When you feel stressed, it’s not just an emotion—it’s a chemical chain reaction inside your body. A clinical expert explains that the pressures of modern life can hijack your endocrine system, flooding your body with stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. This chemical imbalance is at the root of many unexplained physical health issues.
Our society’s focus on non-stop achievement keeps our bodies in a state of constant “fight or flight.” This was a useful survival mechanism for short-term threats, but it becomes destructive when activated 24/7 by work deadlines and social pressures. This prolonged exposure to stress hormones is toxic to our physiological systems.
This chemical hijacking is what leads to tangible health problems. Excess cortisol can cause inflammation, leading to chronic pain. It can disrupt your digestive tract and interfere with the hormones that regulate sleep, like melatonin. Over time, this chemical imbalance wears you down, causing lethargy, burnout, and a decline in mental health.
You can, however, learn to regulate this internal chemistry. Taking micro-breaks for deep breathing can lower cortisol levels. Sharing your stress with a loved one can boost calming hormones like oxytocin. Setting boundaries at work, not personalizing events, and reframing criticism are all behavioral changes that prevent the initial hormonal hijack, giving you back control over your body.
Hijacked by Hormones: How Stress Is Chemically Changing Your Body
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