Stress
374 sourcesRay Peat's concept of stress extends far beyond the popular understanding of 'feeling stressed.' Drawing on Hans Selye's work, Peat described stress as any factor that shifts the body away from efficient oxidative metabolism toward emergency, adaptive responses. These responses — involving cortisol, adrenaline, serotonin, estrogen, and prostaglandins — are protective in the short term but destructive when chronic. Peat argued that modern life imposes constant low-grade stress through poor diet (PUFAs, starch, inadequate protein), hormonal imbalances, light deprivation, and environmental toxins.
The stress response in Peat's framework involves a cascade: inadequate fuel supply → cortisol and adrenaline release → free fatty acid mobilization → suppressed thyroid function → shift toward glycolysis → lactic acid production → further stress. Breaking this cycle requires addressing nutrition, thyroid function, and hormonal balance simultaneously.
Key Positions
- Stress shifts metabolism from oxidative to glycolytic, producing lactic acid instead of CO2
- Cortisol, adrenaline, serotonin, and estrogen are all stress mediators that promote each other
- Darkness and cold are biological stressors that increase stress hormones
- Frequent eating (especially sugar and protein) prevents the stress of low blood sugar
- Polyunsaturated fats amplify the stress response by inhibiting glucose oxidation
- Learned helplessness — Seligman's model — illustrates the metabolic basis of stress and depression
- Sleep problems, low body temperature, and cold extremities are signs of chronic stress
Sources
374 items-
Sugar issues
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Suitable Fats, Unsuitable Fats: Issues in Nutrition
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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The Cancer Matrix
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The Great Fish Oil Experiment
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The Nutrition Whisperer - Dodie Anderson
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The Ray Peat Dietary Survival Guide - Joey Lott
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The dark side of stress (learned helplesness)
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The transparency of life: Cataracts as a model of age-related disease.
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Thyroid
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Thyroid, insomnia, and the insanities: Commonalities in disease
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Thyroid: Therapies, Confusion, and Fraud.
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Tissue-bound estrogen in aging
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Tryptophan, serotonin, and aging.
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Unsaturated Vegetable Oils: Toxic.
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Unsaturated fatty acids: Nutritionally essential, or toxic?
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Using Sunlight to Sustain Life
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VV Fitness Blog - Vahdaneh Vahid
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Vashinvetala (formerly Pranarupa)
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Vision and Acceptance - Karen Mcc and Éric Lépine
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Vitamin E: Estrogen antagonist, energy promoter, and anti-inflammatory
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Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging
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When energy fails: Edema, heart failure, hypertension, sarcopenia, etc.
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age pigment cause and effect of aging and stress