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The title really says it all. Let's face it, programming is an extremely stressful job. I've seen half of my class crying in programming courses at college (I'm a CL student, we have about 70% women ;-), and I remember myself way too often as a train wreck ready to smash everything into pieces.

There are a lot of things that can put a programmer under stress. Most commonly, it's client's expectations, deadlines, nasty bugs that have been slowing you down for a week already. Sometimes you feel like you have to compete with somebody, and produce the better code, of course. Sometimes it's your own stubbornness that can get you into trouble. We probably know it all: you're sitting in front of the computer at 5 a.m., the damn birds already start singing outside and you're still hunting that bug, because… well, BECAUSE! As a result, you don't get enough sleep and next the day everything starts over again, because you cannot concentrate.

The list probably goes on for a while, so feel free to add stuff.

In the past I've had numerous approaches to relieving myself from the strain. Some of them I wouldn't want to talk about on a public forum. Other than that, I've played games (mostly RTS and Shooters, although normally I despise the latter.), went out for a walk, procrastinated work until it was too late…

I have yet to come up with a surefire, or at least marginally reliable method of "letting things go". I think I've made a good step in the right direction in not allowing myself anymore to get angry at 5 a.m. If it's past, say 2 a.m. I just go to bed when something doesn't work as expected, and do it the next day.

But that doesn't cut it. I'm still young (I guess), I don't want to die from a heart attack at age 46. That's why I'd like to find out how more experienced (or clever) people than I are handling a typical porgrammer's stress situations.

If you have some resources on time-management or anti-procrastination techniques, I'd be happy to hear about them, too.

Thanks.

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I noticed yesterday that a lot of people are adding 'as a programmer' to the end of their questions. I want to post a question like, "What should I have for lunch today, as a programmer?" – Bloodhound Sep 18 '08 at 12:49
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I actually read this as "How do you vent stress a programmer" and wondered what the hell it meant to "vent stress" someone. – Lasse V. Karlsen Sep 18 '08 at 17:02
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@Bloodhound I totally agrre with you on the <complety offtoptic question> as a programmer bullshit. – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Feb 5 at 1:23
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closed as not programming related by Jonathan Sampson, ammoQ, Burkhard, sth, dmckee Aug 29 at 4:20

153 Answers

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  1. Go out and meet people, friends, coworkers. Chat, laugh, eat & drink.
  2. Go out for a walk. Take some sunlight. Watch the trees, Watch your breath and body while doing all this.
  3. Listen to music, participate in some forums etc.
  4. Read some world news.
  5. Go meet your family and kids for some time.
  6. Take a longer drive to a short route.
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Role playing games.

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I take art classes. It's cheaper than therapy.

Also, DON'T TAKE WORK HOME WITH YOU!!!

When you leave the office, stop thinking about work. I don't know how many times I've walked away from a tough problem and had the answer come to me during my morning shower.

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I bike to and from work every day when there's not snow on the ground. That helps quite a bit. Try to pay attention to the traffic. Get a speedometer, and pay attention to how fast you are going. I also find video games quite enjoyable. Good for relieving stress. It's hard to think about work when you have to concentrate on the game.

Personally, I find it pretty easy just to stop at the end of the day, and forget about work until I show up the next morning. It sounds like you need a different job if you are spending such long hours at work. Work shouldn't be something that you spend 16 hours a day doing. It shouldn't be something that stresses you out.

The other thing that works really well is sitting down and playing with the kids. Read a book to them. Play with their toys. Stuff like that. If your wife will let you, just play with their toys anyway, even if they're sleeping. While kids can bring a lot of stress, they can also be great at helping to relieve it.

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To answer my own question:

I bike to work. Everyday an hour in one direction, makes two hours for about 40km. That helped a lot. But now that Winter is approaching in this hemisphere, I was looking for alternatives.

I also play an instrument (bass), but that doesn't relieve just enough stress.

Sometimes I like to eat a lot. Luckily, since I'm riding my bike to work, I didn't get particularly fat.

Red wine also helps from time to time, but I'd rather not rely on any "substances".

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Video Games! :-)

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Physical activity is fine and if you don't want to go too far from the computer, try DDR (Dance Dance Revolution). It's really enjoyable.

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I agree with the shooting range -- I find the focus necessary to shoot well or even plinking just for fun to be quite relaxing. Plus you get to make really loud noises.

