In my clinic, the most common thing I hear isn’t a specific symptom. It’s a sentence: “I just don’t feel like myself anymore.” Patients describe a low hum of fatigue, a short fuse, a body that won’t cooperate. They’ve tried sleep tracking, cold plunges, and three different supplements. Nothing has worked.
What they almost always have in common is chronic stress — not a dramatic, week-long sprint, but a steady, low-grade activation that has quietly rewired their physiology. The good news: when we name it correctly, we can address it. The harder news: most of the “stress fixes” on the internet are aimed at the wrong system.
What chronic stress actually does
Acute stress is useful. Your body needs cortisol the way a car needs a gas pedal. The problem is when the pedal stays pressed — for months, sometimes years — and the engine starts to wear in places you can’t see.
Key takeaways
- 01Chronic stress is biochemical, not just emotional — and it shows up in labs.
- 02The four systems most affected: sleep, gut, hormones, and cardiovascular.
- 03Most “fixes” target the wrong system. The fastest wins start with the nervous system.
- 04Recovery isn’t about doing more. It’s about subtracting strategically.
The four systems
1. Sleep — the canary in the coal mine
Stress disrupts sleep architecture before it disrupts sleep duration. You’ll fall asleep just fine, then wake at 3am with your heart racing. That’s cortisol, not coincidence. The fix isn’t more melatonin; it’s lowering the morning cortisol curve so the night-time one normalizes.
2. The gut–brain axis
The vagus nerve is the highway between your gut and your brain, and chronic stress puts it in second gear. That’s why so many of my stressed patients also describe bloating, IBS-like symptoms, or a sudden inability to tolerate foods they’ve eaten for years.
