Why do we think too hard?

Why do I feel trapped in my mind?

Why I can’t escape myself?

I’ve asked myself similar questions. During my first year of college, I procrastinated and filled my days with low-priority tasks. This distracted me from important academic goals and pressured me to put off everything until the last minute. When I encountered more personal problems the pressure provoked in me some chronic stress, with an array of negative outcomes.

How does stress form?

But if you detect something stressful, a brain area called the hypothalamus releases a hormone called CRH (Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone), which triggers the pituitary gland to secrete another hormone, ACTH (AdrenoCorticoTropic Hormone!), into the bloodstream. ACTH then reaches the adrenal glands, where it stimulates the release of the stress hormones cortisol (a glucocorticoid steroid hormone) and epinephrine (also known as adrenaline).

LEARN MORE: Physiology, Glucocorticoids

LEARN MORE: Physiologic and Pharmacologic Effects of Corticosteroids

LEARN MORE: Introduction to the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis

When the body experiences stress it also provokes a short term (or acute) alarm reaction by releasing catecholamine neurotransmitters, including norepinephrine. Stressors can be something you remember and reflect on (potentially involving activity in your hippocampus) – or something threatening you encounter that’s also detected by a nucleus in your temporal lobes called the amygdala.

The amygdala can generate MANY responses to stress. It directly activates the sympathetic division of your autonomic nervous system, and pressures you into a “fight or flight” mode. It also activates the HPA axis, releasing cortisol from your adrenal glands, putting your body and brain on high alert.

LEARN MORE: Physiology of the Autonomic Nervous System

LEARN MORE: Positive upshots of cortisol in everyday life

LEARN MORE: Interactions between sleep, stress, and metabolism

LEARN MORE: Effect of cortisol on energy expenditure and amino acid metabolism in humans

Too much cortisol

Excessive stress turns into a chronic problem when the body encounters frequent, intense exposure to various stressors that keep us in alert mode, consistently feeling the pressure of stress over an extended time. This can lead to emotional exhaustion, or burnout.

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“…chronically high levels can affect a number of different important functions. And it fuels the mental, emotional and physical exhaustion that comes with burnout…”

— Jessica Cohn-Kleinberg

LEARN MORE: Emotional Exhaustion

LEARN MORE: Burnout phenomenon: neurophysiological factors, clinical features, and aspects of management

LEARN MORE: The Impact of Emotional Exhaustion on Psychological Factors in Workers with Secondary Traumatic Experiences

LEARN MORE: Emotional Labor and Burnout: A Review of the Literature

LEARN MORE: The Role of Cortisol in Chronic Stress, Neurodegenerative Diseases, and Psychological Disorders

LEARN MORE: Evaluation of stress, burnout and hair cortisol levels in health workers at a University Hospital during COVID-19 pandemic

Too little cortisol

Having lower-than-normal cortisol levels may also provoke physical and mental fatigue. Low cortisol has been described as adrenal insufficiency and, if provoked by autoimmune attack, it’s known as Addison’s disease. Chronic fatigue has been a contentious diagnosis, and some references are included below.

LEARN MORE: Symptoms & Causes of Adrenal Insufficiency & Addison’s Disease

LEARN MORE: Burnout and Hypocortisolism – A Matter of Severity? A Study on ACTH and Cortisol Responses to Acute Psychosocial Stress

LEARN MORE: Addison’s Disease: A Diagnosis Easy to Overlook

LEARN MORE: Adrenal fatigue does not exist: a systematic review

LEARN MORE: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Stress reduces dopamine

Lack of motivation or anticipatory excitement (also known as anhedonia) might also be linked low levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine, with individuals not able to seek long-term or even short-term goals such as leaving their own bed. Chronic stress can lower dopamine activity, which can reduce your productivity and participation in work, education, and life.

LEARN MORE: Dopamine System Dysregulation in Major Depressive Disorders

LEARN MORE: The effects of psychosocial stress on dopaminergic function and the acute stress response

Stress activates the amygdala

“Chronic stress increases fear, measured with conditioned freezing – a robust, and easy to quantify readout of amygdala-mediated fear.”

— Stress-Induced Functional Alterations in Amygdala: Implications for Neuropsychiatric Diseases

Under conditions of chronic stress, over-activation of the amygdala may also occur, causing fear, anxiety or depression. Long-term consequences can include panic and phobia to specific objects, situations or activities. Stress decreases the ability of brain areas involved in fear inhibition to quiet the amygdala, disrupting regulation and control over our emotional responses.

LEARN MORE: Stress-Induced Functional Alterations in Amygdala: Implications for Neuropsychiatric Diseases

LEARN MORE: Emotional Responses to Stressors in Everyday Life Predict Long-Term Trajectories of Depressive Symptoms

Are you just “lazy” – or emotionally burned out?

People often confuse emotional exhaustion with laziness, and based on my personal experience as an unenergetic person I wasn’t always able to make this distinction clear to myself either. Burnout is when you are impacted by environmental factors that result in physical and mental disorders that cause withdrawal and fatigue, while laziness is a conscious choice to avoid effort to perform tasks.

LEARN MORE: Neurobiological links between stress and anxiety

LEARN MORE: Different Areas of Chronic Stress and Their Associations with Depression

The “chicken and egg” idea (which came first?) illustrates how our problems and our stress operate.

Stress, for example, can trigger us into thinking too hard – but overthinking can generate more stress!

LEARN MORE: The effects of chronic stress on health: new insights into the molecular mechanisms of brain–body communication

What can I do?

There are resources available to help individuals survive chronic stress and even reset their bodies after being exposed to stress for extended periods. Each method has a focus on either healing the individual or addressing stressful aspects of the environment. As certain factors can generate chronic stress, it’s important for us to recognize what they are and how to take care of our bodies, and our brains.

LEARN MORE: A Functionalistic Stress Recovery Intervention Improves Perceived Recovery Opportunities and Relaxational Behaviors

LEARN MORE: Reducing chronic stress to promote health in adults: the role of social prescriptions and social movements

LEARN MORE: Resilience in the Context of Chronic Stress and Health in Adults

MAKE ART

LEARN MORE: Creative Arts Interventions for Stress Management and Prevention—A Systematic Review

LEARN MORE: Reduction of Cortisol Levels and Participants’ Responses Following Art Making

LEARN MORE: The Connection Between Art, Healing, and Public Health: A Review of Current Literature

LEARN MORE: Art therapy-based interventions to address burnout and psychosocial distress in healthcare workers—a systematic review

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