How To Tell If You Have Adrenal Fatigue
How to Tell If Your Adrenals Are Fatigued (Plus 7 Ways To Support Them)
Too
many of us wear stress and busy lifestyles like a badge of honor.
Unfortunately, the medal that goes along with stress is usually adrenal
fatigue. If you’re one that burns the candle at both ends, leaves stress
unchecked, and exists on coffee and nutritionally devoid food, then
this is something you might need to address.
Until
quite recently, I had no idea what adrenals were. I wasn’t the best
science student, and they certainly were never a part of that body part
jingle that taught us of the components of the human body. “The shin
bone’s connected to the knee bone, the adrenal glands connected to the
…”
The adrenal glands (also known as suprarenal
glands) are the triangle-shaped endocrine glands that sit on top of the
kidneys. They are chiefly responsible for regulating the stress
response through the synthesis of corticosteroids and catecholamine,
including cortisol and adrenaline. If that just sounded like a bunch of
big words to you, let me break it down. Over-worked adrenal glands = big
problems for your health.
Your adrenal glands
are super important for a healthy immune system. They are necessary for
proper thyroid function, balancing your hormones, maintaining your ideal
weight, stabilising your emotions, controlling your cravings and much
more. They are pretty much the regulators of your body, and sorting them
out may be the key to solving many of your unexplained health
challenges.
How do we know if our adrenals are
fatigued? Unfortunately, because of the nature of our fast-paced
lifestyles, this is a condition that can go unchecked because we just
get so used to feeling less than brilliant. However, common symptoms
include:
- Excessive sweating or perspiration from little activity
- Lower back pain and/or knee weakness or pain, especially on the side
- Dark circles under the eyes
- Dizziness
- Muscle twitches
- Low blood sugar
- Heart palpitations
- Sensitivity to light, or difficulty seeing at night
- A craving for salt
- Low stamina for stress, and easily irritated
- Excessive mood responses after eating carbohydrates such as pasta, breads and sugar
- Chronic infections (bacterial, viral, fungal, yeast)
- Low blood pressure
- Light-headedness on standing up
- Tired but wired feeling, poor sleep, difficulty getting out of bed in the morning
- Cravings for sweets and carbs, intolerance to alcohol
- Premature aging
- Dry, unhealthy skin with excess pigmentation
- Lack of libido
- Cystic breasts
- Tendency to startle easily
- Negative response to thyroid hormone
- Poor concentration and fuzzy thinking
7 Ways To Support Your Adrenals
1. Get adequate sleep. Seven
to eight hours a night is ideal, and if you can get to bed well before
midnight you get extra points. This is when our bodies do most of their
healing.
2. Schedule “me time” as part of your daily routine, and make it a priority.
3. Practice stillness or meditation every day.
5. Eliminate refined sugar
and processed carbs. They are empty calories and do nothing besides
stress out your adrenals. Adrenal glands help to regulate blood sugar
levels.
6. Eat a clean diet of organic, fresh, plant-based whole foods. Load up on vegetables, fruits, nuts, legumes, beans and whole grains.
7.
Kick the coffee habit. Swap your caffeine fix for green tea, peppermint
tea, dandelion and chicory root tea or nice clean water.
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