I discovered that while stress chemicals (cortisol) might clear from our blood in about 90 minutes, their effect on our cells can last for hours or days. For us as autistic people, this is compounded by our natural Inertia. Just as we have "Monotropic Focus" (hard to shift attention), we also have "Physiological Inertia." Our body’s "brake pedal" is often a bit less sensitive than the neurotypical one. We don't just "switch off" the stress response; we have to manually wind it down.
I realized I couldn't "think" the cortisol away. I had to move it. I’ve been using a simple Taoist tactic in my garden today that I wanted to share:
-
The Shake (The Purge): I stood on the grass and just bounced on my heels, shaking my hands and wrists loosely for a few minutes. It mimics how animals "shake off" a chase. It signals to the body: The event is over. Discharge the energy.
-
The Anchor (The Roots): After shaking, I stood still, placed my hands on my kidneys (lower back), and imagined breathing the excess heat down through my legs and into the ground.