Pepper (1995) explains that in the workplace or at home, emotion of constantly being challenged. Tension may co-exist in a supervisor and subordinate position and conversation of confidential or personal matters may trigger emotions at work. Areas of conflict in the organisation can exist in the organisation itself, the department, boss, sub-cultural group, or individual colleagues. Emotions on betrayal, dedication, anger, disappointment, hate or jealousy can be provoked. With emotional behaviour, stress can also be a common factor in the workforce; it is also increasing in modern life. The result of stress can lead to a burnout, emotional and physical exhaustion, depersonalisation and lack of personal accomplishment. Common stressors are dealing with the workload, quantitive problems such as having too much work, staff shortage, and company downsizing. Alternatively the problem could be qualitative; the work is too demanding, unsuitable appointments, insufficient training, old equipment or poor instructions. As well as stress in the work environment, the organisation cannot forget stressful events employees may be dealing with at home.
Examples could include marriage problems, illness, pregnancy, moving house, death or more. If not addressed, serious outcomes could be physical, such as heart disease, insomnia, chronic pain, high blood pressure and psychological effects could be a nervous breakdown, depression and extreme cases could be even mental illness. Stress symptoms can affect the organisation by employees loosing commitment, job satisfaction and becoming disenchanted with the profession. Eventually, the employee may just decide to leave and it is in the best interest of the company to ensure the workplace is not stressful and to monitor working conditions which may lead to employees becoming stressed out (Pepper, 1995).
With the definition of stress discussed, the issue of diversity will be explored and how it can also be linked to the cause of stress. Society today is full of diversity, whether it is in gender, age, religion, ethnicity or social class. Looking in-depth at gender, women have always held a stereotypical image as being illogical, fickle, and incapable of thought and logic.
Frug (1992) recognises that gender is not naturally given but socially constructed, and suggests one "principle" of postmodernism is that human experience is located "inescapably within language." Power is implemented not only through direct force, but also how language shapes and restricts realism. Yet language is always open to re-interpretation, it can also be used to resist the shaping and restrictions.

