
Written by Sylvia Poonen
Life and Transformation Coach
Approximate reading time: 8 minutes
TransformationWithin Coaching – We help you grow
“Awareness today. Wellness tomorrow. Prevention is power.”
When Stress Becomes a Way of Life
Are there moments when you wake up already tired, as though you have been running all night? Your mind feels heavy, your heart restless, and your body tense even before the day begins. You tell yourself you are “just stressed,” but what if stress is not only a feeling? What if it is quietly changing the chemistry of your body, reshaping your brain, wearing down your cells, and slowly killing you?
Stress was never meant to be the enemy. It was designed as an ally, a biological survival code that kept our ancestors alive. When danger appeared, their bodies shifted into high alert, flooding the bloodstream with adrenaline and cortisol to help them fight or flee. The moment safety returned, those hormones faded, and the body found balance again.
But unlike our ancestors, our threats today rarely disappear. They linger in financial strain and mounting debt, unanswered messages, strained or toxic relationships, relentless workplace deadlines, parenting challenges, health concerns, family disputes, caring for aging parents, and emotional wounds we never speak about. The body, unable to distinguish between being chased by a tiger in the wild or facing any of these modern pressures, keeps the same internal alarm blaring. The danger has simply changed its form, but to the body, it all feels the same: SURVIVAL!
The Body’s Survival Code: Fight, Flight, and Freeze
In a perceived threat, your heart races, your breath quickens, and your muscles tighten. This is your body’s ancient wisdom taking over.
Fight: You feel anger rise and want to argue, defend, or fix what is wrong. It is your brain’s way of saying, “I must regain control.”
Flight: You walk away, scroll endlessly, overwork, or isolate yourself to escape discomfort. You are not weak. You are wired for survival.
Freeze: You go numb, unable to react or think. You shut down emotionally or mentally, waiting for the storm to pass.
These responses once saved lives in the wilderness, but in modern life, they leave us stuck in chronic overdrive. Every criticism, deadline, or rejection keeps our body in fight, flight, or freeze, even when the real danger has passed.
The Silent Killer Within
Science now confirms what ancient wisdom has said for centuries: chronic stress is one of the most powerful silent killers of our time.
When stress becomes a constant companion, the body’s natural defenses begin to wear down. The immune system, our inner army, grows weaker, leaving us more vulnerable to infections, slower to heal, and out of balance within. Chronic stress doesn’t just weigh on the mind; it quietly drains the body’s strength, reminding us how deeply our emotions and biology are intertwined.
Each surge of adrenaline is meant to protect you, but when that surge never stops, your body begins to crumble under its own defense.
When cortisol remains high for long periods, it becomes toxic. It thickens blood vessels, raises blood pressure, inflames organs, and weakens immunity. Harvard researchers call it “the chronic wear and tear of the stress response.”
Your nervous system is like an electrical circuit. Occasional sparks give it power, but if the current never stops, the wires overheat and burn out.
At the cellular level, this looks like fatigue, inflammation, and oxidative stress — the scientific term for internal rusting. Over time, this constant biochemical storm accelerates aging and disease.
The Mind Under Fire
Neuroscience confirms that prolonged stress changes the brain.
Under chronic stress, the brain becomes its own battlefield. The hormone cortisol, which was meant to sharpen focus in danger, begins to erode the very areas that control focus, memory, and emotion.
High levels of cortisol, the body’s main stress hormone, can shrink the hippocampus, which is the region responsible for memory and learning, while overstimulating the amygdala, which controls fear and emotional reactivity. This is why people who live under chronic stress often forget simple things, struggle to concentrate, and feel more anxious or irritable.
Think of a student cramming for exams on four hours of sleep, or a single mother juggling two jobs while worrying about bills. Their bodies are running on emergency mode every day. There is no tiger in sight, yet the same hormones rage within.
Real Voices: When the Body Speaks What Words Cannot
During a counseling session, a weary father sat across from me, his eyes filled with quiet defeat. “I used to feel like a man when I could provide,” he said softly. “Now I just feel like a burden.” His medical reports showed nothing unusual, but his spirit was clearly crushed. His body had been carrying years of silent pressure, whispering the same message over and over: “I can’t keep pretending I’m okay.”
