Sync Your Hormones To Boost Your Body’s Natural Energy
- Jan 27, 2020
- Kelly Harrington, MS, RDN
How much stamina and strength you have are controlled by four key hormones, research shows. Keeping your hormones in sync will...
How much stamina and strength you have are controlled by four key hormones, research shows. Keeping your hormones in sync will...
We all want to feel good. Taking care of your adrenal glands by sleeping enough and reducing your stress will pay dividends to your immune system.
There are so many ways to balance blood sugar levels. It's important because extreme lows often lead to overeating, and spikes result in an insulin surge, which promotes fat storage. Here's how to handle that.
Avoid the blood sugar ups and downs because they stress your body, age the body faster, disrupt hormones and lead to fat storage.
The health of your gut can influence your mood, which is why it’s often referred to as the second brain. Suffering from gastrointestinal inflammation can contribute to issues like depression, and conversely, mental stress can cause a leaky gut. In fact, scientists have discovered that the bacteria in your body can detect when you feel stress!
Stress hormones can trigger your digestion to go into a fight-or-flight response. This can cause normally harmless microbes to become pathogenic in reaction to the stress hormones released by your body - leading to infection. This vicious cycle throws the inner ecology of your digestive system quickly out of balance.
The good news is that you can change your diet to change the bacteria in your body. Supporting your digestive health will support your mood on a day-to-day basis.
Start out with:
Did you know what goes on in your gut can dictate your mood, your perspective, and your sense of optimism?
Having earned the title of the second brain, the gut is in constant dialogue with the:
Everyday stress could cause harmless microbes in your body to become pathogenic! These bacteria will rapidly multiply and mutate, leaving you at risk for an infection.
As it turns out, psychological stress can do more than influence the integrity of our own cells. Scientists have found that the bacteria living inside of us can actually detect whether or not we feel stress. (4)
These stress hormones are meant to protect us during potentially dangerous events. They move energy stores into the muscle, increasing our heart rate and our breath. And in the process, cortisol and norepinephrine shut down our digestive system and our immune system.
The bacteria that are normally present in the digestive system can read stress in the body and detect the presence of stress hormones. Researchers have found that usually harmless microbes will suddenly become pathogenic in response to the stress hormones that we release. (5) (6)
When bacteria become pathogenic, they multiply rapidly or mutate, and this often leads to infection. Once this happens, the inner ecology of the gut is thrown out of balance.
Keep in mind that stress not only signals bacteria to multiply and mutate, it also shuts down the digestive system and the immune system. These systems usually protect us from disease. This means that when we experience stress, we are more vulnerable than ever to bacterial overgrowth and infection.
Once the inner ecology of the gut becomes imbalanced, the door opens for a wide range of health conditions to develop and manifest.
In addition to the unnoticed stressors of daily living, many of us spend a great deal of time feeling stress. Whether this stress involves global catastrophes, family drama, or personal struggles, the body releases the same stress hormones.
These stress hormones can ultimately contribute to a long list of health disorders, including infection from opportunistic bacteria.
As it turns out, the health of the digestive system is central to how good we feel on a daily basis. And our mental wellbeing influences whether or not the bacteria normally present in the digestive tract are able to cause disease.
This is why we have found that one of the best ways to consistently generate health is to eat fermented foods on a daily basis and, if possible, at every meal!
Diet can help to modulate the effects of stress in the body. Especially when the diet:
Truly fermented foods have several beneficial strains of bacteria that keep overgrowth and infection in check when the body’s defenses are down.
Beneficial bacteria found in fermented foods and probiotic beverages do things like soothe intestinal cells that have become inflamed and gently stimulate the movement of food through the intestinal tract. The multiple functions of beneficial gut bacteria are so important that some scientists refer to our inner ecology as a “virtual organ.” (7)
This means choosing foods that keep the body in a slightly alkaline state.
While everyone is different in their response to food, there are some foods that are notoriously pro-inflammatory and best avoided. These are:
The health of your gut can influence your mood, which is why it’s often referred to as the second brain. Suffering from gastrointestinal inflammation can contribute to issues like depression, and conversely, mental stress can cause a leaky gut. In fact, scientists have discovered that the bacteria in your body can detect when you feel stress!
Stress hormones can trigger your digestion to go into a fight-or-flight response. This can cause normally harmless microbes to become pathogenic in reaction to the stress hormones released by your body - leading to infection. This vicious cycle throws the inner ecology of your digestive system quickly out of balance.
Supporting your digestive health will support your mood on a day-to-day basis. Start out with:
Article courtesy of Body Ecology, found here with sources.