Most people believe stress is caused by life events.
But if stress were caused by events themselves, everyone experiencing the same situation would feel the same level of stress.
They don’t.
Stress is not caused by what happens — but by how what happens is interpreted.
What’s Actually Happening
In direct experience, life unfolds as:
- sights
- sounds
- sensations
- thoughts appearing and disappearing
None of these are stressful on their own.
Stress appears when the mind adds meaning:
- “This shouldn’t be happening.”
- “I can’t handle this.”
- “This threatens me.”
- “This must be fixed immediately.”
- “I don’t like this.”
Stress is not the event. Stress is the mental commentary layered on top of the event.
Why This Matters
This doesn’t mean stress is your fault.
It means:
- stress is learned
- stress is automatic
- stress is reversible — without forcing change
When interpretation pauses — even briefly — stress softens on its own.
Not because you did something right.
But because the mechanism became visible.
When a mechanism is seen clearly, it often stops running.
This Explains Something Crucial
This helps explain why stress:
- disappears when attention is fully absorbed
- fades when interpretation is seen for what it is — or drops away
- returns when meaning is added again
Reality stays the same.
The interpretation changes.
And so does stress.
A Deeper and Often Overlooked Assumption
Interpretation doesn’t stop at labeling events as good or bad.
It also includes a much deeper, usually unquestioned belief:
That there are two separate realities — “me” in here, and “everything else” out there.
From this assumption, interpretation becomes personal:
- “This is happening to me.”
- “I am threatened.”
- “I need to protect myself.”
- “The world is against me.”
But what if this core assumption is never actually examined?
What if stress is not only about what we think is happening — but about who we assume we are in relation to what’s happening?
An Invitation to Investigate, Not Believe
This isn’t asking you to adopt a new philosophy.
It’s an invitation to look.
If the belief in separation were real, we should be able to find it directly — in experience.
Not as a thought. Not as a label. But as something actually dividing “you” from life.
This kind of honest observation doesn’t require effort, training, or belief.
Just curiosity.
And what many people discover, when they look carefully, is that the boundary they assumed was always there is never actually found.
That recognition alone can be deeply liberating.
The Implication
Peace isn’t something you create.
It’s what remains when misunderstanding ends.
A Simple Experiment
Right now, notice:
- a sound
- a sensation
- a sight
Before labeling it as good or bad, for a few seconds, let it be exactly as it is — without interpretation.
Then notice:
Is there a clear boundary between “you” and this experience, or is there simply experience happening?
Notice what happens to stress when meaning — and separation — are not added.
A Final Note
Our free apps, Mind Detox and Peace Booster, were created to support this kind of gentle investigation.
Not to give answers — but to help you notice what’s already here when long-held assumptions are questioned.
The peace you’re looking for was never lost. It was only obscured.
You can also explore more free resources from Vast Self.