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What happens when adrenal insufficiency does not just change your body - but changes your sense of who you are?
In this episode, Noah and Eloise take a deep dive into the My Adrenal Life article “Identity Shifts, Grief, and Redefining Productivity After an Adrenal Insufficiency Diagnosis.” Together, they explore one of the most painful and least discussed parts of life with adrenal insufficiency: the identity loss that can happen when the person you used to be no longer matches what your body can safely do.
For many people, self-worth has been built around being dependable, productive, resilient, and able to push through anything. But with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), secondary adrenal insufficiency, tertiary adrenal insufficiency, or steroid-induced adrenal insufficiency, pushing through can become biologically dangerous. The body can no longer produce cortisol on demand, which means stress, overexertion, and even ordinary pressure may carry consequences that healthy people never have to think about.
Noah and Eloise explore how this creates what feels like an identity quake. The old version of you - the one who stayed late, carried more, pushed harder, and kept going no matter what - may no longer be sustainable. The episode explains why that loss can trigger real grief, even though it is rarely recognized that way by the outside world.
A major theme in this conversation is ambiguous loss - the experience of grieving a former version of yourself while still being physically present. The body is here, but the old rhythm, capacity, and sense of ease may not be. That kind of grief can be hard to name, and even harder to explain to people who only see the surface.
The episode also explores the connection between cortisol, productivity, and survival. In adrenal insufficiency, cortisol is not just a “stress hormone.” It is part of what allows the body to sustain blood pressure, manage blood sugar, regulate inflammation, and respond to demand. Without that automatic support, old habits of overachievement and endurance may stop being admirable and start becoming unsafe.
Noah and Eloise also talk about redefining productivity. Instead of measuring worth by output alone, people with adrenal insufficiency may need to develop a different standard - one centered around sustainability, stability, rest before crisis, timely medication, boundaries, and protecting the body’s limited reserves. In that context, resting, canceling, saying no, and pacing are not failures. They are active forms of medical management.
The conversation also makes space for the emotional complexity of living this shift. Anger, envy, sadness, guilt, and fear are all part of the experience. This episode does not force a silver lining. Instead, it offers a more honest kind of hope - one that allows grief to exist while still making room for growth, self-respect, and a quieter, more sustainable form of resilience.
If you have ever wondered who you are now that your body works differently than it used to, this conversation offers language, validation, and compassion for that transition.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group
By My Adrenal LifeWhat happens when adrenal insufficiency does not just change your body - but changes your sense of who you are?
In this episode, Noah and Eloise take a deep dive into the My Adrenal Life article “Identity Shifts, Grief, and Redefining Productivity After an Adrenal Insufficiency Diagnosis.” Together, they explore one of the most painful and least discussed parts of life with adrenal insufficiency: the identity loss that can happen when the person you used to be no longer matches what your body can safely do.
For many people, self-worth has been built around being dependable, productive, resilient, and able to push through anything. But with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), secondary adrenal insufficiency, tertiary adrenal insufficiency, or steroid-induced adrenal insufficiency, pushing through can become biologically dangerous. The body can no longer produce cortisol on demand, which means stress, overexertion, and even ordinary pressure may carry consequences that healthy people never have to think about.
Noah and Eloise explore how this creates what feels like an identity quake. The old version of you - the one who stayed late, carried more, pushed harder, and kept going no matter what - may no longer be sustainable. The episode explains why that loss can trigger real grief, even though it is rarely recognized that way by the outside world.
A major theme in this conversation is ambiguous loss - the experience of grieving a former version of yourself while still being physically present. The body is here, but the old rhythm, capacity, and sense of ease may not be. That kind of grief can be hard to name, and even harder to explain to people who only see the surface.
The episode also explores the connection between cortisol, productivity, and survival. In adrenal insufficiency, cortisol is not just a “stress hormone.” It is part of what allows the body to sustain blood pressure, manage blood sugar, regulate inflammation, and respond to demand. Without that automatic support, old habits of overachievement and endurance may stop being admirable and start becoming unsafe.
Noah and Eloise also talk about redefining productivity. Instead of measuring worth by output alone, people with adrenal insufficiency may need to develop a different standard - one centered around sustainability, stability, rest before crisis, timely medication, boundaries, and protecting the body’s limited reserves. In that context, resting, canceling, saying no, and pacing are not failures. They are active forms of medical management.
The conversation also makes space for the emotional complexity of living this shift. Anger, envy, sadness, guilt, and fear are all part of the experience. This episode does not force a silver lining. Instead, it offers a more honest kind of hope - one that allows grief to exist while still making room for growth, self-respect, and a quieter, more sustainable form of resilience.
If you have ever wondered who you are now that your body works differently than it used to, this conversation offers language, validation, and compassion for that transition.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group