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Hormonal Balance Starts in the Nervous System (Not in “Willpower”) Hormonal balance isn’t just about what you take—it’s about what your body perceives. Your endocrine system (hormones) is constantly listening to your nervous system for one core piece of data: “Are we safe enough to repair, digest, sleep, and regulate?” When your baseline is strained, the body adapts by turning up stress chemistry, tightening breathing mechanics, shifting appetite and blood sugar, and making everything feel louder—mood, tension, cravings, fatigue, sleep disruption. This guided somatic routine is designed to help you lower baseline arousal so your hormones can return to steadier daily rhythm. The Science: HPA Axis, Cortisol, and Why “Stress” Becomes Hormonal Your stress system isn’t just a feeling—it’s a hormonal pipeline. The HPA axis (hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal axis) coordinates cortisol and other stress mediators to mobilize energy, sharpen focus, and keep you going. That’s useful in acute stress. But when the nervous system stays stuck in high alert (sympathetic dominance) or shutdown (dorsal vagal collapse), the HPA axis can drift into dysregulation: cortisol timing shifts, recovery gets harder, and the body starts prioritizing survival over repair. Over time, this can ripple into sleep depth, digestion, immune signaling, thyroid conversion, glucose regulation, and ovarian hormone metabolism—not because you’re “broken,” but because your body is trying to keep you alive with the information it has. Nervous System Regulation as Endocrine Support Somatic work supports hormonal balance by changing inputs that your brainstem and hypothalamus use to set your baseline: breathing mechanics, ribcage mobility, vagal tone, interoception (how you sense your internal state), and proprioception (how your body maps itself in space). Predictable, non-threatening sensory input can reduce the background stress signal and improve autonomic flexibility—your ability to move between activation and rest. That flexibility is a quiet superpower for endocrine health because hormones love rhythm: stable sleep-wake cycles, steadier blood sugar, consistent digestion, and a nervous system that knows how to downshift. Why This Helps With Mood, Sleep, Appetite, and “Feeling Off” When baseline arousal drops—even slightly—many people notice changes that look “hormonal”: less wired-but-tired energy, fewer adrenaline spikes, more stable hunger cues, smoother digestion, and a nervous system that can finally access rest. That’s not placebo magic; it’s physiology. A steadier nervous system environment supports the conditions your hormones depend on: recovery, metabolic steadiness, and circadian timing. This is also why “hormone symptoms” often flare during life load—because the body is responding to stress signaling, not failing a moral test. A More Honest Take on “Balance” Your body isn’t a spreadsheet you can optimize into perfect hormonal harmony. It’s an intelligent, adaptive system responding to sleep, light exposure, blood sugar demands, emotional load, inflammation, training volume, and everything you’ve had to carry. This practice is the somatic piece of hormonal support: helping your nervous system read more steadiness, so stress chemistry doesn’t have to run so loud in the background. Small, repeatable regulation moments are how long-term stability is built—quietly, consistently, without self-blame - Find more practices on my website: https://www.shebreath.com/store YouTube: / @shebreath_teresa Instagram: shebreath_official TikTok: sheBREATH Facebook: sheBREATH Substack: https://substack.com/@shebreath - Disclaimer: The content provided on this channel is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Teresa Trieb is not responsible for any liabilities, injuries, or damages that may occur from following the information or advice in these videos. By voluntarily participating in these somatic exercises, you agree to do so at your own risk and accept full responsibility for any potential damage. You may consult a healthcare professional before beginning somatic exercises. These exercises are intended as a general guide; always pay attention to your body's signals and discontinue if you feel unwell. If you experience sensations such as tingling, ear ringing, dizziness, light-headedness or similar symptoms, please remain calm, as they are completely normal.