Paul Poulton looks at what we can learn from those who were slaves when it comes to dealing with stress.

Paul Poulton
Paul Poulton

Do you need a life coach to give you some lifestyle tips? Is your gastrointestinal tract giving you a touch of IBS? Is Monday morning the wrong time for anyone to mess with you? Is stress putting an undue burden on your adrenal glands?

Adrenal fatigue can (apparently) cover a host of symptoms, including brain fog, nervousness, sleep disturbances and digestive problems; the term appears in modern alternative health books.

Most of us are aware that modern life can sometimes be stressful: The Mental Health Foundation, revealed in 2018 that 74 per cent of us felt so overwhelmed that we were unable to cope.

But Monday morning blues are not exclusive to our generation. Gold Coast is a former British colony in West Africa during the 1500s. As market forces developed, gold took a step back to make way for a demand in slaves as the main export of the area. The Rolling Stones begin their song 'Brown Sugar' with the words:

Gold Coast slave ship bound for cotton fields
Sold in the market down in New Orleans
Scarred old slaver knows he's doin' all right
Hear him whip the women just around midnight.

Mick Jagger, who penned the lyrics, said they contain "All the nasty subjects in one go."

For the slaves themselves life had been turned upside down: Taken from their home, packed into stench saturated ships for a two month voyage across the Atlantic to be sold in the market down in New Orleans, or some other merchant's yard.

Traders would force shackled families to line up in slave pens waiting to be inspected by potential buyers; family members may be separated, and once sold, an enslaved person could have a life of ceaseless toil, working long hours each day.

I wonder if adrenalin fatigue was a factor in the life of an enslaved person working on a plantation back in the 1700s? Their life certainly puts a new perspective on mine.

A person suffering at the hands of a European slave trader had no access to lifestyle gurus or mindfulness classes and yet many of them found a way through the slough of despond.

God moves in mysterious ways and somehow the people working on the tobacco, cotton and sugar plantations embraced the religion of their captors, and sang about it too.

Marsha Hansen, in her book 'My Soul Is A Witness', points out that it's been claimed that one can make a journey from Genesis to Revelation by listening to the African-American spirituals.

Plantation owners would allow their workers to sing because it helped with the rhythm of work. To be sure, the black people singing these songs helped shape our modern musical heritage. African musical modes met with the major scale prominent in Western music and after an elongated pregnancy a new scale was given birth - what we now know as the (six note minor) blues scale.

The notes of the scale contained intervals hard for the average westerner to sing, and listen to. Even now classically trained singers can struggle to sing the blues. The tritone, also known as a diminished fifth, is a dissonant musical interval that for centuries had earned the nickname 'The Devil's Interval' and was avoided by composers and the pupils they taught.