@josh said in Glucose loading cures everything?:
@gentlepotato said in Glucose loading cures everything?:
@josh said in Glucose loading cures everything?:
Is it because the HPA axis becomes more sensitive with every trauma, and more ready to switch into sympathetic mode, stress cascade and ultimately more fat metabolism, inhibiting glucose metabolism. Maybe flooding the system with glucose stops the stress hormones from needing to be activated and slowly over time this makes the HPA axis less reactive through neuroplastic pathways being desensitised.
Do you have any sources for this understanding of the HPA axis? That the HPA axis "becomes sensitive", what does that mean? The neuroplastic approach is a very mental one, often seen mentioned by people who believe in the biopsychosocial model. I'd say it's very far from a bioenergetic approach.
Sorry from a technical standpoint i am fairly unqualified. i have had an intimate relationship with trauma though over the last two years. Iv tried to take knowledge and see how it sits and feels on my own body, staying open minded.
I believe in the bioenergetic view of increased energy makes you more able to deal with stress and trauma. I have felt things that trigger me become easier to deal with as i have more resource, using bioenergetic principles. I also know triggers of hardwired stress responses to pretty innocuous things still remain as i feel the adrenaline effects of them everyday.
So from my basic understanding, i think the hypothalamus can send false flags to the pituitary, and each time the pituitary fires off the adrenals, this down regulates your metabolism. This in turn makes your HPA axis much more sensitive to firing as your resources for stressors such as false flags becomes much lower. I can see where i was confusing, in a way the hpa axis isnt more sensitive, its just doing its job, its actually due to low energy, and the hpa axis is filling in the gaps.
It funny (it really isnt) but i notice this in the morning when my temps are low im super reactive to triggers, whereas in the evening i barely react to them. Inversely if im being triggered alot, after the adrenaline has settled my temps will drop. It just shows how bidirectional the relationship between stress and energy ate.
Iv tried the 4x 25g dextrose for the last 4 days and on the first day my tinnitus went for 6hrs in the afternoon which was a big deal. The next 3 days my tinnitus didnt go. What i think happened is it is having an effect, but naturally after day one i felt a bit better, and pushed myself a bit harder, hence lost the gains, and adrenaline(cause of my tinnitus) stepped in again. Will give it time and hopefully will start to improve my brains carb metabolism. This alongside experimenting with increasing co2 which has been super helpful.
Btw i do think if you can boost your metabolism and be less reactionary to triggers. I believe we all have triggers, but this less our bodies react to these triggers the less important they become to the brain and slowly fade away like old memories, and you dont re traumatise yourself each time there is a trigger (book:the brain that changes itself). i think there is room for neuroplasticity alongside bioenergenetics, but this is only my opinion
Dr. Peat says that tinnitus is caused by gut inflammation. So heal the gut, heal the tinnitus? I have it too. My gut is healing, top down. Not going to provide the gory details at this time, but gut dysbiosos has been a lifelong issue for me so I'm probably looking at a year or more before I'm 100%.