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.

