Just knowing what those trigger points are, can help you not get to the point
of stress overload.
It is the force of this mind - muscle contraction connection over the
resistance stress overload that makes for muscle, and most certainly, not physical power.
However, if you find that you're consistently feeling tense, anxious, worried or on edge or other symptoms of stress, you may be
on stress overload.
There are many blood vessels in addition which have smooth muscles, and many of these can potentially go into a state of contraction with
sympathetic stress overload, resulting in cramps, spasms and the many and varied other symptoms produced by circulatory insufficiency.
If you notice areas of thinning hair or bald spots on your cat, talk to your veterinarian because there may be an underlying medical cause or your cat may be
experiencing stress overload.
I started getting these after having my last baby and they seem to come when there's sensory and
stress overload.
It's all part of
the stress overload, the typical American diet, the lack of sleep, a lack of outdoor time, poor gut health, insufficient vitamin D, rampant overtraining — or (alternatively) being too sedentary, working too hard, feeding fatty acid imbalances, absorbing environmental toxins, etc., etc..
The stress overload can cause some pets to try to escape the house or yard.