Understanding Stress, and What We Can Do About It

How taVNS, Self-Awareness, and Stoic Wisdom Can Support a Calmer Life

April is Stress Awareness Month. And at ZenoWell, we think this is worth more than a social media reminder. It is worth a real conversation—about what stress actually does to the body, what science is learning about how to regulate it, and what ancient philosophy has known for a very long time about how to live with greater steadiness.

This is not an article about eliminating stress. Stress is part of being alive. It is a signal. It is a response. Sometimes it is even useful.

But when stress becomes chronic—when it stops being a temporary alarm and starts becoming the background noise of daily life—it changes the body in ways that most people never see, but almost everyone eventually feels.

At ZenoWell, we believe that understanding stress is the first step toward regulating it. And that is where our name begins.


Why We Are Called ZenoWell

Our name comes from Zeno of Citium, the founder of Stoic philosophy—a tradition built not on suppressing emotion, but on understanding the relationship between what happens to us and how we respond.

The Stoics organized human experience around a deceptively simple framework:

  • What is within our control — our attention, our breathing, our interpretation, our daily habits.
  • What is not within our control — external events, other people's actions, circumstances we did not choose.
  • What lies in between — our physiological state, our stress response, our nervous system patterns. These are not fully under conscious command, but they are not entirely beyond influence either.

That middle category is where ZenoWell lives.

We do not promise to eliminate stress. We offer tools and practices that may help you know yourself better, predict your responses more clearly, and gently shift the things that can be shifted—so you can feel better, recover more easily, and live more.

The Stoic insight is not about control through force. It is about awareness leading to wiser action. And modern neuroscience, as it turns out, is arriving at a remarkably similar conclusion.


What Chronic Stress Actually Does to the Body

Most people understand stress as a feeling—tension, worry, overwhelm. But stress is also a physiological cascade with measurable consequences.

When the brain perceives a threat, two major systems activate:

  1. The Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS) — triggering the fight-or-flight response, increasing heart rate, redirecting blood flow, and heightening alertness.
  2. The Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal (HPA) Axis — releasing cortisol, the body's primary stress hormone, which mobilizes energy and suppresses non-essential functions like digestion and immune regulation.

In short bursts, this is adaptive. It helps us respond, perform, and survive.

But when stress becomes chronic and unpredictable, these systems do not simply turn off. They remain partially activated, and the consequences accumulate.

What research has shown about chronic stress

Recent studies, including animal models of chronic unpredictable stress, have demonstrated that sustained stress exposure can lead to:

  • Elevated cortisol levels that persist beyond the stressful event
  • Insulin resistance and disrupted glucose metabolism
  • Dyslipidemia — imbalances in cholesterol and triglycerides
  • Systemic inflammation driven by an overactive sympathetic nervous system
  • Reduced vagal tone — meaning the body's built-in calming system becomes less effective
  • Metabolic syndrome — a cluster of conditions including hypertension, elevated blood sugar, and cardiovascular risk

One 2025 study published in Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications found that chronic unpredictable stress in animal models produced a full metabolic syndrome profile, including hyperglycemia, dyslipidemia, and elevated corticosterone — and that these changes were associated with suppression of SIRT6, a key enzyme involved in metabolic regulation and inflammation control.

Another 2025 study published in Physiological Reports demonstrated that even a single session of mental arithmetic stress was enough to significantly elevate salivary cortisol in healthy adults — confirming that the HPA axis responds rapidly and measurably to psychological challenge.

These are not abstract findings. They describe what happens inside the body when stress is left unaddressed — day after day, week after week.

The deeper biological picture

A comprehensive 2025 narrative review in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences described how chronic stress disrupts the entire neuroimmune axis:

  • Glucocorticoid resistance develops — immune cells stop responding to cortisol's anti-inflammatory signals, leading to persistent low-grade inflammation
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction emerges — the body's cellular energy systems become less efficient
  • Gut microbiota composition shifts — reducing production of beneficial metabolites like short-chain fatty acids and neurotransmitters such as GABA and serotonin
  • The vagus nerve's regulatory capacity diminishes — weakening the cholinergic anti-inflammatory reflex that normally keeps immune activation in check

In Stoic terms, this is the body losing its capacity for self-governance — not because of a single event, but because of an accumulation of unregulated responses over time.


The Vagus Nerve: The Body's Built-In Regulator

If chronic stress represents the body's alarm system stuck in the "on" position, the vagus nerve represents one of the most important pathways for turning it back toward balance.

The vagus nerve is the longest cranial nerve in the body. It runs from the brainstem to the heart, lungs, gut, and other organs. Approximately 80% of its fibers are afferent — meaning they carry information from the body to the brain.

This makes the vagus nerve not just a motor pathway, but a sensory highway — constantly reporting on the state of the body's internal environment.

When vagal tone is healthy, the body is better able to:

  • slow the heart rate after exertion
  • reduce inflammatory signaling
  • support digestion and recovery
  • shift from sympathetic activation toward parasympathetic calm
  • regulate the HPA axis and cortisol release

When vagal tone is diminished — as it often is under chronic stress — these regulatory capacities weaken. The body stays in a more activated, more inflamed, less resilient state.

