
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Why does adrenal insufficiency make so many people feel older than they really are?
In this episode, Chloe and Alex take a deep dive into the My Adrenal Life article “How Adrenal Insufficiency Can Make the Body Feel Older Than It Is.” Together, they unpack a feeling many people in the adrenal insufficiency community know intimately: the sense that your body is aging faster than your actual years.
This conversation explores why that experience is real, physical, and deeply validating. For people living with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), secondary adrenal insufficiency, tertiary adrenal insufficiency, or steroid-induced adrenal insufficiency, the body is operating without the automatic cortisol response that helps regulate repair, inflammation, blood sugar, sleep, hydration, and recovery from stress.
Chloe and Alex explain how cortisol acts like a constant background manager for the body’s maintenance systems. In healthy physiology, it helps coordinate small repair jobs throughout the day, dampen inflammation, support energy production, and help the body recover from physical and emotional strain. In adrenal insufficiency, that flexible system is replaced by fixed medication dosing, which can leave gaps in coverage and make recovery slower, heavier, and more noticeable.
The episode explores the idea of “inflammaging” and why unmanaged or poorly buffered inflammation can create symptoms that feel older than a person’s age, including joint stiffness, puffiness, brain fog, and lingering fatigue. The discussion also looks at mitochondrial energy production, explaining why adrenal insufficiency can create a deep, cellular exhaustion that feels more like moving through mud than ordinary tiredness.
Another major theme is sleep disruption. Even when someone with adrenal insufficiency is profoundly exhausted, hormone timing issues can still interfere with restorative sleep. Poor sleep then worsens inflammation, mental clarity, mood, and physical recovery, creating a cycle that can make the body feel even more worn down.
Chloe and Alex also discuss the extended recovery curve that often follows emotional stress. A minor argument, a stressful appointment, or an adrenaline surge may leave someone with adrenal insufficiency shaky, drained, and off-balance for hours or even days. That delayed recovery can feel a lot like the fragility people often associate with aging, but in this case it is tied to physiology, not personal weakness.
The conversation also touches on hydration, salt balance, blood volume, muscle support, and energy budgeting, all of which can affect whether the body feels resilient or depleted. Importantly, the episode highlights that while adrenal insufficiency can absolutely create the feeling of accelerated aging, that is not the same as saying someone is biologically old before their time.
At its core, this episode offers reassurance and perspective. Feeling older than you are does not mean you are failing. It does not mean you are weak. It means your body is doing an enormous amount of work without the hormonal flexibility most people take for granted.
If you have ever looked in the mirror and wondered why your body feels so much older than your age, this conversation may help explain why - and help replace self-blame with understanding.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group
By My Adrenal LifeWhy does adrenal insufficiency make so many people feel older than they really are?
In this episode, Chloe and Alex take a deep dive into the My Adrenal Life article “How Adrenal Insufficiency Can Make the Body Feel Older Than It Is.” Together, they unpack a feeling many people in the adrenal insufficiency community know intimately: the sense that your body is aging faster than your actual years.
This conversation explores why that experience is real, physical, and deeply validating. For people living with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), secondary adrenal insufficiency, tertiary adrenal insufficiency, or steroid-induced adrenal insufficiency, the body is operating without the automatic cortisol response that helps regulate repair, inflammation, blood sugar, sleep, hydration, and recovery from stress.
Chloe and Alex explain how cortisol acts like a constant background manager for the body’s maintenance systems. In healthy physiology, it helps coordinate small repair jobs throughout the day, dampen inflammation, support energy production, and help the body recover from physical and emotional strain. In adrenal insufficiency, that flexible system is replaced by fixed medication dosing, which can leave gaps in coverage and make recovery slower, heavier, and more noticeable.
The episode explores the idea of “inflammaging” and why unmanaged or poorly buffered inflammation can create symptoms that feel older than a person’s age, including joint stiffness, puffiness, brain fog, and lingering fatigue. The discussion also looks at mitochondrial energy production, explaining why adrenal insufficiency can create a deep, cellular exhaustion that feels more like moving through mud than ordinary tiredness.
Another major theme is sleep disruption. Even when someone with adrenal insufficiency is profoundly exhausted, hormone timing issues can still interfere with restorative sleep. Poor sleep then worsens inflammation, mental clarity, mood, and physical recovery, creating a cycle that can make the body feel even more worn down.
Chloe and Alex also discuss the extended recovery curve that often follows emotional stress. A minor argument, a stressful appointment, or an adrenaline surge may leave someone with adrenal insufficiency shaky, drained, and off-balance for hours or even days. That delayed recovery can feel a lot like the fragility people often associate with aging, but in this case it is tied to physiology, not personal weakness.
The conversation also touches on hydration, salt balance, blood volume, muscle support, and energy budgeting, all of which can affect whether the body feels resilient or depleted. Importantly, the episode highlights that while adrenal insufficiency can absolutely create the feeling of accelerated aging, that is not the same as saying someone is biologically old before their time.
At its core, this episode offers reassurance and perspective. Feeling older than you are does not mean you are failing. It does not mean you are weak. It means your body is doing an enormous amount of work without the hormonal flexibility most people take for granted.
If you have ever looked in the mirror and wondered why your body feels so much older than your age, this conversation may help explain why - and help replace self-blame with understanding.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group