High cortisol is aging you faster than smoking and tanning beds.
Low libido, achy joints, dark circles, weak muscles.
Here are 9 natural ways to slow the clock, no medication needed:
1. Cold water on your face.
Because it activates the vagus nerve and helps move your body out of panic mode.
It triggers the mammalian diving reflex, raising parasympathetic (vagal) activity and slowing your heart rate, which helps interrupt a panic spiral.
Cold water signals calm to your nervous system.
Signaling calm is good, but chronic stress hormones still need taming from the inside.
Research links ashwagandha to lower cortisol, better mood, and steadier energy.
Physician's CHOICE KSM-66 Ashwagandha is the best-absorbing one I've tried:
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2. Slow exhales stop the fight or flight response, in seconds.
Long exhales raise respiratory sinus arrhythmia and vagal calming. Your whole body relaxes and your vision clears.
This often raises HRV and shifts your nervous system away from threat mode.
3. Device free walking resets threat scanning.
Rhythmic movement and sensory flow reduce constant threat monitoring. It lowers the kind of mind wandering that comes from a Default Mode Network stuck in rumination.
Your salience network stops getting jolted with false alarms.
4. Drawing externalizes your emotions.
When you put feelings on paper, you lower cognitive load and calm limbic reactivity. Drawing engages visuomotor and sensory motor networks.
It can help you sit with uncomfortable emotions instead of running from them.
5. Softening your eyes reduces hypervigilance.
Threat states narrow your visual attention into tunnel vision. Widening your gaze reduces that defensive narrowing and sends a safety signal through your body's orienting system.
It helps shift you out of freeze mode.
6. Try a whole body sigh.
Research shows a sigh can lower your heart rate. You feel relief almost immediately.
Look into the physiological sigh research from Huberman's lab for the full mechanism.
Best use: 60 to 90 second intervals, any time of day.
7. Rocking is self soothing.
Rhythmic vestibular stimulation is common across humans, think of how infants are soothed. It lowers arousal by settling into a steady rhythm and shifting attention to bodily sensation.
Best use: slow rocking or sway for 1 to 3 minutes.
8. Humming stimulates the vagus nerve and restores calm.
Vocalization engages breath control and can stimulate vagal pathways through the throat and voice box. Chanting and tonal singing may raise a sense of social safety.
Best use: hum on long exhales for 1 to 2 minutes.
Calm from humming fades fast if your magnesium is low.
Studies tie magnesium to calmer nerves, less tension, and deeper sleep.
Nutricost Magnesium L-Threonate is the only one I keep by my bed:
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9. Nature exposure calms the salience network.
Nature scenes link to lower stress reactivity, better mood, less rumination. Often tied to reduced DMN rumination and lower sympathetic activity.
Green space and forest bathing show a meaningful drop in stress markers.
Our bodies carry what our minds cannot process.
Releasing tension in the body can help you feel safe again and give you a way to handle emotions that feel too big.
Start with just one of these today and notice what shifts.
Repost the first tweet to help someone you love.
With the deepest respect and love,
Julian.
DISCLAIMER:
This thread may contain affiliate links. It is not intended to prevent, diagnose, or treat disease. Consult a licensed practitioner before starting any new health protocol.
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