
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Can joy, excitement, travel, celebration, or even a meaningful life event become a real medical stressor when you live with adrenal insufficiency?
In this episode, Chloe and Alex take a deep dive into the My Adrenal Life article “Your Body Can’t Tell the Difference: Why All Stress Demands a Response in Adrenal Insufficiency.” Together, they explore one of the most important and misunderstood truths in adrenal care: the body does not separate stress into neat emotional categories. To the physiology of adrenal insufficiency, stress is stress - whether it comes from illness, fear, excitement, love, public speaking, travel, pain, heat, or even a joyful milestone like a wedding.
For people living with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), secondary adrenal insufficiency, tertiary adrenal insufficiency, or steroid-induced adrenal insufficiency, cortisol is not optional. It is the hormone that supports blood pressure, blood sugar, inflammation control, circulation, and the body’s ability to respond to increased demand. When that system is impaired, the body can no longer produce extra cortisol automatically when life becomes physically or emotionally intense.
Chloe and Alex explain how the stress response system works, including the role of the amygdala, hypothalamus, pituitary gland, and adrenal glands. One of the key insights in this episode is that the body responds to salience and demand, not to whether an experience feels “good” or “bad.” A wedding, a first date, a funeral, a flight, a heated argument, a fever, a dental procedure, or a high-stakes exam may all create a physiologic need for more cortisol.
That is why people with adrenal insufficiency can feel low-cortisol symptoms not only during clearly difficult situations, but also during exciting or meaningful ones. A situation that should feel energizing can instead lead to shakiness, anxiety, nausea, dizziness, weakness, and the terrifying sense that the body is beginning to fail.
The episode also walks through a practical framework for understanding minor, moderate, and major stressors, and why recognizing the type of demand matters. Chloe and Alex discuss why being proactive can be so important in adrenal insufficiency, especially during moderate and major stress, and why waiting until symptoms escalate may leave someone already behind the curve.
Another important theme is the balance between under-replacement and over-replacement. While missing a needed stress dose can be dangerous, chronically taking too much steroid also carries real long-term risks. This conversation helps explain why stress dosing is not about taking extra medication for every annoyance, but about learning to recognize when the body is under meaningful physiologic demand and needs support.
Most importantly, this episode reframes adrenal management from fear to empowerment. It shows that understanding the body’s stress response does not mean avoiding life. It means learning how to support the body well enough to say yes to important moments more safely.
If you have ever wondered why a joyful event, a stressful trip, a difficult conversation, or a hot day can leave someone with adrenal insufficiency feeling physically unwell, this conversation helps connect the dots.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group
By My Adrenal LifeCan joy, excitement, travel, celebration, or even a meaningful life event become a real medical stressor when you live with adrenal insufficiency?
In this episode, Chloe and Alex take a deep dive into the My Adrenal Life article “Your Body Can’t Tell the Difference: Why All Stress Demands a Response in Adrenal Insufficiency.” Together, they explore one of the most important and misunderstood truths in adrenal care: the body does not separate stress into neat emotional categories. To the physiology of adrenal insufficiency, stress is stress - whether it comes from illness, fear, excitement, love, public speaking, travel, pain, heat, or even a joyful milestone like a wedding.
For people living with primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), secondary adrenal insufficiency, tertiary adrenal insufficiency, or steroid-induced adrenal insufficiency, cortisol is not optional. It is the hormone that supports blood pressure, blood sugar, inflammation control, circulation, and the body’s ability to respond to increased demand. When that system is impaired, the body can no longer produce extra cortisol automatically when life becomes physically or emotionally intense.
Chloe and Alex explain how the stress response system works, including the role of the amygdala, hypothalamus, pituitary gland, and adrenal glands. One of the key insights in this episode is that the body responds to salience and demand, not to whether an experience feels “good” or “bad.” A wedding, a first date, a funeral, a flight, a heated argument, a fever, a dental procedure, or a high-stakes exam may all create a physiologic need for more cortisol.
That is why people with adrenal insufficiency can feel low-cortisol symptoms not only during clearly difficult situations, but also during exciting or meaningful ones. A situation that should feel energizing can instead lead to shakiness, anxiety, nausea, dizziness, weakness, and the terrifying sense that the body is beginning to fail.
The episode also walks through a practical framework for understanding minor, moderate, and major stressors, and why recognizing the type of demand matters. Chloe and Alex discuss why being proactive can be so important in adrenal insufficiency, especially during moderate and major stress, and why waiting until symptoms escalate may leave someone already behind the curve.
Another important theme is the balance between under-replacement and over-replacement. While missing a needed stress dose can be dangerous, chronically taking too much steroid also carries real long-term risks. This conversation helps explain why stress dosing is not about taking extra medication for every annoyance, but about learning to recognize when the body is under meaningful physiologic demand and needs support.
Most importantly, this episode reframes adrenal management from fear to empowerment. It shows that understanding the body’s stress response does not mean avoiding life. It means learning how to support the body well enough to say yes to important moments more safely.
If you have ever wondered why a joyful event, a stressful trip, a difficult conversation, or a hot day can leave someone with adrenal insufficiency feeling physically unwell, this conversation helps connect the dots.
Visit us at www.MyAdrenalLife.com and our Facebook Group