How Stress Affects Your Body
Everyone experiences stress at some point - but what’s actually happening inside your body when you feel overwhelmed?
When you encounter stress, your brain signals the release of cortisol and adrenaline, activating your body’s fight-or-flight response. In nature, this response would be used in short bursts to power an animal out of a stressful or dangerous situation. In modern human life we rarely have a need for fight or flight, but our brains still use it to respond to other stressors, like the phone ringing, for example. We probably don’t need to run away from the phone, so the cortisol and adrenaline stay in our bodies, leaving us with that fizzy, unsettled feeling that stress can bring. Over time, long-lasting stress can keep the nervous system in a state of imbalance, making it harder to relax, sleep, or feel at ease. Long-term exposure to these brain-chemicals can lead to:
• Muscle Tension: Especially in the shoulders, neck, and jaw.
• Shortness of Breath: Shallow breathing and increased heart rate.
• Poor Sleep: Which in turn can lead to chronic fatigue.
• Digestive Issues: Due to the gut-brain connection.
• Headaches: Think migraines and difficulty concentrating.
How Stress Affects Your Body
Everyone experiences stress at some point - but what’s actually happening inside your body when you feel overwhelmed?
When you encounter stress, your brain signals the release of cortisol and adrenaline, activating your body’s fight-or-flight response. In nature, this response would be used in short bursts to power an animal out of a stressful or dangerous situation. In modern human life we rarely have a need for fight or flight, but our brains still use it to respond to other stressors, like the phone ringing, for example. We probably don’t need to run away from the phone, so the cortisol and adrenaline stay in our bodies, leaving us with that fizzy, unsettled feeling that stress can bring. Over time, long-lasting stress can keep the nervous system in a state of imbalance, making it harder to relax, sleep, or feel at ease. Long-term exposure to these brain-chemicals can lead to:
• Muscle Tension: Especially in the shoulders, neck, and jaw.
• Shortness of Breath: Shallow breathing and increased heart rate.
• Poor Sleep: Which in turn can lead to chronic fatigue.
• Digestive Issues: Due to the gut-brain connection.
• Headaches: Think migraines and difficulty concentrating.