
What Stress Feels Like in an Autoimmune Body
What Stress Feels Like in an Autoimmune Body
When people talk about stress, it is often described as feeling anxious, overwhelmed, or tense.
But living with autoimmune disease has taught me that stress does not always feel emotional first. Sometimes it shows up quietly, through the body.
As exhaustion that does not match what you did that day.
As pain that flares after an emotionally heavy conversation.
As brain fog that settles in once everything finally slows down.
For a long time, I told myself I was not stressed. I was just tired. I was just dealing with a lot. I was just getting through.
But my body was telling a different story.
In an autoimmune body, stress is not always about what is happening right now. It is often about what has been carried without space to process.
Holding it together.
Pushing through.
Not wanting to burden anyone.
Saving emotions for later.
Later has a way of showing up physically.
I started noticing patterns. After emotionally intense days, my body would ache. After weeks of being “fine,” I would crash. Stress showed up as fatigue, pain, and brain fog long before I ever labeled it as stress.
This does not mean emotions cause disease.
It does mean emotions live in the body.
And when they are not acknowledged, the body finds a way to speak.
Awareness changes the relationship we have with stress. Instead of seeing symptoms as random or frustrating, we begin to see them as signals asking for attention.
Sometimes stress sounds like needing rest before you feel exhausted.
Sometimes it looks like needing quiet after being emotionally “on.”
Sometimes it feels like your body asking you to slow down before it forces you to stop.
This is not about controlling stress or eliminating it. That is not realistic.
It is about recognizing how stress shows up for you so you can respond sooner and with more care.
When we stop dismissing stress because it does not look dramatic, we start giving our bodies what they need before things escalate.
Stress is not a personal failure.
It is part of being human.
And in an autoimmune body, learning to notice stress early can make daily life feel steadier, even when symptoms are unpredictable.
A Gentle Invitation
If this resonates, you might start noticing how stress shows up for you physically.
Not to analyze it.
Not to fix it.
Just to recognize it.
If you would like to stay connected, you are welcome to follow along with me on Instagram, where I share real conversations about stress, energy, and living with autoimmune disease.
👉 You can find me on Instagram here:
https://www.instagram.com/annmarieentner/
If community feels supportive, you are also welcome inside my free Facebook group. It is a space for honest conversations, shared experiences, and gentle support from women who understand how emotional and physical stress overlap in this life.
👉 You are welcome to join the free Facebook group here:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1082010256396779/
No pressure. No expectations.
Just space to notice, reflect, and take care.
Listening to stress is not weakness.
It is awareness.
