Acute stress isn't the enemy — it's adaptive, and it's supposed to resolve. The damage comes when the cycle never closes: cortisol stays high, the system never stands down, and the load accumulates across your body. And here's the catch most people miss — solving the problem doesn't automatically complete the stress in your body.
By Jared Ohman6 min readLast updated June 2026Source: Self-Care, Ch. 6
The stressor and the stress are not the same thing. Eliminating the stressor does not automatically complete the stress cycle in your body.
— Emily & Amelia Nagoski (via The Self-Care You Were Never Taught, Ch. 6)
SHORT ANSWER
Allostatic load, a concept from Bruce McEwen, is the cumulative wear that builds up when the stress cycle breaks down. Allostasis — maintaining stability through change — is the body's healthy response to a challenge: cortisol rises, energy mobilizes, then the system returns to baseline when the challenge passes. Allostatic load occurs when that return never happens — cortisol stays elevated, sleep degrades, and damage accumulates across the cardiovascular, metabolic, immune, and neurological systems. The crucial insight (from Emily and Amelia Nagoski): the stressor and the stress are not the same thing. Eliminating the stressor doesn't automatically complete the stress cycle in your body — movement, laughter, crying, connection, and breathing are what discharge the mobilized energy and return you to baseline.
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The problem
The deadline passed. The crisis resolved. The hard thing is over — and you're still wired, still bracing, still not sleeping. You solved the problem, so why does your body act like the problem is still here? You conclude something's wrong with you, when in fact your body is doing exactly what unfinished stress does.
Solving the problem and completing the stress are two different jobs, and almost no one is taught the second one. Skip it long enough and the leftover stress doesn't just sit there — it accumulates, system by system, into real damage.
The mechanism
Bruce McEwen's allostatic load names the difference between acute and chronic stress. Allostasis — stability through change — is healthy: cortisol rises, heart rate climbs, energy mobilizes, and when the challenge passes the system returns to baseline. That cycle is necessary. Allostatic load is what happens when the cycle breaks down — cortisol stays elevated because the stressor never resolves, immune function stays suppressed, sleep degrades because the system never fully stands down. The load accumulates across the cardiovascular, metabolic, immune, and neurological systems, shifting the body from adaptive flexibility toward pathological rigidity.
The key move comes from Emily and Amelia Nagoski: the stressor and the stress are not the same thing. The stressor is the external problem; the stress is the mobilized state in your body. Eliminating the stressor doesn't discharge the stress. Only the body completes the cycle — through movement, creative expression, laughter, crying, social connection, and breathing. Seen this way, self-care isn't indulgence; it's the mechanism that completes stress cycles and reduces allostatic load.
The operating system
STEP 01
Separate the stressor from the stress
Notice when the problem is handled but your body hasn't gotten the message — still tense, wired, braced. That gap is unfinished stress, not a sign the problem isn't really solved.
"Why am I still on edge, it's over?" is the question that means the cycle hasn't completed.
STEP 02
Complete the cycle through the body
Pick a physical discharge: a brisk walk or run, shaking out, a good cry, a real laugh, a hug held longer than normal. The body needs to do something to register that the threat has passed; thinking "I'm safe now" isn't enough.
Movement is the most reliable discharge — about 20 minutes of getting your heart rate up tells the body the chase is over.
STEP 03
Don't wait for the stressor to end
For chronic stressors that won't resolve soon, complete the cycle anyway, regularly. You can't always remove the problem, but you can keep discharging the stress so it stops accumulating into load.
Daily completion of small cycles prevents the slow accumulation that becomes burnout.
STEP 04
Treat self-care as load reduction
Reframe the practices as physiology, not pampering. Breathing, exercise, connection, expression — these are how the body returns to baseline. Naming them as allostatic-load reduction makes them non-negotiable rather than optional.
"I don't have time" usually means "I don't have time to complete my stress cycles" — which is exactly how load builds.
STEP 05
Watch for accumulating load
Degrading sleep, lingering illness, chronic tension that never lifts — these signal load building faster than you're discharging it. McEwen's encouraging finding: much of the damage is reversible once the cycle starts completing again.
The damage is largely reversible. Starting to complete cycles, even late, lets the system recover.
The printable: complete the cycle
Print it. Solving the problem isn't finishing the stress.
ALLOSTATIC LOAD · COMPLETE THE CYCLE
The stressor ≠ the stress.
THE PROBLEM
Cycle that never closes → cortisol stays up → damage accumulates.
THE INSIGHT
Solving the problem doesn't discharge the stress in your body.
It's the cumulative physiological damage that accumulates when the stress-recovery cycle doesn't complete. Healthy stress (allostasis) ramps up and then returns to baseline. When the stressor is chronic and the system never stands down, the load accumulates across organ systems — cardiovascular, metabolic, immune, neurological — shifting the body from adaptive flexibility toward pathological rigidity.
Why doesn't solving my problems make the stress go away?
Because the stressor and the stress are two different things, as Emily and Amelia Nagoski put it. The stressor is the external problem; the stress is the physiological state in your body. You can eliminate the problem and still be carrying the mobilized stress energy — which is why people often crash or stay wired after a deadline passes. The body needs to complete the cycle separately.
How do I complete the stress cycle?
Through the body, not the to-do list. Physical movement, creative expression, laughter, crying, social connection, and breathing exercises all discharge the mobilized energy and signal the body that the threat has passed. Self-care practices, in this light, aren't luxuries — they're allostatic-load-reduction strategies, the mechanism by which the body returns to baseline.
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