Episode Link: Dr. Sharon Horesh Bergquist
Book: Link
TRANSCRIPT:
Colleen: Welcome back to Hot Flashes and Cool
Topics Podcast. Today, we are gonna be talking about the stress paradox with
Dr.Sharon Bergquist. Welcome to the show.
Dr. Sharon: – Thank you so much for having me.
Colleen: – When we were reading this book,
so much of what is told to us as we get older is that stress is bad. You have
to minimize your stress level. It’s not good for your health, but your book is
truly a paradox because you are talking about the fact that our
body is hardwired for stress and that there’s some good stress and bad stress. So I
thought we would start at the beginning explaining what you mean by what our body
is hardwired for stress, for good stress.
Dr. Sharon: Yeah. So, you know, everything that we’ve
been told about stress that it harms is certainly true. I’m not trying to discount
any of it. And there’s, you know, really about nine decades of research now showing
that, but in the last two decades, there’s also a lot of really good science
showing how certain types of stress, the types that we’re made for, which we can
get into, are really there to help us adapt and thrive and grow.
And when we use these types of good stress, it helps us build resilience against
the types of stress that are wearing us down. So it is counterintuitive because
we’re actually using stress to build stress resilience. Right.
Bridgett: And those two type of
stresses, can you share those with us? The chronic stress and hermetic, am I saying
that correctly, hermetic stress?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah, absolutely, Bridgett. So this is all from this
new science of good stress called Hormesis. It’s from the Greek word to excite.
And the good kinds, and these are the types that we’re adapted for, they’re brief,
they’re mild to moderate and they’re followed by recovery. And the chronic stressors
that we are very familiar with are kind of continuous, they’re beyond our control,
things like financial hardship, difficult relationships, job situations where we feel
stuck. And the common approach to stress management around chronic stress,
are things like mindfulness, meditation, which are, you know, so important.
And I think there are wonderful approaches, but they don’t always work for everybody.
You know, some people just have a very busy mind. And this is a different set of
tools because we’re approaching resilience by taking action.
So all of the good stressors, these hormetic stressors involve deliberate stress.
You are choosing to add stress. You are in control and taking action is really the
antidote to anxiety. And that’s like you said, sounds so counterintuitive to say,
“I’m going to implement stress into my life.”
Colleen: But you’re saying it’s controlled
stress. It’s not from the outside world coming in where you don’t have any control
over what you see, what you hear, what you listen to. How is that beneficial for
our bodies?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah, so our bodies are, again,
we’re made for stress. We’re made to do hard things for two million years of our
human history. our ancestors were constantly faced with stress, but these brief types
of stressors, right? We’re talking about running away from a predator, et cetera, not
24 /7 media and news. And so when we’re exposed to these types of brief stressors,
we have receptors in our brain for the stress hormone cortisol.
When cortisol is at a mild to moderate amount when it’s building up in our brain,
it attaches to a different receptor in our brain on our neurons than when it is in
a very high level from when it’s chronic continuous or at a really high intense
level. When it attaches to the receptors, the mineraloid corticoid receptors that type
when it’s in a small amount. It enhances the communication between our neurons.
We actually grow synapses, which are these communications between brain cell to brain
cell. And when we have stress in a very high level and it attaches to the
glucocorticoid receptor, the other type of receptor, when there’s a higher amount of
cortisol, we prune those connections. So when we do these mild to moderate stressors
followed by recovery, we’re making our brain greater in connectivity and we can
actually stimulate the growth of new brain cells called neurogenesis. So we’re
essentially changing the structure and function of our brain As well as body because
this same process, you know, in the brain we call it neuroplasticity, which is
growth in our brain But in our body, it’s bioplasticity So we’re rewiring and
reconfiguring our brain to a more capable brain where it can make more complex
decisions. We can think with greater clarity. It helps with our mood because it’s all
controlled by the health of our neurons. So it’s really powerful medicine.
