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Addressing the Stressing
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| Kneading relief:
senior Nicole Ambrosetti gets a massage from senior Brad
Labez-Tapang Photo:
Chris Hildreth |
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Will Cooper III, a sophomore biomechanical engineering major and
member of Duke Student Government (DSG), was the picture of relaxation
one balmy evening in early December, which, by the curricular
calendar, was no time to be relaxing.
It was exam week, and, in typical fashion, all extraneous doings
had come to a halt: no practices, no classes, no parties. Across
West Campus, traffic had thinned, the quads had quieted, and the
library, like the lone hotel in a blizzard, was filled to capacity.
Rather than snow, it was stress that descended on the campus, spreading
like an odorless toxin, sapping energy and slowing strides and
muffling the sounds of student life in an atmosphere of collective
pressure.
There was, however, one space that remained untouched, one pocket
of peace and tranquility. And Cooper was sitting in it. Munching
on a powdered-sugar brownie, he pondered aloud trivia from a board
game in Meeting Room B of the Bryan Center, site of the first DSG-sponsored "Stress
Free Zone":
"The leaded nozzle has to be thicker than the unleaded. Right?
'Cause leaded gas is really bad for your car."
"Henry VIII beheaded how many of his wives? Anybody?... Two.
Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard."
The Stress Free Zone, according to Cooper, who was in charge of
maintaining its state of calm, was conceived as a refuge for the
exam-weary, an enclave of effortlessness and entertainment for
the overanxious and under-rested. Outside the Zone were expectations
and an endless supply of caffeine to meet them. Inside were decks
of cards, Chevy Chase movies, lemon bars, Swiss Miss, and two graduates
of "Physical Education 119: Massage Therapy," who provided
their services free of charge. "We just wanted to make an
atmosphere where people could come in and decompress for awhile," said
Cooper. "The intensity in the reading rooms [in Perkins Library]
is just ridiculous right now. If you breathe too loudly, people
get upset."
Others in the Zone agreed. It was too much. They'd been shushed,
given the fish-eye, asked to leave. "This guy totally chewed
me out for whispering. Just whispering!" said Katherine Robinson,
a senior, as she slurped a bowl of mandarin soup. And they'd escaped
to the Stress Free Zone to rest their brains and replenish their
energy, they said, before heading out to brave a long night in
the stacks or a research paper in the computer cluster.
"I've got one day to write twenty pages on zebra fish regeneration," said
Maureen Murphy-Ryan, a sophomore biology major, as she watched
Christmas Vacation on a tinsel-covered TV. Would she finish in
time? "You'd be amazed what you can do in twenty-four hours." Still,
Murphy-Ryan was being careful to budget her time for enough sleep. "There
was a girl in my dorm freshman year who was so stressed out," she
recalled. "She pulled an all-nighter for an exam at 9:00 the
next morning. But she tried to take a little nap and woke up at
10:00. She was hys-ter-i-cal. She ran across campus, ran into the
classroom, and vomited! In front of everyone! I felt so bad for
her."
Stories of all-night cram sessions and test-taking catastrophe
are hardly new to the college landscape. But over the last decade,
as colleges have become more mindful of the mental-health issues
affecting a new generation of students, the old stories have gained
a new relevance. In the hopes of averting such disasters, a number
of colleges have begun extending a therapeutic hand to those students
enduring what have long been considered the ordinary strains of
academic life. Now available during finals at many schools, public
and private, are free massages, soothing music, sweets and tea--even
canines to cuddle.
As Kevin Kruger, associate executive director for the National
Association of Student Personnel Administrators, told The New York
Times last April, "This movement is an indication of colleges
trying to be more proactive, rather than waiting for students to
flunk out, have a breakdown, or whatever the outcome is going to
be." Duke is no exception. "We've been paying more attention
to this lately," says Ryan Lombardi, assistant dean of students. "Research
and anecdotal evidence suggests that students are arriving on campus
with increasingly complex mental health issues. So there are pre-existing
medications and conditions to be aware of."
"Academic stress is probably the most common reason students
come in to see us," says John Barrow, assistant director of
Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) at Duke and an assistant
clinical professor in the division of medical psychology. Barrow
says students do not tend to identify grades as the source of their
stress, but that anxiety lurks under the surface, hidden among
other stressors--typically relationships--and compounding them.
In the weeks leading up to exams, says Barrow, "we prescribe
mostly short-range tactics for stress management. This isn't the
time when they're going to start making the fundamental changes,
the behavioral changes, and the values assessments that could reduce
stress in their lives. But we encourage them to be realistic about
how much they can do in a day and to recognize that they'll need
to rest at times, to let the biological system come down from peak
intensity." A stress-free zone? "That's great," he
says. "It sends the message that taking a break is okay; it's
institutionally sanctioned."
Back in the Stress Free Zone, Cooper reinforced that message: "There's
no stressing in here," he announced to the room. "That's
the only rule." A line had formed for free massages. Old School
played on the TV. And Cooper quizzed the crowd with questions of
no significance to an academic record: "What kind of nut is
used in marzipan?" he asked. "What is marzipan?"
--Patrick Adams
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