
You know her. You might be her.
She is the woman who arrives first and leaves last. Who has the answer before the question is finished. Who has built something real — a title, a reputation, a life that looks, from the outside, like a masterclass in discipline and drive.
She is also the woman who hasn’t slept deeply in months. Whose hair has been quietly breaking off at the crown. Whose skin looks tight — not from Botox, but from something harder to name. There is an edge about her. A bracing quality. Like she is always, just slightly, braced for impact.
She has tried wellness. She downloaded the apps. She did the cold plunge. She went to the retreat where they talked about boundaries and breathwork, and she sat in the back, arms crossed, thinking:
This is for people who have time to be soft.
She does not have that time. She cannot afford to be soft. She has built everything she has by being hard, and she is not about to let a lavender candle undo it.
So this is not for the woman who is already converted. This is for her — the skeptic, the driver, the woman who needs a reason grounded in something real before she will consider stopping.
Here is the reason.
The autonomic nervous system governs functions you do not consciously control: heart rate, digestion, immune response, hormone regulation, skin cell turnover, and hair follicle health. It operates through two primary branches.
The sympathetic nervous system is your activation state — the mechanism behind fight, flight, and the focused intensity that has served your career exceptionally well. When activated, it floods your body with cortisol and adrenaline, redirects blood flow to large muscle groups, suppresses digestion, and temporarily pauses non-essential processes like cellular repair and follicle nourishment.
The parasympathetic nervous system is your restoration state — the mechanism behind repair, recovery, and regulation. It is where your immune system does its deepest work. Where your skin regenerates. Where your body processes stress hormones and restores hormonal balance.
These two systems are designed to work in rhythm. Activation and restoration. Output and recovery. That rhythm is not a luxury — it is a biological requirement.
The problem for high-achieving women is not that they have a strong sympathetic response. It is that many of them have lost the rhythm entirely.
You have not eliminated the need for restoration. You have simply delayed the invoice.
Polyvagal theory, developed by neuroscientist Dr. Stephen Porges, describes what happens when the nervous system becomes stuck in a chronic stress state. The vagus nerve — the longest cranial nerve in the body, connecting brain to heart, lungs, and gut — loses its flexibility. The body can no longer easily shift between activation and restoration. It defaults to high alert, even when there is no immediate threat.
For high-achieving women, that threat is rarely a tiger. It is a 7 a.m. board call. An inbox with 300 unread. A performance review. A child’s school email that arrives at the wrong moment. The body does not distinguish between these stressors and physical danger. It responds the same way.
Over time, chronic sympathetic activation produces measurable, visible consequences:
Elevated cortisol constricts peripheral blood vessels, reducing circulation to the scalp. Hair follicles, deprived of oxygen and nutrients, weaken. The result is breakage — not at the ends, but at the root. The crown. Exactly where women who carry chronic stress tend to notice it first.
Cortisol also suppresses collagen synthesis and disrupts the skin’s moisture barrier. The result is not simply dryness — it is a particular quality of tightness, a dullness, a texture that no amount of serum fully corrects because the disruption is systemic, not topical.
And then there is the aura. The braced quality. The holding. The jaw that is never fully relaxed. The shoulders that live near the ears. The way a dysregulated nervous system eventually shows up not just in the body, but in the presence — a kind of hardness that others sense before they can name it. A signal the body is sending, whether or not the mind has registered it.
This is not weakness. This is biology. And it is cumulative.
Here is what the data shows.
The prefrontal cortex — the part of the brain responsible for strategic thinking, executive function, nuanced judgment, and emotional regulation — is exquisitely sensitive to cortisol. In controlled studies, chronic stress measurably degrades prefrontal cortex performance. Decision quality declines. Pattern recognition slows. The capacity to hold complexity — to see around corners, to read a room, to know when to push and when to hold — diminishes.
This is the part of the brain her entire career depends on.
Rest is not the opposite of performance. Restoration is the mechanism by which performance is sustained. The athletes she would respect — the ones with the longest careers, the most consistent output, the sharpest edges maintained over decades — are not the ones who trained hardest. They are the ones who recovered best.
Her nervous system is no different from theirs.
Rest is not the reward for finishing everything. It is the condition that makes finishing possible.
This is where the wellness industry has failed her.
A spa day is not nervous system restoration. A glass of wine is not restoration. A meditation app used in the back of an Uber between meetings is not restoration. These are pleasant. Some of them are genuinely useful in the short term. None of them shift the underlying pattern.
Genuine restoration — the kind that allows the parasympathetic nervous system to do its work — requires specific conditions. It requires an environment the nervous system reads as safe. It requires sustained stillness, not a strategic pause. It requires removal from the cues and contexts the nervous system has learned to associate with threat.
For a woman whose nervous system has been in chronic activation for years, stepping into that environment for the first time can feel profoundly disorienting. The body does not immediately believe the safety is real. It takes time — sometimes more time than a lunch break or a single night away.
This is not a character flaw. It is physiology. And it is the reason that genuine restoration often requires intentional, structured removal from the environment that created the dysregulation in the first place.
If you have read this far, something in this landed.
Maybe you recognized the hair. The skin. The way you hold your shoulders at the dinner table. Maybe you recognized the way you’ve started to feel slightly contemptuous of women who seem to rest easily — not because you believe rest is wrong, but because somewhere along the way you stopped believing you were allowed to have it.
The work of restoration is not soft work. It is, in fact, some of the most demanding work a driven woman can do. It requires tolerating stillness. Releasing the identity that has been built around constant output. Allowing the nervous system to remember what safety feels like — not as a concept, but as a physical state.
It requires, in the most precise clinical sense, re-regulation.
The question is not whether you need it. You do. The question is whether you are ready to stop performing wellness long enough to actually receive it.
Marilyn Moore Dyson is the founder of The Quiet Bloom Wellness, a luxury trauma-informed retreat brand for women. With 15+ years in behavioral health and management consultanting, she helps high-achieving women reclaim genuine restoration — not as self-care, but as a leadership practice. Learn more at quietbloom-wellness.com
Sources
Porges, S. W. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-regulation. Norton.
McEwen, B. S. (2007). Physiology and Neurobiology of Stress and Adaptation: Central Role of the Brain. Physiological Reviews, 87(3), 873–904.
Arnsten, A. F. T. (2009). Stress Signalling Pathways That Impair Prefrontal Cortex Structure and Function. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 10, 410–422.
April 20, 2026
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