Colleen: With neurogenesis, is that actually creating additional healthy cells as opposed to
using what you have? Because I know a lot of times people think, well, I’m going
to be killing brain cells or as I get older brain cells are going to degenerate.
But is that actually creating new brain cells?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah, we have the ability to create
new brain cells throughout most of our adult life. We know we can do it at least
through our seventh decade, probably longer. And it’s really powerful because we all have some stem cells and we can differentiate them into neurons in
this whole process of giving our bodies a stimulus, it helps us remember how we
handled a particular stressful experience so that the next time we handle it,
we can be better at it. And part of the mechanism in our brain that leads to that
is differentiating these stem cells into these neurons that help us recall that
particular situation down the road. We have that modeled really in more animal
studies. It’s very hard to kind of trace that in human studies, but there’s a high
likelihood that this is the same process that happens in our brain.
Bridgett: You know, when I was reading your book,
there was part of it too that said, and I probably am getting this wrong,
but that things change. Like you might not respond in the same way. Something on a
cellular level changes. Is that correct?
Dr. Sharon: It is,
and it changes our resilience. So we know for a long time that childhood adversity
can impact our resilience throughout our life and of course there are many stressors
that find us throughout our life course that affect our resilience and that’s really
our passive resilience it’s kind of how life happens to us and our ability to
handle future stress and a lot of times it wears us down so that we can handle
less because it’s cumulative and we’re kind of an overload. What we’re talking about
here is building active resilience because we can choose certain types of stress that
shape shift our brain in a way we want where we are more capable,
where we are more resilient. And I think this is like this incredible science
because in neuroscience, the amount to which we can reshape that resilience is unlike
any we’ve ever imagined could be possible. And that’s really why this is so
profound.
Colleen: So can we talk a little bit about hermetic stress and the good stressors that we
should actually create for ourselves? And the first one in the book is food toxins
as medicine. And anytime you hear the word toxin, you’re not thinking that this is
a good thing. Let’s put it into our body. But you’re actually saying that there are
certain food toxins that can benefit and like you said, create the resilience that
we’re looking for.
Dr. Sharon: Yeah. So the common thread between all of the hermetic
stressors with the plant chemicals, the phytochemicals being one of them, is that
these were stressors that were inherent in the environment to which our ancestors
have adapted. So our genes have found mechanisms where we can handle these stressors,
and over two million years we’ve not only adapted to handling them,
but they are part of this ancient code of how we activate our body’s natural
ability to heal. So we had to develop strategies to become incredibly resilient and
thrive from these stressors for our human species to be able to continue and thrive.
And the way the plant toxins work in that kind of overarching approach is,
well I should start by saying “well why do plants make phytochemicals?” So when
plants are in their native environment, like a wild environment, they make
phytochemicals as a response to the stressors they face. Ultraviolet light,
pollutants, insects trying to eat them, us as humans trying to eat them, so plants
can’t flee. So their mechanism for deterring us and kind of surviving is they make
these plant chemicals called phytochemicals which are natural pesticides for the plant
and phytochemicals as we know them are beneficial right because phytochemicals are the
part in plant food we’re talking about fruits and vegetables they give them their
color right so the brighter the color of the blueberry, the more phytochemicals it
has. And the phytochemicals are the anti -inflammatories, they’re the antioxidants, they
have anti -cancer capability. So when we consume this part that the plant made in
response to stress, it activates our stress response. And what happens in our body
is that stress gets communicated to our cells. And our cells have these gene
programs that awaken our natural defenses. For example,
we ramp up our antioxidant level. We moderate inflammation. We have a DNA repair
response. We actually repair our DNA. We repair proteins.
We stimulate this process called autophagy where we can recycle damaged components in
ourselves, it stimulates energy by increasing our mitochondria.
