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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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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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To vent stress, I lift weights. That's how I keep in shape.

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Punching Bag - once place I worked had one on the loading doc. I'd go and rail on that thing! Fists, kicks, pipes, bats, boxes, etc.. It took whatever you could throw at it. Two or three minutes of that and you were good to go.

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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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What's with all the e-Guitar, Guitar Hero stuff?

Bass Guitar, second-hand amplifier, find a tame drummer, job done.

Six string guitarists and singers are tuppence a bucketful but we know who wields the power!

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Write posts about it on stackoverflow.com

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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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I just find a few old cynical COBOL programmers and vent on them...verbally and physically, if required.

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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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Programming (as a job) shouldn't be stressful. Most jobs are terrible to begin with. Just because programming is a better career choice on average doesn't mean your current programming job is as good as it gets.

If every job you get is equally stressful, perhaps your decision making process is dysfunctional. This means that the values you are applying in making your decisions do not accurately reflect the values you need to be happy. This kind of cognitive dissonance can be very hard to undo. An easy shortcut to solving this problem is to simply do something totally irrational. Do you hate finance? Do you hate wearing suits? Do you hate getting up early? Great, try to find a job where you have to do all three. You may surprise yourself.

None of this advice doing it for you? Alright, consider this: you are going to die, guaranteed, and there's mostly nothing you can do about when. Maybe you haven't quite internalized it yet. If not, try to. Once you have come to terms with that fact, everything else by contrast ought to be a non-event.

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In college after late nights in the computer lab I enjoyed hiking up the hill overlooking the city and praying as I watched the stars and city lights.

Nowadays reading a good book, watching a movie, hanging out with friends, taking walks and singing/listening to praise music are refreshing.

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People have said it before, but i'll say it again, and be a little more specific. Games. social games are a perfect way to let off steam. The people in your team, their personalities, and even age group will determine which games you'll want to play. You can always switch it up. Play some oldschool Quake one week, Rockband the next, and after that, some good old fashion low stakes Texas Holdem. With real cards.

Not everyone is going to go for the Quake, or the Poker, or the Rockband even, but if you mix it up enough, you get everyone involved sometimes, and stronger team cohesion.

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Nerf weapons.

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I used to be a chip designer working for a design house in Taiwan. Those of you who are in the chip fab business probably knows that it is a 10 hour per day job where they expect you to stay at work over the weekend when the chip comes back from a tape out.

It was an insane lifestyle. I kid you not, my manager once asked me to call up a colleague to come to work at 3AM in the morning on a Sunday morning. (I was at work with a few colleagues).

How did I stay sane and not get burnt out? I took up ballroom dancing. It provided enough physical exertion so that when I eventually get home at 10PM, I can fall asleep right away. The activity provided social stimulus at the same time as you get to meet people from all walks of life. The idea is to take up something to exert your physical body so your brain can shut itself down easier at night. If you don't do this, you might end up dreaming about work, which will result in you waking up feeling even worst.

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drumming! or any other kind of playing music...

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Getting away from the situation for a short period of time is helpful.

It's odd that this is asked, I just had a similar situation. I was asked as a developer to do something incredibly stupid, and there was no way I was going to be able to get through to the particular manager that their request was not a technically sound solution to the issue at hand. The response is always, "Just do it!" I took a few moments to just go across the street to the Einstein's Bagels, have a mocha latte and read a paper, came back after I calmed down, and "just did it." The client is complaining that things aren't working they way they want, but at least, I have documented emails to the project manager stating this was going to be the case, and the normal documented response email of "Just do it!"

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First get enough sleep. Do not ever stay at work past midnight (actually I try to leave by 9 but I'm old) on a regular basis. When you are sleep deprived you make more mistakes and it takes much longer to do things, so working past midnight on a regular basis is counterproductive.

Do not log in from home to work unless it is a genuine emergency (ie the site is down, not there is a deadline coming up). Home should be sacrosanct. Do not mix home and work, you will find this relieves a lot of work stress. Do not provide your cell phone number to your employer. If they want to call you after hours, let them give you a cell phone. If they can't call you, you will get disturbed less.

Meditation is the only thing that got me through the recent stress of having my beloved die. If it works for that greatest of stressors, it should work to help your work stress as well.

Freinds, family, hobbies all help. When I had a particularly annoying co-worker (a secretary promoted to project manager because she was sleeping with the CEO), I bought a punching bag and named it after her. Very helpful!

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I am married and have a child, there is no way that I will let the stress get to me any more that my relationship with them gets messed up. I have a work switch, as soon as I leave the office I take a deep breath and leave work inside the building for the next day, I switch off.

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Though i don't get to go very often, fishing is very relaxing...as long as you don't stress about catching anything...lol

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Alcohol and tobacco.

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@Dan Adams: watching someone fishing is even more relaxing ;)

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Loud music in the car with the windows down. Make sure to choose a song you know and don't feel shy about giving the people in the car next to you a live show. This will work wonders to calm you down and make you feel alive again after spending 8+ hours basking in the warm glow of your CRT or LCD.

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