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12/17/2025

​Stress and Its Impact on the Body: Navigating Stress During and Beyond the Holiday Season

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Photo by Andrea Piacquadio: https://www.pexels.com/photo/photo-of-man-touching-his-head-3752834/
                  “Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes—including you.” — Anne Lamott

Stress is an unavoidable part of life. While short-term stress can sometimes be motivating or protective, chronic or unmanaged stress can significantly affect both physical and mental health. The holiday season, while often joyful, can intensify stress due to increased demands, expectations, and disruptions to routine. Understanding stress, its major sources, and its impact on the body is a critical step toward prevention and long-term wellness.

This blog explores what stress is, the five major stressors many individuals face, how stress affects the body, the long-term consequences of chronic stress, and how counseling can support stress management and recovery.

Stress Busters In and Out of the Holiday Season

Stress management is not only a seasonal need—it is a year-round skill. However, stress often escalates during the holidays due to time pressure, financial strain, family dynamics, and social obligations.
Practical stress busters include:
  • Maintaining consistent sleep and meal routines, even during busy seasons
  • Scheduling intentional breaks and downtime
  • Practicing mindful breathing or grounding exercises
  • Setting realistic expectations and boundaries
  • Reducing overcommitment and learning to say no
  • Limiting excessive alcohol or caffeine intake, which can worsen anxiety
These strategies are effective both during high-stress seasons and throughout the year, especially when practiced consistently.

What Is Stress?

Stress is the body’s natural response to perceived demands or threats. When the brain interprets a situation as stressful, it activates the sympathetic nervous system, triggering the well-known “fight, flight, or freeze” response. This leads to the release of stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline.

In short bursts, stress can sharpen focus and reaction time. However, when stress becomes chronic—lasting weeks, months, or years—it places continuous strain on the body and nervous system, often leading to emotional exhaustion and physical illness.

Five Major Stressors


While stressors vary by individual, research and clinical practice consistently identify five broad categories that impact most people:

Work and Career Stress

Deadlines, workload, job insecurity, workplace conflict, and burnout are common contributors to chronic stress.

Financial Stress

Concerns about income, debt, inflation, holiday spending, or unexpected expenses can create persistent anxiety and sleep disturbance.

Family and Relationship Stress

Family dynamics, caregiving responsibilities, parenting challenges, and relationship conflict often intensify during holidays and life transitions.

Health-Related Stress

Chronic illness, pain, fertility concerns, autoimmune conditions, or caring for a loved one with medical needs can significantly strain emotional and physical reserves.

Life Transitions and Trauma

Major changes such as grief, divorce, relocation, becoming a parent, or unresolved trauma can overwhelm the nervous system and increase vulnerability to long-term stress.

How Stress Impacts the Body

Chronic stress affects nearly every system in the body:
  • Nervous System: Heightened anxiety, irritability, panic symptoms, difficulty relaxing
  • Cardiovascular System: Increased heart rate, elevated blood pressure, higher risk of heart disease
  • Immune System: Reduced immune response, increased inflammation, more frequent illness
  • Digestive System: Stomach pain, IBS symptoms, nausea, appetite changes
  • Musculoskeletal System: Muscle tension, headaches, jaw pain, back and neck pain
  • Endocrine System: Hormonal imbalances, fatigue, sleep disturbances

Over time, the body may remain in a constant state of activation, making it difficult to fully rest or recover.

Long-Term Impact on Physical and Mental Health

When stress is left unaddressed, it can contribute to both physical and psychological conditions, including:
  • Anxiety disorders and panic attacks
  • Depression and emotional numbness
  • Chronic fatigue and burnout
  • Sleep disorders
  • Migraines and chronic pain
  • Gastrointestinal disorders
  • Worsening of autoimmune and inflammatory conditions
  • Trauma-related symptoms, including hypervigilance and emotional reactivity

Chronic stress also increases the risk of maladaptive coping strategies such as substance use, emotional eating, or social withdrawal.

How Counseling Can Help


Counseling provides a structured, supportive space to address stress at its roots—not just the symptoms. Therapy can help individuals:
  • Identify personal stress triggers and patterns
  • Learn nervous system regulation skills
  • Develop healthier coping strategies
  • Address unresolved trauma or grief
  • Improve boundaries and communication
  • Reduce anxiety, depression, and burnout

Evidence-based approaches such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), EMDR therapy, trauma-informed care, and mindfulness-based interventions are particularly effective for stress-related concerns.

At Transform & Renew Counseling, we support individuals, families, and children in navigating stress, trauma recovery, and life transitions. Our counseling services in San Antonio are offered both in person and virtually, allowing flexibility and access to care.


Final Thoughts

Stress is not a personal failure—it is a physiological response to life demands. However, when stress becomes chronic, it deserves attention and care. Learning to manage stress proactively can protect long-term physical health, mental well-being, and overall quality of life.

If you are experiencing ongoing stress, anxiety, or burnout, professional counseling can help you restore balance and resilience.

To learn more or schedule an appointment:
Transform & Renew Counseling
Phone: 210-201-4578
Email: [email protected]
​

Support is available, and meaningful change is possible.

    Authors

    Elizabeth Oldham is an LPC-S and co-founder of Transform & Renew, PLLC.  She specializes in co-dependency, anxiety and OCD, depression and mood disorders. 

    Aimee Rhodes,  Doctorate in Education, Global Training and Development and LPC-S is a cofounder of Transform & Renew, PLLC. She specializes in mood disorders, relationship trauma and grief. 

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