It is so incredibly synergistic how we have adapted over time to benefit from plant
food. And part of that is because our ancestors survival really depended on how many
different edible foods could they eat. And the more they could adapt to eating
certain plants, which you know, some of course can be poisonous, but the more they
could adapt to the different, you know, quote, toxins in these natural pesticides and
plants, the more they would survive. And we have essentially been given this gift in
our DNA, handed down generations of thriving and becoming more resistant to our own
environment as a result of this relationship that has formed over human history.
Bridgett: Yeah I did I thought it was so amazing that part because you’re reading that about
the toxins and the man, was he German that that was treated badly for coming up
with this theory and people came out against him in his studies.
And I just thought that was amazing that you go to this level of toxins where I
guess you reach a threshold. Is that, yeah, and you talk a lot about the
Goldilocks, trying to find the Goldilocks spot. So can you talk about how our cells
and things respond when you try to find that Goldilocks spot?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah,
and thanks for asking, because this is such a critical part of it. So there’s a
long history behind how hormesis was discovered, and as you’re referring to Hugo
Schultz in the late 1880s, had done some experiments where he was trying to find
what dose of a disinfectant can kill certain yeast, and what he was observing is
that at a certain dose of the yeast were actually becoming stronger and they were
proliferating and growing and it was so counterintuitive because we’re made to think
that okay at a high dose something can be toxic it can kill us if we just get
below a certain threshold maybe we can just not get harmed but what he was seeing
is that if we come to a certain range, this Goldilocks zone that we thrive,
we actually benefit. So our relationship with these stressors is not linear,
right? So our goal isn’t just to kind of reduce stress to the point where we’re
not harmed from stress. What we’re realizing is that when we hit the sweet spot, we
take off, right? We actually thrive and benefit in the relationship is more like
parabolic, if you picture the St. Louis Arch, where too much stress can harm,
not enough, can actually be just as harmful as too much. They’re kind of the two
bottom portions of that arch. And right in that middle, that Goldilocks just right
amount is where we gain the highest growth and resilience. And we call that
Goldilocks zone, the Hermetic zone. That’s the optimal zone of stress.
Colleen: – That makes me think of two part question. One, how do you know when you reach
that level? And two, I know you also talk about diversity, that you have to kind
of change up. A lot of people will eat the same foods, have the same routine and
the importance of diversity in reaching that Goldilocks zone.
Dr. Sharon: Yeah, both is so important.
So you know when you reach it versus say a harmful stress by how you feel. So a
lot of this is just tuning into your body and then I do think in the future of
medicine. We’re gonna have more objective ways to measure this but this really applies
as a general framework for any health habit if you do the habit and you feel worn
down and exhausted and just kind of burned out, okay, that was not a health
promoting habit. If you do it and you feel energized and, you know, you think more
creatively, you, you know, that is a good stress and you’re in that Goldilocks zone.
And that really applies to food as we’re talking about here. Like how did I feel
after I ate that food and within, you know days of food can impact your mood.
It can impact your creativity as well as physical function You know,
and we all know you can get a slump after eating sugar, etc. I mean, it’s pretty
short term It applies to exercise. Did you over train? Did you under train or do
you feel just great the day that you worked out? Right, you can apply this to
psychological stress, right? When you do something, does it leave you exhilarated,
right? Did you do something where you’re like, oh my God, I’m on cloud nine? I
said yes, I did it, and I’m so glad I did, but I was so nervous. Or do you walk
away just wanting to go straight to bed and put your head under the covers, right?
So this kind of framework of how do I feel afterwards is a really critical part of
tuning into how you relate to some of these stressors.
And the second part of what you asked, this variety part, the reason variety is so
important, and we’re talking about variety of plants here, different fruits,
vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds, is because each plant has a different mix of
phytochemicals of these plant “toxins” and each toxin sets off a different set of
these stress responses in our cells. So when we consume a variety of different
plants, our stress responses are going off like fireworks in a very beneficial way,
where we’re repairing our protein, our DNA, ramping up our antioxidant defenses, We
are stimulating our mitochondria, autophagy. The more different plant food,
the more we set off different pathways and the stronger we become.
