You handled the crisis, so why does your body still feel braced for impact? Because solving the problem and ending the stress are two different things.
The deadline passed, the argument ended, the bill got paid. Your nervous system never got the memo, and that low hum of tension is the proof.
Stress is a full-body response with a beginning, a middle, and an end. Most of us are good at removing the stressor and terrible at finishing the response it set off. The leftover adrenaline and cortisol have nowhere to go, so they linger as tight shoulders, shallow breath, and a mood that will not lift even when the situation is resolved.
This course treats recovery as a physical act, not a mindset. A zebra outruns a lion and shakes it off within minutes; humans carry the same charge for days because we never let the cycle finish. You will learn to read the signs that a cycle is still open, then close it on purpose through movement and breath, real contact with other people, and the releases most adults quietly skip: a good cry and the act of making something. The final lesson turns all of it into a plan you can reach for the next time your body stays switched on after the threat is gone.
Chronic copers: you push through stressful weeks and wonder why rest never seems to recharge you.
The high-functioning and frazzled: you keep solving problems while your body stays braced, irritable, and wired at night.
Anyone tired of vague advice: you want concrete, repeatable ways to discharge stress instead of being told to relax.
7 lessons to get you from zero to confident. Start at your own pace.