when fight-or-flight becomes the norm
stress becomes damaging when the instinctive fight-or-flight stress response to an acute experience continues to be a constant mode of operation, she says, comparing the repetitive pattern to a repetitive strain injury that has detrimental consequences on your biological systems, including the acceleration of disease and aging, and impaired emotional regulation, immunity, hormones and more.
“if we do the work that helps us feel equipped to manage stress, we feel confident and can access our creativity, empathy, memory and enhance focus,” says messina. “it’s important to know that stress does not look the same, is not felt the same and cannot be processed the same person to person. stress management, like the latest research in nutrition, is not a one-size-fits-all protocol.”
in fact, research by scientists at harvard medical school,
recently published in cell metabolism, found that biological age is fluid and fluctuating in both animals and people, but also, that it can be changed by lifestyle habits and environmental exposures, as well as drug treatments.
“the findings imply that severe stress increases mortality, at least in part, by increasing biological age,” vadim gladyshev, senior study author, professor at harvard medical school and director of redox medicine at brigham and women’s hospital in boston, said in a statement. “this notion immediately suggests that mortality may be decreased by reducing biological age and that the ability to recover from stress may be an important determinant of successful aging and longevity.”