This is why vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has become one of the most actively researched areas in neuroscience and neuromodulation.


What Is taVNS, and Why Does It Matter for Stress?

Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) is a non-invasive method of stimulating the auricular branch of the vagus nerve — the branch that surfaces at the ear, particularly in the cymba conchae region.

When gentle electrical pulses are delivered to this area, afferent signals travel to the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) in the brainstem — a critical relay station that connects to brain regions involved in:

  • Emotion regulation — amygdala, hippocampus, anterior cingulate cortex
  • Arousal and attention — locus coeruleus
  • Autonomic control — hypothalamus, parabrachial nucleus
  • Interoception and body awareness — insula, prefrontal cortex

This means taVNS does not simply "zap" the nerve. It sends a signal upstream into the brain's own regulatory architecture — potentially supporting the same pathways that chronic stress has disrupted.


What Current Research Suggests About taVNS and Stress

The evidence base for taVNS in stress-related contexts has grown substantially, and several recent studies are particularly relevant for Stress Awareness Month.

taVNS may help regulate the cortisol response to acute stress

A 2025 study by Cuberos Paredes and colleagues measured salivary cortisol before, during, and after a mental arithmetic stress test. Participants who received active taVNS during the stress task showed a significantly blunted cortisol response compared to the sham condition.

This is notable because it suggests taVNS may act directly on the HPA axis — potentially through the NTS-to-hypothalamus inhibitory pathway — to reduce the magnitude of the stress hormone surge. The researchers proposed that vagal afferent activation may engage GABAergic projections from the NTS to the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), the site where corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is produced.

In practical terms: the body still recognized the stressor, but the hormonal escalation was smaller.

taVNS may reduce subjective stress and improve EEG markers of regulation

A 2025 study published in Frontiers in Digital Health used both questionnaires and EEG to examine taVNS effects on stress regulation in healthy adults. After stress-inducing tasks (mental arithmetic and a 2-back working memory task), participants who received active taVNS showed:

  • Greater reduction in subjective stress scores compared to sham
  • Increased alpha-band power — an EEG marker commonly associated with relaxed wakefulness
  • Changes in brain network efficiency — suggesting improved global neural communication

The researchers concluded that taVNS may modulate stress not only at the subjective level but also at the level of cortical network dynamics.

taVNS may support reduction in anxiety, depression, and perceived stress

A 2025 randomized trial published in Biological Psychology examined the effects of a two-week course of taVNS on community-dwelling adults with subthreshold affective symptoms. Participants used the device for 4 hours per day over 14 days.

The results showed:

  • Significant reductions in depressive symptoms in the active taVNS group compared to sham
  • Reductions in anxiety symptoms
  • Lower perceived stress scores

Importantly, this study was conducted in a general population — not clinical patients — suggesting that taVNS may be relevant for everyday stress management, not only for diagnosed conditions.

taVNS may reduce stress, anxiety, and depression in high-performance contexts

A 2025 randomized controlled trial published in Applied Sciences studied 18 elite female shooters — athletes who must maintain extreme psychological stability under competitive pressure. The experimental group received taVNS for 30 minutes daily over four weeks.

The results were striking:

  • Significant reductions in perceived stress (pre-to-post)
  • Significant reductions in cognitive anxiety and somatic anxiety
  • Significant reduction in depression scores
  • Significant increase in self-confidence

These findings suggest that taVNS may support psychological regulation even in individuals who are already high-functioning but face sustained performance-related stress.

taVNS may reverse chronic stress-induced metabolic disruption

The 2025 animal study in Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications found that VNS applied after eight weeks of chronic unpredictable stress:

  • Reduced serum corticosterone levels
  • Improved fasting blood glucose and insulin sensitivity
  • Normalized lipid profiles
  • Restored SIRT6 and AMPK activity — key metabolic regulators suppressed by chronic stress
  • Reduced neuroinflammation and anxiety-like behavior

While this was an animal study and cannot be directly translated to human use, it provides a compelling mechanistic picture: vagus nerve stimulation may help restore the metabolic and inflammatory pathways that chronic stress disrupts.

Long-term taVNS may modulate brain fear circuitry in PTSD

A pilot study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders Reports (2026) examined three months of twice-daily transcutaneous cervical VNS in PTSD patients. Using high-resolution PET imaging during exposure to personalized traumatic scripts, the researchers found:

  • Reduced activation in fear-related brain regions — posterior cingulate, thalamus, parahippocampal gyrus
  • Increased medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) function — the region responsible for fear extinction and top-down emotional regulation

This suggests that sustained VNS may not only dampen acute stress responses but may also help reorganize the brain's stress circuitry over time — shifting the balance from reactive fear processing toward more regulated, prefrontal-mediated control.


The Stoic Connection: Know Yourself, Regulate Yourself

At ZenoWell, we find it remarkable how closely modern stress neuroscience echoes the core Stoic insight:

You cannot always control what happens. But you can develop the capacity to respond with greater awareness and steadiness.

The Stoics did not have fMRI machines or cortisol assays. But they understood something fundamental: that the quality of a life depends not on the absence of difficulty, but on the presence of self-knowledge and self-regulation.

