March 19, 2026

How global stress affects the nervous system and causes fatigue

The world is a lot right now—here’s how to support your body and energy

Many people are feeling a noticeable shift right now—more fatigue, more overwhelm, more difficulty regulating emotions or energy.

If you’re living with chronic illness, this impact can feel even stronger.

This isn’t just psychological. It’s physiological.

Your nervous system and your organ systems are both responding to an increased total stress load—one that includes not only your personal life and health, but also ongoing exposure to global stress.

Your Body Processes Global Stress as Real Stress

From a nervous system perspective, your body does not distinguish between:

  • direct personal stress
  • and stress you are witnessing (news, social media, collective events)

Both are processed through the same pathways.

This is how the nervous system responds to stress over time.

Repeated exposure to distressing information signals uncertainty and potential threat, activating your stress response system.

Over time, without enough recovery, this can lead to:

  • chronic activation (fight/flight)
  • or shutdown (freeze/fatigue)

If you’re already navigating chronic symptoms, your system has less available capacity to buffer this.

How Stress Affects the Body

You may notice:

  • increased fatigue or crashes
  • more pain or inflammation
  • digestive issues
  • poor sleep
  • heightened anxiety or emotional reactivity
  • brain fog or difficulty concentrating

These are not random symptoms—they’re signs of how stress affects the body, especially when it becomes ongoing.

Many of these are common chronic stress symptoms, particularly when your system doesn’t get enough time to recover.

Stress and Chronic Illness

The relationship between stress and chronic illness is significant.

When your body is already managing ongoing symptoms, your baseline capacity is lower. Your system is working harder to maintain balance.

So when additional stress is layered on—especially constant global stress—it can:

  • intensify fatigue
  • increase flare-ups
  • reduce your ability to recover
  • make symptoms feel more unpredictable

This is why things may feel harder right now, even if nothing in your personal life has changed significantly.

Your body is responding to total load.

A Traditional East Asian Medicine Perspective

In Traditional East Asian Medicine, stress directly impacts the flow of Qi (vital energy) and overall organ health.

Each organ system plays a role in regulating both physical and emotional balance:

  • The Liver regulates the smooth flow of Qi
  • The Spleen supports digestion and energy production
  • The Heart supports emotional stability and mental clarity
  • The Kidneys store your deepest reserves of energy

When stress becomes chronic, it disrupts this internal balance.

This is often understood as Qi stagnation (especially in the Liver), along with depletion in other organ systems over time.

This Moment Is Also an Opportunity for Resilience

While stress can deplete the body, it also creates an opportunity to build resilience.

In Traditional East Asian Medicine, health is not about avoiding stress completely.

It’s about your body’s ability to respond, adapt, and recover.

Right now, many people are being pushed outside their usual capacity.

And while that can intensify symptoms, it also makes patterns more visible:

  • where your energy is getting depleted
  • how stress is affecting your body
  • which systems need the most support

This awareness allows you to respond more intentionally.

Why Small Actions Matter More Right Now

When your system is under ongoing stress, your body becomes more sensitive.

That means:

  • depletion happens faster
  • but support also works faster

Small, consistent actions—especially those that support your nervous system and organ health—can have a meaningful impact.

Resilience is not built by pushing harder.

It’s built by:

  • reducing unnecessary strain
  • supporting energy where it’s being depleted
  • helping your body recover more efficiently

Caring for Your Body Also Impacts the World Around You

When your system is more regulated:

  • you think more clearly
  • you respond instead of react
  • you have more capacity to support others
  • you’re less likely to burn out

Supporting your body is not separate from caring about the world.

It’s what makes sustainable care possible.

How to Support Your Body Right Now

Instead of trying to fix everything at once, focus on supporting the systems most impacted by stress.

Start With One System

You don’t need to do everything.

Start by asking:

  • Do I feel tense and irritable? → support the Liver
  • Do I feel tired and foggy? → support the Spleen
  • Do I feel anxious and overstimulated? → support the Heart
  • Do I feel deeply depleted? → support the Kidneys

Start here. Then try one of the practices below.

Support the Liver (Overwhelm, Irritability, Feeling Stuck)

What’s happening: Stress disrupts the flow of Qi, leading to stagnation.

What helps:

  • gentle daily movement (walking, stretching, Qigong)
  • reducing constant exposure to distressing input
  • allowing emotional expression instead of holding it in

Simple practice: Slowly twist your torso side to side for 1–2 minutes while breathing deeply.

Support the Spleen (Fatigue, Brain Fog, Mental Overload)

What’s happening: Too much information and worry weakens digestion and energy production.

What helps:

  • warm, cooked foods
  • eating without distractions
  • reducing multitasking and information overload

Simple practice: Place your hands over your abdomen and take 5 slow breaths before eating.

Support the Heart (Anxiety, Restlessness, Emotional Overload)

What’s happening: Excess stimulation affects emotional balance and mental clarity.

What helps:

  • intentional quiet time without input
  • limiting late-night scrolling
  • breath practices with longer exhales

Simple practice: Inhale for 4, exhale for 6, for 2–3 minutes.

Support the Kidneys (Deep Fatigue, Burnout)

What’s happening: Chronic stress depletes your core energy reserves over time.

What helps:

  • prioritizing rest
  • keeping your body warm
  • reducing overexertion

Simple practice: Rub your hands together and place them on your lower back for 1–2 minutes.

Returning to Your Body as a Source of Strength

If the world feels like a lot right now, it’s because your body is processing more than just your own life.

And if you’re living with chronic illness, your system has less capacity to absorb that without impact.

Understanding how stress affects the body—and learning how to support your nervous system and organ health—allows you to move through this moment differently.

Not by doing more.

But by supporting your body in a more intentional, sustainable way.

That’s how resilience is built.

What you can do today to get closer to your health goals:

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