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Being just out of college myself, I always found the best way to destress was to have a good group of friends to just go hang out and talk with. Nothing was more stress relieving to me than to just go joke around with about 2-3 other people for about an hour or two. The nice thing about college is I can garuntee some of your friends will be awake at all hours of the night too. Not to mention they could also use the stress relief more than likely.

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I usually keep a home-improvement project on the go. Repaint this, reframe that, hang this, take that down.

I find that manual work is really rewarding because it is very concrete. It has a start and it has an end. It contrasts well with the more abstract work that I do day-in day out.

Doing something social also helps a lot. I play boardgames. Which really are an excuse to sit around a table with real people and have a drink.

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lunchtime games of Team Fortress 2 with the whole dev team

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I run. I find by the time I get to the 5km (~3 mile) mark I'm working hard enough that I can't think about anything else other than the run, great way to stay in shape and get outside with those birds too.

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Physical activity is often good because it fools the body and mind to think one have actually done something for a problem, thus tuning down stress.

Also, empty the brain as in writing lists of what keeps one stressed is also good. Checkout GTD

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The gym. Exercise is an important component of a programmer's life as our jobs are hardly physically exerting, and nothing else compares for eliminating stress.

Also, not to be awfully explicit, but sex is an excellent de-stressor as well, if such an thing is available to you :-).

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Honestly, just find something you enjoy doing. Personally, I write short stories in a notebook. Get away from the computer for a few minutes at a time. Obviously you don't have enough time to write a story every time you need to get away. Just stop, go to your notebook and work on story development, characters, ideas. Just brainstorm.

The idea is to get your mind onto something else, preferably something creative rather than pragmatic.

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Write long noisy emails to my manager.

Away from the computer? Drink and play guitar.

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Excercise and pleasure reading. Get away from the computer for a while.

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Second the board-games: it's something that even my video-game averse girlfriend can get into. Carcassone and Settlers of Catan are good starting points.

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Try yoga,but dont expect to much from it ;)

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Extremely fast, extremely loud heavy metal music (think Dragonforce) and violent video games.

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That's assuming that Dragonforce are metal ;) – Sklivvz Sep 18 '08 at 16:33
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Dragonforce is the best! However please take note that Dragonforce is not safe driving music. Good thing I ride trains :) – Robert Gould Sep 19 '08 at 4:32
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Darn straight! I use this type of music not only as a personal de-stresser, but also to blot out the noise of my co-workers! – Kaz Dragon Mar 31 at 16:10
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Unplug!

I took up board gaming (not your average off-the-shelf stuff, check boardgamegeek.com) and the time spent unplugged, and socializing, is a great stress reliever.

We've even got a lunch time gaming group at lunch which is a great way to break up a stressful day.

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Yesterday I discovered that the job offer that I'd handed in my notice to my current job and turned down another job offer for is withdrawn because I'm not a US citizen - it seems the recruiter deleted that part of the job description before passing it on to me. After kicking a filing cabinet so hard I broke a toe, and yelling at a co-worker, I went home and did a really long hard workout in my kayak. I probably should have done that first.

BTW: Don't use Adecco, they're idiots.

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I'm playing in an amateur hockey league. Spending some energy in a sport you like is very valuable. It helps to release the stress and think about something else.

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your best bet if your having problems, is get up go for a pint and come back

chances are you'll see the problem straight away then

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Honestly, if you find programming so stressful, and unless you thrive on stress, find another way to make a living.

The people writing the best code are probably not constantly set to explode.

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I find that the best way to beat work day stress is to do some physical activity that doesn't require a lot of thought. This lets my mind wander where it will. I jog a few miles or play Wii Sports a few times a week. This also doubles as good "flash of insight" time. When you let your mind wander, it usually subconsciously wanders back to some hard problem you're trying to solve consciously.

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I go for bike rides. Also just going for a walk with some tunes from the iPod going (nothing metal or hard rock) eases stress.

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Spend time in StackOverflow

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That really falls under "procrastination". The problem is, that procrastination will - in the end - create even more stress :-( – Aleksandar Dimitrov Sep 18 '08 at 12:47
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Non-computer related hobbies are the way to go.

I keep an aquarium, and find it very stress relieving.

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A few approaches:

  • Meditation
  • Tea
  • Observe the secondhand for about 30 seconds
  • Organise your work better
  • Make a pause from time to time
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