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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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I second Settlers of Catan and Carcassonne, as well as Citadels. Board games work well after staring at a screen of spaghetti code...

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Table Tennis!

Dr. Daniel Amen on the the best brain sport

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Since getting a bike, I've been taking occasional lunchtime bike rides to clear my head and get a little exercise at the same time.

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I'm definitely going to get flamed for this, but there's just no problem (programming or otherwise) that a cigarette cant solve...

P.S. ...well other than health related problems :)

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I ride my motorcycle.

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I have found two things that work for destressing:

1) Do some sort of physical activity, games, such as basketball, work best.

2) Ask myself a series of "what then" questions so that I see the consequences of what I'm stressing about. For example,

I'm not figuring this out. Agggh!

What then?

well I'll fail my task.

What then? (branch into alternative cases)

I'll get help from coworkers, or friends, or online I'll get fired etc.

What then? I'll have to get a new job, or things worked and I'm on a new task.

I find this technique helps me put the consequences of the source of my stress into perspective and allows me to think of alternative paths to getting a solution.

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Sometimes I go for a drive.. or listen to songs or spend time with my friends who are not geeks so that I will have a completely free and relaxed mind!

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Your family

I'm a bit surprised that your family doesn't see more mentions. It's a great way to blow off steam.

If you don't have one yet, go out and procreate now!

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I can heartily reccommend two things:

1. Running

I took up running a couple of years ago, and it's amazing how much less stressed you feel after a run. It also helps you sleep better, which brings your stress down a bit too.

2. Writing stuff down

Keeping things in your head is what really keeps my stress up. If I write it down, I know I can 'forget' about it and it'll be there for me when I need it - especially if I put it in an calendar reminder or something like that.

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Xbox360, Call of Duty 4, GTA 4

....and beer.

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This works for me...

  1. Watch/read something funny (i.e. Family Guy, Monty Python) Laughter really is the best form of medicine

  2. Go for a run - something to get your mind off the strain

  3. Go for a walk. Often on those "all nighters" I'll disappear around 6pm and go for a 40 minute walk. It allows me to prioritise.

  4. Leave out the coffee. When I first started in software I'd fill up on coffee. It dehydrates you, you always need to go to the toilet and you can't concentrate on what your meant to be doing. I found myself just staring at the screen after too much caffeine.

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Video games and music (playing an instrument, not an iPod).

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I simply vent. I swear up a storm, release a string of expletives that would make George Carlin proud, then complain loudly about having to use OpenID for anything, for any reason.

Then, I get back to work.

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I am a cigar smoker and I think that helps. I have a humidor on my desk at my day job and when I work in my home office I often enjoy a few. This keeps my stress levels down and helps me concentrate.

The key is to find something that you enjoy and relaxes you, for me it is cigars.

Flipping off the screen helps too!!!

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Exercise, Hobbies, Friends/ Family, Marketable Skills, and Money in the Bank

Find a form of exercise that you can do a few days a week on a regular basis and do it. I usually listen to podcasts while on the rowing machine. I also used to ride my bike to work a lot. Both give you time to think, and you will probably solve most of your problems while you allow your mind to wander.

Find something non computer related that you love and harness that. I happen to love the arts, mostly Theatre, Indy/Foreign films, and live music. This also gives you the ability to hold conversations with people who aren’t technical.

Make sure that you stay in close contact with your good friends and family, especially those outside the industry. This will keep you grounded. Many of my friends are not in the same city that I am, so I have to make time to call them or chat with them on a fairly regular basis.

Make sure that your skills are up to date and you have a good amount of liquid money in a savings account (the so called FU fund). Most people recommend 3-6 months worth of living expenses. If you know that you can find another job whenever you want to, then things become easier to deal with because you are not worried about how you are going to pay the mortgage. Also, live way bellow your means, especially if you have a high salary that might not be easily transferable to another job.

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Exercise and video games help out after work, but I'm usually able to keep my work life and home life separate very easily. I combat stress at work by surrounding my desk with things that remind me of life outside the office. I have pictures of my family and friends, I have random action figures and games. I have some posters that used to be in my old college dorm room. Most importantly: I have some foam toys and hacky sacks that I can squeeze.

Whenever I am feeling a little overwhelmed, I'll squeeze something and look around my office. It lets me take my mind off work for a couple minutes and relax. Sometimes I'll also take that time to scribble some notes down on paper or do some doodling.

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I like to create things in maile. The process is slow and there is no way to hurry so it almost work like meditation.

Other ways to loose the stress is to spend time with the kids (or with other relatives). It even helps to improve on your social skills.

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Humor. Whenever I run into a brick wall (or worse: deadline) I take a break or spend some time joking around with the guys. Put things in perspective. Of course, I still have to solve the problem later, so I still have to get cracking.

OP's example of people crying about programming is something I've never witnessed, but I have seen similar things - people falling apart because of work related stress - so I can sympathize .

That is why a while ago I decided to never let stressfull situations get to me personally, and when things become impossible, I try to see it as a challenging exercise, rather than a problem.

That's probably the worst cliche you could apply to situations like this, but I find it worrks. Most times, when I run into a nasty bug that I can't get my head around, I tell myself I'm playing a game. The objective is to solve the problem in time, but if I shouldn't make it, that's just game over. not the end of the world.

I'm certainly not advocating that you should not take work seriously. It's still hard work - because when you play a game, you still play to win ;)

But a key factor in handling stress is recognizing it, and knowing when to take a breath. Taking some distance from the job at hand has saved my brain from overheating many a time.

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Drink more, Think less.

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Exercise is the best way I've found to cut stress. Going for a run or hitting the gym is a sure fire way to melt the stress away.

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You only need two things: foosball and office pranks

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Cracking on Guitar or playing counter strike works for me. Depends on every individual.

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There are a lot of answers already, but to chime in my 2 cents I use four things mainly.

  • Guitar -- I play guitar and running a website about learning guitar (UnderstandingGuitar.org) (Also, music in general)
  • Motorcycle - There is literally nothing more relaxing (to me) then going down a major highway on my 'cycle at 80MPH. It can put programming and the stressors related to programming in to perspective. (We are not doctors and we do not save lives with our work).
  • More Programming -- I'm sure most people on this site actually do this too. I run a small "stress-free" project at home and it helps remind me why I got in to programming in the first place (I Love it!)
  • Intense Weight Lifting -- Power Lifting and pushing my self hard on this. (Gotta becareful though.)

Regards all,
Frank

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I assume you've already tried the traditional self-gratify, imbibe, blow-up digital monsters loop?

You might try simply walking away from the computer for awhile. Take a walk. Read a book. Catch up with friends. Make new friends. What have you...

Believe it or not, I have solved and even debugged more annoying problems by walking away from the KVM than by "slogging it out" coding.

The mind is a funny thing!

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I doodle.. http://www.madcolor.com

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Halo, specifically the beach assault in the Silent Cartographer section on Legendary.

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I practice meditation & play the shakuhachi, a Japanese end-blown bamboo flute. I would definitely recommend meditation of some sort as a strategy to control and avoid as well as vent stress. I believe that meditation also yields great cognitive benefits.

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If you have a big list of things to do, the most depressing thing is to look at that list, especially when crossing something off only accomplishes a few percent of it. Instead, look at the one thing you have to do now, and keep a big list of all the things you've already done. Adding to that list is satisfying.

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Ear plugs! (For a more hi-tech solution, try noise reduction headphones - a big help, with or without music)

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I bottle up 8+ hours of annoyance then go to my local gym and thrash it out.

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