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Stress & Balance

What Is Stress and How It Affects Your Body

Stress is more than a feeling. It is a physical process that changes how your body functions. Understanding exactly what happens — and why — is the first step toward doing something about it.

7 min read
stresscortisolnervous systemfight or flightchronic stress

Quick Summary

  • Stress is a coordinated physical response, not just a feeling — involving cortisol and adrenaline.
  • Acute (short-term) stress is normal and can even improve focus and performance.
  • Chronic stress — without adequate recovery — is what disrupts sleep, digestion, immunity, and energy.
  • The fight-or-flight response evolved for threats that end. Modern stressors often don't.
  • Simple breathing techniques can interrupt the stress response within minutes.

Guided View

What is stress?

Stress is a physical response, not just a feeling. When your brain detects a threat, it releases cortisol and adrenaline to prepare your body for action.

Acute vs chronic

Short-term stress is purposeful and normal. Chronic stress — where the body never fully recovers — is what causes harm over time.

What it does to your body

Ongoing elevated cortisol disrupts sleep, suppresses digestion and immunity, and can affect memory and mood over time.

What actually helps

Recovery-focused habits — sleep, movement, deliberate breathing, and supportive nutrients — give the nervous system the chance to return to baseline.

Full Article

You know the feeling. Your heart rate picks up. Your muscles tighten. Your thoughts start racing and you cannot quite catch them. Something is wrong, or at least your body thinks so.

This is stress — and it is not just a feeling. It is a coordinated physical response that affects nearly every system in your body.

Understanding what is actually happening — and why — matters. Not because knowledge makes stress disappear, but because it changes your relationship to it. When you understand the mechanism, you can work with it instead of against it.

The stress response

When your brain detects a threat — real or perceived — it sends a signal to your adrenal glands to release stress hormones, primarily cortisol and adrenaline.

These hormones prepare your body for action. Your heart rate increases. Blood is redirected from digestion toward your muscles. Your senses sharpen. Your thinking narrows to the immediate problem.

This is the fight-or-flight response. It evolved to help you escape predators. It works exactly as designed — for short, acute threats that end.

The problem is that modern stressors rarely have a clear end. A difficult email, financial worry, social tension, a relentless schedule — these do not resolve the way physical threats do. The alarm gets triggered, and then it just stays on.

Acute stress vs chronic stress

Acute stress is short-term and purposeful. A deadline, a difficult conversation, a physical challenge — these activate the stress response, and then the body recovers. Acute stress can actually improve performance and resilience when followed by adequate recovery.

Chronic stress is different. It is a low-grade, persistent activation of the stress response without adequate recovery in between. Over weeks and months, chronically elevated cortisol begins to have measurable effects across multiple body systems.

The distinction matters because the solution is different. Acute stress is not something to eliminate — it is part of a healthy, engaged life. Chronic stress is what needs attention.

What chronic stress does to your body

Sleep: Cortisol follows a daily rhythm — high in the morning to wake you up, low at night to allow sleep. Chronic stress disrupts this rhythm, making it harder to fall asleep, stay asleep, or feel rested upon waking.

Digestion: The digestive system is directly suppressed during the stress response. Blood flow is redirected away from the gut, and digestion slows or stalls. Over time, this can contribute to bloating, discomfort, and irregular digestion.

Immune function: Short-term stress can actually boost immunity. Chronic stress does the opposite — it suppresses immune activity, making the body more vulnerable to illness and slower to recover.

Energy and focus: The brain is highly sensitive to cortisol. Chronically elevated levels can affect memory, concentration, and mood over time. Many people describe a persistent low-grade mental fog that they cannot quite shake.

Cardiovascular system: Ongoing elevated heart rate and blood pressure put additional load on the cardiovascular system. This is one of the reasons long-term chronic stress is associated with heart health concerns.

Skill to Try: The Physiological Sigh

You can do this anywhere, at any time, without anyone noticing. No app required.

Take a full inhale through your nose. At the top, take a second smaller sniff to fully inflate your lungs. Then release slowly through your mouth. This double-inhale technique has been studied for its rapid effect on the autonomic nervous system. It offloads carbon dioxide quickly and activates the parasympathetic response within one to two breaths. Use it when you feel the stress response coming on — before a difficult conversation, after a frustrating moment, or any time you need to reset quickly.

What actually helps

The most evidence-supported approaches to managing chronic stress work by addressing the recovery side of the equation — not just reducing stress inputs, but actively supporting the body's ability to return to baseline.

Consistent sleep is one of the most powerful tools. Cortisol regulation depends heavily on sleep quality and timing.

Regular movement — particularly moderate aerobic activity — has direct effects on cortisol metabolism and mood.

Deliberate breathing practices, even five minutes a day, help train the nervous system toward a lower resting baseline.

Some people also find support from nutrients and adaptogens — magnesium, ashwagandha, and L-theanine are among the most studied. These are not substitutes for lifestyle habits, but they may provide additional support alongside them.

Where to go from here

Understanding stress is the foundation. From here, the most useful next steps are learning how your nervous system works, what habits support regulation, and what evidence-based tools are available.

None of this needs to be complicated. Small, consistent changes compound over time. The nervous system is adaptable — and it can learn to come back to calm more easily with the right conditions.

Educational Disclaimer

This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical advice and does not replace professional consultation. Always speak with a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine.

Questions About This Topic

A Practice to Try

A short guided practice connected to this topic.

YouTube · Othership: Sauna, Ice Baths + Breathwork22 min

Nervous System Reset | Guided Breathwork

Beginner

A guided breathwork practice designed to help you explore short, intentional breathing patterns and return to a calmer state. This practice may support a sense of reset and nervous system awareness.

Watch practice

This practice is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. If you feel unwell or have a medical condition, consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting any new practice.

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