And the relevance here is when I talk to my patients, most of my patients who
consider themselves as ones who eat a healthy diet will describe to me, their
typical morning is I have smoothie. Um, and for lunch, I have a salad and for
dinner, I have some version of protein with some side vegetable, but that kind of,
I think trap we all fall into because we’re all creatures of habit is we’ll have
the same smoothie. You know, it’s like, I put three strawberries, four blueberries
and ginger, whatever the combination is. And okay, my lunch is always this salad
that I get from X place and they always put a side of whatever on it and we we
kind of get into these patterns where it’s the same healthy food and of course it’s
already hugely beneficial that it’s you know if it’s whole food and healthy but
we’re missing out on variety. There are 30 ,000 edible foods in the world.
We cultivate 50 and only about 30 of them make it to our plate each year.
And in that just isn’t the way we can optimize our body’s natural healing ability
and our natural defenses.
Colleen: Yeah, you know, you were looking at Bridgett’s breakfast every morning, weren’t you?
Bridgett: I
am this Greek yogurt, the fruit, chia seeds,
pepitas, yeah, and it is, it is a habit, but you know, when I was
reading your book and like you said, you compare what our ancestors, how many plant
foods they ate, and then you look at it and it narrows down to what we eat. Now,
remember we spoke to a nutritionist at one time that I think she said to try to
get 30 different a week, and maybe we might get 11, You know,
and it really makes you think about any of the things that you’re putting in there
Even if she said if you’re putting an herb in there if you’re putting anything put
put some more plant foods in there and that stood out to
me. The importance of a plant -based diets is
to keep things simple because I really think anything that we want to
do long term has to be simple is keep the same template, right?
Dr. Sharon: So if you like
the Greek yogurt and or if you like a smoothie, well, switch up the fruit each
morning, you know, and, and I’m a big believer in just getting big things of frozen
fruit, you know, it just, it’s always in your freezer. They’re flash frozen at the
peak of ripeness. And just have, you know, I think of it as templates, right?
This is my salad template. This is my smoothie template. And, you know, in the
book, that’s really why I did the recipes more in templates, because once you can
make one smoothie, you really can make 20 varieties of them and just start to make
small swaps. And that way you’re not going through that whole inertia of I have to
learn an entirely new recipe. And that’s how we keep it really simple.
Colleen: – One of the
things when we’re talking about the food is you do talk about fasting and the
importance of fasting. Can we talk about that portion of good stress?
Dr. Sharon: – Yeah,
so it’s, you know, we’re talking about what we’re eating and then the timing of our
meals is just as important as what we’re eating. In the book,
I talk about what I call circadian fasting. So it’s a form of time restricted
eating, where we are limiting our calorie consumption to 12 hours or less and trying
to have most of those calories earlier in the day. And, you know,
the reason behind that is, and I should, you know, kind of mention that this is
really normal eating. I almost don’t like the term fasting applied to this because,
and I know it is a now considered a form of fasting, but this is how our bodies
are really wired because when we go more than 12 hours without calorie
intake, that’s roughly the time period where our body does this metabolic switch from
using glucose or stores of glucose called glycogen to using fat for energy.
And our body converts the fat to ketones. And the importance here is that we wanna
balance build up and growth, which is what we do when we eat. We kind of raise
our insulin level, insulin storage hormone, and we start storing energy with
balancing, breaking down that energy. So using the glucose, using the fats.
And when we’re out of that balance, um, well, we, we net growth, um,
which, you know, on some level sounds good, but if you, um, kind of look at the
trends, it’s also contributing to a lot of metabolic disease, to a lot of,
um, you know, challenges with weight management because we’re kind of out of whack
right now. The average American eats over or consumes calories over a 15 -hour time
period. So we’re spending more time in this build -up phase than the breakdown phase,
and we can only be in one or the other. And what’s even more important is at the
level of our cells. When our cells are in growth mode, they’re proliferating,
but when they are in this kind of breakdown mode, they’re actually in a repair
mode. So when you go more than 12 hours without food, ketone is a signaling
molecule, meaning that it signals or communicates with every part of our body. And
it’s sending the signal of food scarcity, and that triggers a stress response.
