1. | Higble, Andrea, “When Stress Calls,” San Diego Union-Tribune, March 12, 2001, pp. C1, C2. |
2. | Personal communication, June 2000. |
3. | Sometimes the issues are more clinical and thus more serious. People with stress-sensitive or stress-causing illness, including anxiety or panic attacks, addictions, or depression, could benefit from psychotherapy. |
4. | Wolff, Michael, “The E Decade,” New York, December 6, 1999, pp. 34–41. |
5. | I'm talking about nonpathological levels of anxiety that can be reduced in the ways described here. Pathological levels of anxiety, like phobias, need psychotherapy. |
6. | A regular appointment is on the academic ladder of assistant, associate, and full professor. That ladder leads to academic tenure. Nonregular appointments are not eligible for tenure. |
7. | Lardner, James, “World-Class Workaholics,” U.S. News and World Report, December 20, 1999, pp. 42–53. |