Stress is often the noun which triggers. As the originating causation, it is often considered the evil cousin who brings about other ailments. It is a state of mental or emotional strain which is encountered under extraordinary circumstances, often hostile in nature, and involving a lack of calm or quietude.
Workplace stress is a reality of the modern technological age; hostile work environments have been identified as causative agents of stress; and demands for overburdened, repetitive work habits contribute exponentially.
While the goal for a “stress-free environment” is generally unattainable and a mythological state existing only in one’s imagination, it is thought from a medical perspective that engaging in stress-reducing activities, whether incrementally throughout the day, or during one’s leisure time, remains an important facet of healthy living.
The noun which triggers — stress — is that which, if left unchecked, can result in the debilitating effects of an explosion of psychiatric (and physical) medical conditions, including (but not limited to) anxiety, depression, suicidal ideations, homicidal thoughts, intrusive nightmares, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, gastric and abdominal dysfunctions, chronic and profound fatigue, general malaise, chronic pain, debilitating migraine headaches, and a host of other medical conditions.
At some point, when the seriousness of a medical condition brought about by stress cannot be relieved or reduced through pragmatic means of altering key components which cause the stress, then complete removal from the stressful environment must be considered.

Generalized anxiety disorders appear in physical and psychological ways. Headaches are a possible physical symptom. So are muscle aches, sweating, and hot flashes.
Federal Disability Retirement, available for all Federal and Postal employees who have the minimum number of years of service, whether one is under FERS or CSRS, and filed through the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, must always be considered when one’s medical condition — whether triggered by stress or some other causative agent — begins to impact and prevent the Federal or Postal employee from performing one or more of the essential elements of one’s Federal or Postal position.
Sometimes, when the visiting cousin who carelessly and thoughtlessly spreads germs and destructive diseases comes for a short visit, subtle hints as to the unwelcome nature of the visit may simply fail to move. In such cases, it is time to move out, leaving behind the unwanted cousin to drown in the misery of his own making.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
Filed under: Mental/Nervous Condition | Tagged: a hostile work environment and federal disability retirement, anxiety and confusion after disability in the usps, anxiety and depression among postal workers, anxiety and stress during federal disability filing, anxiety causation in the federal workplace, anxiety of waiting for fers disability retirement, are stress and anxiety hard to prove in an owcp work related claim?, attorney that will handle federal disability for stress, being layoff while on stress leave or lwop, burnout job stress and anxiety in federal government occupations, can I collect disability for stress from usps?, can I get opm disability retirement for stress?, coping with depression and the federal workplace, CSRS disability retirement federal attorney, disability for depression and ptsd for civilian government employees, disability retirement stress, disabling depression, emotional distress at the Post Office, escaping the vicious cycle of dependency from working in a hostile work environment, federal and postal workers with major depressive disorders, federal attorney to handle stress related disabilities, Federal Disability, federal lawyer for stress claims, federal stress jobs and disability retirement, federal workers with high levels of stress and depression, fers disability and work related stress, FERS disability retirement, fers disability retirement for mania and depression, fers retirement based on stress, getting fired from the postal service for stress related reasons, law firm representing clients in opm disability law all across america, nationwide representation of federal employees, owcp depression us postal service, owcp disability retirement, postal service disability retirement, psychiatric disorder caused by a hostile work environment, representing federal employees from any us government agency, stress, surviving anxiety and depression in the postal service, the depressive federal worker, the federal employee and the stress of living with a disability, the incremental effect that stress cause in the lives of federal workers, the option of federal disability retirement for postal employees who cope with stress and anxiety, uncertainty and stress in the wait to get fers csrs disability, us postal employees with depression, us postal service hostile workplace, using stress and associated disabilities as the basis for my fers disability retirement claim, usps stress related disability retirement, when is necessary to leave behind a stressful working environment with the federal government, when the postal worker can not longer cope with stress |
Leave a Reply