And within our cells, it starts to activate all of these housekeeping functions that
we’re talking about. And the cell learns to become more efficient, like it becomes
more insulin sensitive because it wants to uptake energy more efficiently. The cells
starts to do these repair processes to the protein, the DNA, et cetera. It starts
to recycle the damaged components in addition to the repair that’s going on so that
when we resume eating, we are proliferating healthier cells.
And this back and fourth, if we do this daily of kind of housekeeping, repair,
and then healthier cells get, you know, multiplied in our body, is really the way
our bodies were designed to deal with the daily damage that we all deal with.
Like throughout the day, for example, the average person gets 10 ,000 places of
injury to the DNA. And, you know, our bodies are just incredible machines constantly
trying to heal and repair, but we do this work generally overnight and our bodies
have to be prepared and be in this fasted state because if we’re eating close to
bedtime. We are telling one part of our body. Hey, you know, open up the shop.
We got to this food, um, don’t turn out the lights yet yet. Another part of our
body is like winding down and trying to get ready for bed. And we’re, we’re
interfering with these repair processes and we’re interfering with the efficiency of
our circadian biology, this natural rhythm that we’ve really developed between growth
and repair and build up and breakdown. And when we’re out of balance, we simply
can’t repair all these things that we’re incurring,
you know, when you think about our food environment, all the pollutants, these
potential harmful toxins, the man -made toxins, not the not the healthy plant toxins.
Our bodies are out of balance with now we’re getting more damage than we’re spending
time repairing And that accelerates the timeline to disease,
because at the end of the day, disease and all these symptoms that we’re feeling
are all stemming from cellular dysfunction. I mean, that’s the most upstream factor
that, you know, if we try and get to root cause, you just can’t go further
upstream because the most fundamental smallest unit in our body is our cells. So the
health of ourselves is really the backbone of every symptom, whether it’s
bloating, digestion, mental fog, fatigue. It’s the backbone of disease like diabetes,
heart disease, Alzheimer’s, cancer. It’s just the backbone of longevity and how well
we age. So it’s really critical that we focus on repairing and allowing our body to
do what it’s made to do.
Bridgett: You know, you hit on so many of the things that the
good, the four R’s of good stress. I mean, you talked about repair.
And then, you know, can you talk about like the resist and the repair? And I was
looking at the rest of the Rs on their recycle recharge. Can you talk about the
four Rs?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah, absolutely. So the way I kind of condense the benefit of all these
different cellular stress responses is down to the four Rs, which as you started to
mention is, you know, resisting damage to repair the damage that’s already happened
to recycle different parts of ourselves and to recharge them by building their
energy. So we resist antioxidant damage and oxidative stress and we resist
inflammatory damage through these cellular stress responses. We repair protein,
and this is what’s really just phenomenal. Our proteins are the workhorse in
ourselves. We have 20 ,000 to 100 ,000 different proteins, and they’re doing the bulk
of the work. And proteins are so important that one of our cellular stress responses
are heat shock proteins. And they’re essentially what we call molecular chaperones.
And when protein is damaged, this chaperone finds that protein and literally escorts
it to get out. And that’s the importance of activating these stress responses.