In another session, a distraught woman said to me, “I don’t know who I am anymore. I am either working or worrying.” Her lab tests were fine, but her life was not. Her body had been whispering for years: “I’m tired of surviving.”
Both stories remind us that suffering often hides behind normal test results and polite smiles. The body keeps score long before the mind admits defeat or disease sets in. Healing begins the moment we listen to what the body has been trying to say all along.
When the Mind and Body Mirror Each Other
Stress does not stay trapped in your head; it reaches every cell of your body.
Your gut, often called the second brain, feels it first. When you are anxious, digestion slows, bloating begins, and the balance of good bacteria shifts. Over time, the intestinal barrier weakens, allowing toxins and inflammation to enter the bloodstream — what scientists call leaky gut.
This creates a loop where the gut inflames, the brain becomes foggy, the immune system overreacts, and you feel more anxious. The two are mirrors. Whatever clouds one is reflected in the other.
Stress also slows the lymphatic system, the body’s natural drainage network for waste and toxins. When this flow decreases, detoxification falters. You wake up feeling puffy, heavy, and foggy even after sleep. The skin dulls, the hair thins, the libido fades, and tissues lose elasticity. Each organ carries the echo of the same internal alarm.
Scientists call this allostatic load — the biological price of constantly fighting for survival.
A Nation on Edge
In South Africa, stress has quietly reached epidemic levels.
According to the Ipsos Global Mental Health Report (2024), 71 percent of South Africans say they have been so stressed that they struggled to cope, while 50 percent say they were too overwhelmed to work for a period of time.
Behind those numbers are real people: parents stretched thin, young adults navigating uncertain futures, professionals burning out behind screens, and teenagers silently drowning in anxiety.
These are not just statistics. They are stories of people whose bodies and minds are paying the price of modern life.
The Turning Point: From Survival to Serenity
Chronic stress is not a life sentence. It is a signal, a message from the body asking for alignment.
The miracle of human biology is that it always seeks balance. The same brain that floods you with stress hormones can also release healing chemicals such as serotonin, dopamine, and oxytocin when you create moments of calm, connection, and rest.
When you begin to breathe deeply, sleep better, nourish your body, and quiet your thoughts, your chemistry begins to change. Hormones rebalance. The heart rate slows. The immune system reawakens. Inflammation cools. The mind becomes clear again.
Your body remembers how to heal. It has been waiting for your permission.
I have seen this transformation many times: a teacher who began walking every morning and saw her blood pressure drop naturally; a young man who replaced caffeine and chaos with journaling and prayer; a mother who learned that saying “no” was an act of healing, not guilt.
Every act of calm rewires the nervous system. Every breath that says, “I am safe,” tells your cells to repair instead of defend.
Reflection
“Where in my life am I still living in survival mode, and what would peace look like if I allowed myself to feel safe again?”
Coming Up Next
Part Two of this series will explore the science of recovery and how to calm, regulate, and transform your stress response so that you can move from merely surviving to deeply thriving.
References
- Harvard Health Publishing (2023). How Chronic Stress Harms the Body.
- American Psychological Association (2022). Stress and Health Report.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Six Leading Causes of Death and Stress Link.
- European Heart Journal (2021). Stress and Cardiovascular Risk.
- Nature Reviews Neuroscience (2017). Cortisol and Brain Function.
- PNAS (2016). Stress and Immune Suppression.
- JAMA Psychiatry (2019); Epel et al., PNAS (2004). Telomere Shortening and Stress.
- The Mental State of the World Report (2024). Global and South African Stress Trends./li
Disclaimer
This educational content is provided by Transformationwithin Coaching for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical condition or treatment.

Hi this has been an eye opener I’m in constant stress and it is accompanied by panic attacks anxiety self doubt insomnia and I’ve developed type2 diabetes but I’m not taking any treatment I’m reversing it naturally with diet and exercise but it’s difficult because I’m an emotional eater as I’m under constant stress.
Hi Lebohang
Thank you for sharing and helping others relate to the daily struggles and effects. Please do check out our website under “our programmes”. We are sure that you will find something that can help you overcome your current state of being.