Most people know that chronic stress raises cortisol.
Fewer people know what happens next.
After months or years of elevated cortisol, the system that produces it starts to fail. Not dramatically. Quietly. Like a car alarm that's been going off for three years and finally runs the battery flat.
The alarm goes quiet. Not because anything got safer. Because the system is exhausted.
Low cortisol doesn't look like stress. It looks like waking up more tired than when you went to bed. Hitting a wall by mid-morning. Craving salt. Flat mood. Motivation that's just gone.
And standard blood tests almost always miss it because they're designed to catch disease, not the subtle rhythm disruption that sits between medically ill and actually well.
I wrote the full picture this week, what low cortisol actually is, what it feels like, and why the right testing changes everything.
If you've been told your results are normal but nothing about how you feel is normal, well this is worth a read.
— Georgia
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