And we also repair DNA. And like I mentioned, I mean, we’re getting just incredible
amounts of DNA damage on a daily basis. The recycling, so our cells have a recycle
bin called a lysosome, and when we trigger autophagy, this recycling process,
we take the damaged cells, or even old cells that are kind of just senescent cells,
and we shuttle them to the lysosome, and the lysosome, it’s like a junkyard. It
tries to take the scrap parts that can be salvaged and use them for, you know,
different components, and if it’s beyond salvageable, it converts the components to
energy. And probably the most critical part is the final R recharge,
because it’s improving the health of our mitochondria, which are really probably
becoming the focal point of so much of our health. Our mitochondria produce energy
for our body. When we eat food, our body has to convert that chemical energy into
cellular energy. So the energy currency in our body’s ATP and our mitochondria are
the part that are converting that. So they are kind of the power plants,
the cellular engines in our body. And if your mitochondria are impaired or you don’t
have enough mitochondria, So we call this mitochondrial dysfunction, your body can’t
do any of its critical functions, any of the repair, even down to like your energy
level, you know, so often my patients that come in, they ask me, you know, oh, I’m
just tired all the time, but I eat a really clean diet. You know, why am I so
tired? Like what, what do I need food allergy testing or what do I need to do and
the reality is no matter how healthy or how much good food or high -octane fuel you
give your car, if the cellular engine is not there to support,
you can’t convert it to energy. That’s the rate limiting step and we have to focus
on improving our mitochondrial health if we want our bodies to really do all the
essential work that happens at every level and every body system.
Colleen: How do we do
that?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah,
so, you know, right now, you know, the really, we’ll start by asking, why are our
mitochondria getting harmed? And the world that we’re living in, you know,
these processed foods being sedentary, chronic stress, loneliness, they’re all harming
or mitochondria and the aging process alone is gonna impair and make us lose some
mitochondria. So we know that this is happening really in a way that’s unprecedented
in human history and the way we repair it is through the five good stressors.
So we talked about plant toxins, The most potent way to improve your mitochondria
and trigger what’s called mito -hormesis. It’s a particular form of hormesis where
you’re generating more mitochondria and removing the damaged mitochondria.
So you’re essentially improving your ability to make clean energy in your body. So
exercise is the most potent Um, but all the good stressors with the other three
being using temperature like heat and cold. Um, we talked about the circadian
fasting. So the fasted state improves on mitochondria because just like exercise,
it sends this signal to your body of energy depletion and that triggers a stress
response. And, um, even mental challenges to have a role in stimulating mitochondria.
So it’s all kind of interrelated and this is just so key because what’s really
fascinating to me is our stress hormones like the catecholamines, norepinephrine,
and even serotonin that are actually made in our mitochondria. So when you exercise
to improve your mitochondrial health, you’re actually improving your ability to handle
stress, right? Like this is like the beautiful connection between our mind and body
that’s happening at the level of ourselves and why our body is just so
interconnected, why you can’t really just view psychological stress as purely a
psychological phenomena or eating healthy as purely something that benefits you in
some physical way. like there’s such a beautiful interrelationship. And I think
investing in improving our mitochondria, I mean, there’s so many layers to this
because our mitochondria are this incredible communication hub. They’re communicating
with our gut bacteria. They’re communicating with our circadian rhythm. So when our
mitochondria are healthy, every body system starts to function in a more effective
way.
Bridgett: – Yeah, you hit so many of important things and I want to talk forever about
that. One of them, you talked about the heat and the cold extremities. And you’re
reading that, but can you talk about—
Colleen: – So we have to take a cold plunge, is that
what you’re saying?
Bridgett: – Well, the heat and the cold, but it’s warning about
not too long of either of these. Can you talk about that?
Dr. Sharon: – Yeah, so I’m gonna say
that I’m a cold intolerant person. So I will certainly do these stressors,
but I am very sympathetic to people who prefer warm weather. I live in the South.
So I mean, I lived in New England and it was tough.
So, um, and the key here with cold and heat and all these good stressors is that
in the scenario of cold and heat, there’s not an exact temperature you have to hit
for these stress responses to be activated. All you have to do is get a little bit
outside your comfort zone and that’s just enough to trigger stress response,
but you don’t want to get to the point where it’s overwhelming or where you feel
unsafe because then any good stress can become a harmful chronic stress.
So if you are exposed to even 30 seconds of cold at the end of a shower,
that can be energizing and invigorating. It raises your dopamine level by 250%.
