning find that has turned five decades of stress research--most
of it on men--upside down.
Until this
study was published, scientists generally believed that when people
experience stress, they trigger a hormonal cascade that revs the
body to either stand and fight or flee as fast as possible,
explains Laura Cousin Klein, Ph.D., now an Assistant Professor of
Bio-behavioral Health at Penn State University and one of the study's
authors. It's an ancient survival mechanism left over from the time
we were chased across the planet by saber-toothed tigers.
Now the researchers
suspect that women have a larger behavioral repertoire than just
fight or flight; in fact, says Dr. Klein, it seems that when
the hormone oxytocin is released as part of the stress responses
in a woman, it buffers the fight or flight response and encourages
her to tend children and gather with other women instead. When she
actually engages in this tending or befriending, studies suggest
that more oxytocin is released, which further counters stress and
produces a calming effect.
This calming
response does not occur in men, says Dr. Klein, because testosterone---which
men produce in high levels when they're under stress---seems to
reduce the effects of oxytocin. Estrogen; she adds, seems to enhance
it.
The discovery
that women respond to stress differently than men was made in a
classic "aha" moment shared by two women scientists who
were talking one day in a lab at UCLA. There was this joke that
when the women who worked in the lab were stressed, they came in,
cleaned the lab, had coffee, and bonded, says Dr. Klein. When the
men were stressed, they holed up somewhere on their own. I commented
one day to fellow researcher Shelley Taylor that nearly 90% of the
stress research is on males. I showed her the data from my lab,
and the two of us knew instantly that we were onto something.
The women
cleared their schedules and started meeting with one scientist after
another from various research specialties. Very quickly, Drs.
Klein and Taylor discovered that by not including women in stress
research, scientists had made a huge mistake: The fact that women
respond to stress differently than men has significant implications
for our health.
It may take
some time for new studies to reveal all the ways that oxytocin encourages
us to care for children and hang out with other women, but the "tend
and befriend" notion developed by Drs. Klein and Taylor may
explain why women consistently outlive men. Study after study
has found that social ties reduce our risk of disease by lowering
blood pressure, heart rate, and cholesterol.
There's
no doubt, says Dr. Klein, that friends are helping us live longer.
In one study, for example, researchers found that people who had
no friends increased their risk of death over a 6-month period.
In another study, those who had the most friends over a 9-year period
cut their risk of death by more than 60%. Friends are also helping
us live better.
The Health
Study from Harvard Medical School found that the more friends women
had, the less likely they were to develop physical impairments as
they aged, and the more likely they were to be leading a joyful
life. In fact, the results were so significant, the researchers
concluded, that not having close friends or confidantes was as detrimental
to your health as smoking or carrying extra weight!
And that's
not all! When the researchers looked at how well the women functioned
after the death of their spouse, they found that even in the face
of this biggest stressor of all, those women who had a close friend
and confidante were more likely to survive the experience without
any new physical impairments or permanent loss of vitality. Those
without friends were not always so fortunate.
Yet if friends
counter the stress that seems to swallow up so much of our life
these days, if they keep us healthy and even add years to our life,
why is it so hard to find time to be with them? That's a question
that also troubles researcher Ruthellen Josselson, Ph.D., co-author
of Best Friends: The Pleasures and Perils of Girls' and Women's
Friendships (Three Rivers Press,1998).
Every time
we get overly busy with work and family, the first thing we do is
let go of friendships with other women, explains Dr. Josselson.
We push them right to the back burner. That's really a mistake because
women are such a source of strength to each other. We nurture one
another. And we need to have unpressured space in which we can do
the special kind of talk that women do when they're with other women.
It's a very healing experience.
Source: Taylor,
S. E., Klein, L.C., Lewis, B. P., Gruenewald, T. L., Gurung, R.
A. R., & Updegraff, J. A. (2000). Female Responses to Stress:
Tend and Befriend, Not Fight or Flight" Psychological Review,
107(3),41-429.
NOTE: Vancouver
Rape Relief and Women's Shelter offers a
Support Education and Action Group for women. It is free and
confidential.
We are also
looking for women to volunteer on our 24-hour crisis line and in
our shelter for battered women. For
more information on volunteering.
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