GIST] Four Symptoms Of Emotional Stress You Can’t Ignore
Four Symptoms Of Emotional Stress You Can’t Ignore
For many of us, stress is just a by-product of our everyday lives
that we’ve learned to cope with, but it’s important to deal with and
resolve the causes of stress, because when left unchecked, stress can
trigger mood disorders that can affect our mental health.
According to Tim Hipgrave of Nuffield Health’s emotional health
lead, emotional stress can manifest itself in telltale ways, many of
them physical.
Read on for four physical signs that your mental and emotional health may be buckling under the strain.
• Lack of energy: Stress doesn’t just affect your
mind, it also affects you physiologically by releasing the hormone
cortisol into your bloodstream, which mimics physical exertion by
accelerating your breathing and heart rate, and leaves you feeling
unduly tired and lethargic. Stress can also be responsible for lack of
sleep, as it disrupts your body’s ability to regulate its sleep-wake
instincts, causing insomnia.
• Tooth grinding: Stress-induced tooth grinding is
linked to heightened activity in your subconscious when you’re asleep;
as you’re not alert, your body uses your mouth as the physical outlet
for the increased stress.
• Getting sick easily: When stress triggers the
release of cortisol into the bloodstream, it inadvertently hinders your
immune system’s regular function. One important way it does this is by
suppressing the release of the hormone DHEA, which supports immune
function.
• Changed eating habits: It’s no shocker that when
we’re stressed, we tend to reach for short-term food fixes for our
problems, but stress can affect our eating habits by making us grab the
nearest chocolate bar.
“Stress eating” is often triggered by the release of cortisol,
which increases your appetite and coinciding with your low morale, leads
you to reach for typical comfort foods.
On the other hand, many who suffer from stress also experience a
loss of appetite, which is believed to be linked to the presence of a
corticotropin-releasing hormone that suppresses appetite.
(Yahoo Health)
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