It can raise your norepinephrine by 530%. I mean, it’s incredibly powerful as a way
to kind of energize your body and create a scenario where your body is swimming in
these stress hormones, but you know, you can kind of stay calm and during those 30
seconds kind of take deep breaths and you’re essentially training your brain to
become more resilient by creating this stress scenario through cold.
So, you know, if you went into an ice plunge and you stayed in there for,
you know, 20 minutes saying, it’s going to be really tough, you know, if you feel
that you are overwhelmed, like sometimes your body’s saying, get out, get out. I’m
not feeling well. Like if you push it too far again, it’s like
overtraining your past that point where it’s beneficial. You want brief intermittent
mild to moderate stress. That’s just past your comfort zone followed by recovery. You
get out. You naturally let your body warm up again you know, you can risk putting
yourself in a situation of hypothermia if you overdo it, right? So more is not
always better. I think we have to get out of the mentality that, you know, just
push hard, push hard, push harder. I don’t think that that’s the message with good
stress. It almost sounds like a message of tough love, but it’s really a message of
love your body by helping it grow. And it’s not about pushing and persevering in
situations where you’re overwhelmed or in situations where you’re stuck. It’s about
using the right amount of stress as a kind of a secret weapon really of becoming
your best self, of increasing your potential.
Colleen: – And that’s good to hear for a lot
of people because they get in that competitive mode and they’re like, I need to
push the exercise, I need to push the eating habits, I need to push the cold
plunge. And you’re saying, like Bridgett said before, the Goldilocks kind of just in
that zone where you’re making changes, but you’re not becoming chronic in and the
change not staying too long. And your book talks about the stress paradox protocol
at the end, which is very helpful. And you do give that kind of guidance on what
zone you want to hit, where it’s just right. Can you talk about the protocol?
Dr. Sharon: Yeah,
you know, I, you know, as a physician, I work with people individually. And it was
really hard to think, well, how can I, you know, have something that everybody
that’s reading this could benefit from because so often, you know, we try and
individualize every treatment, um, and every person is different. And the way I
designed the protocol is really thinking about a health habit as, um,
you know, here’s a general way you do it. And here’s how you find what’s right for
you. Cause that was so important for me like to have people realize that
what’s stressful for one person in a good way it’s gonna be different than for the
next person depending on where you’re starting from and even the same stress from
day to day can be different depending on your amount of recovery right, if you’re
well recovered, if you’ve slept well you could probably handle 30 seconds of a cold
shower if you didn’t really sleep well the night before you didn’t really eat well,
you didn’t exercise like you, your body just may not be able to handle that one
additional stress that can push you into chronic stress. So the protocol is really
designed so that you can ask yourself the right questions of making sure you’re
benefiting from the good stress and that you’re straddling that Goldilocks zone where
you’re thriving from it. And again, too little and too much are really not where we
want to be. And part of the reason it was so important for me to kind of help
people get there is because so much of what we’re told about stress is, you know,
curb it, get rid of it, whatever we need to do to get it out of our lives.
And, you know, take into the other end of the extreme where we’re not exposed to
enough challenges. We also weaken our body. We’re telling our body to adapt to a
state that doesn’t push it in the way that it can grow and in a way that it can
thrive and in lack of good stress. I think is now becoming a really big risk
factor for so many of the mental and physical diseases like anxiety, depression,
diabetes, heart disease, etc that we’re seeing so it is you know just it’s not to
get rid of stress in our lives the protocols really designed to help you optimize
the stress in your life and and to help you differentiate the harmful stressors from
the beneficial ones.
Colleen: Dr. Sharon thank you so much for coming on today and talking
about the stress paradox. We’ll have the link for the book in the show notes and
we appreciate all that you’re doing in this research that seems very cutting edge at
this moment in time. So thank you.
Dr. Sharon: Thank you for having me. Thank you for letting
me share this information with your listeners. And I hope everyone can benefit from
this.
Colleen: I’m sure they will. Thank you.