
“Peace is not the absence of stress, but the mastery of it.” ~ Unknown
At the crossroads of mind and spirit, the human body speaks a language of chemistry that reflects our inner world. One of the primary messengers of stress is cortisol, the hormone released when we perceive danger, pressure, or threat. But in modern life, where traffic jams, deadlines, and digital noise rarely let up, cortisol often remains elevated, becoming a chronic companion rather than an occasional ally.
I see elevated cortisol as more than a biochemical signal: it is a sacred alarm calling us to pay attention, not just to what we do, but to how we relate to ourselves, our world, and the rhythms of life.