Epictetus taught that suffering arises not from events themselves, but from our judgments about them. Marcus Aurelius practiced daily reflection — examining his responses, his impulses, his patterns — not to achieve perfection, but to achieve clarity.

This is what we mean when we say:

  • Know yourself better — understand your stress patterns, your triggers, your body's signals
  • Predict yourself better — recognize when you are moving toward dysregulation before it fully arrives
  • Know what can be controlled — your breathing, your attention, your daily habits, your willingness to pause
  • Know what cannot — external events, other people, the unpredictability of life
  • Know what lies in between — your nervous system state, your stress reactivity, your vagal tone. These are not fully under conscious command, but they are not beyond influence
  • Try to control yourself better — not through force, but through practice, rhythm, and tools that support regulation
  • To feel better. To live more.

This is the ZenoWell philosophy. And taVNS, as we see it, is one practical tool within that broader commitment to self-aware, body-informed living.


How ZenoWell Supports Stress Regulation in Practice

At ZenoWell, we design our taVNS experience to work with the body's natural rhythms — not against them.

Our Relax and Medit modes use an intermittent stimulation pattern — 4 seconds of stimulation followed by 4 seconds of rest — that creates a natural breathing rhythm:

  • Exhale during stimulation — aligning the electrical input with the phase of breathing most associated with parasympathetic influence
  • Inhale during the pause — allowing the body to return naturally before the next cycle

This is not a random design choice. It reflects the growing body of research on respiratory-gated taVNS, which suggests that the timing of stimulation relative to the breathing cycle may influence cardiovascular, autonomic, and brainstem responses.

We encourage users to approach each session not as a passive treatment, but as a moment of active self-regulation — a few minutes of deliberate calm in a day that may otherwise offer very little.

In Stoic terms, this is the daily practice. Not dramatic. Not heroic. Just steady, intentional, and repeated.


A Simple Practice for Stress Awareness Month

If you are reading this during April — or any month when stress feels present — here is a simple practice we recommend:

  1. Pause. Find a quiet moment. Sit or lie comfortably.
  2. Notice. Ask yourself: where am I holding tension? What does my breathing feel like right now?
  3. Breathe. Slow the breath. Let the exhale become slightly longer than the inhale. Do not force it.
  4. Use your ZenoWell session. If you have a ZenoWell device, choose Relax or Medit mode. Exhale when you feel the stimulation. Inhale during the pause. Let the rhythm guide you.
  5. Reflect. After the session, take a moment. What can you control right now? What can you not? What is in between — and what small step might help?

This is not a cure for stress. It is a practice of awareness and regulation — repeated daily, accumulated over time.


Final Thoughts

Stress Awareness Month is a reminder that stress is not just a feeling. It is a physiological process — one that changes the brain, the immune system, the metabolism, and the heart. When left unaddressed, it accumulates quietly and costs dearly.

But the research also tells us something hopeful: the body has built-in pathways for regulation, and those pathways can be supported.

The vagus nerve is one of the most important of those pathways. taVNS is one of the most accessible ways to engage it. And breathing — slow, steady, exhale-focused breathing — may be one of the simplest ways to align that engagement with the body's own calming rhythm.

At ZenoWell, we believe that the best response to stress is not to fight it, but to understand it and build the daily capacity to regulate it.

That is what Zeno taught. That is what the science supports. And that is what we try to offer — one session, one breath, one moment of awareness at a time.

Know yourself better. Predict yourself better. Control what you can. Accept what you cannot. And gently, steadily, shift what lies in between.

To feel better. To live more.


References

Bremner, J. D., Wittbrodt, M. T., Gurel, N. Z., Nye, J. A., Shandhi, M. M. H., Gazi, A. H., Shah, A. J., Amorim, V., Pearce, B. D., Vaccarino, V., & Inan, O. T. (2026). A pilot study of brain correlates of long-term treatment with transcutaneous vagal nerve stimulation in posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of Affective Disorders Reports, 24, 101014.

Cuberos Paredes, S., et al. (2025). Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation inhibits mental stress-induced cortisol release. Physiological Reports, 13, e70368.

Jackowska, M., Koenig, J., Cibulcova, V., & Jandackova, V. K. (2025). Effects of transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation on subthreshold affective symptoms and perceived stress: Findings from a single-blinded randomized trial in community-dwelling adults. Biological Psychology, 202, 109169.

Kaushik, A. S., Agarwal, V., Kumar, N., Rehman, M., Chaudhary, R., Srivastava, S., Srivastava, S., & Mishra, V. (2025). Stimulation of auricular vagus nerve ameliorates chronic stress induced metabolic syndrome via activation of Sirtuin-6. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 756, 151567.

Kim, W.-J., Lee, Y.-S., Hong, K. H., Choi, H., Song, J.-J., & Hwang, H.-J. (2025). Effect of transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation on stress regulation: An EEG and questionnaire study. Frontiers in Digital Health, 7, 1593614. https://doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2025.1593614

Kurhaluk, N., Kołodziejska, R., Kamiński, P., & Tkaczenko, H. (2025). Integrative neuroimmune role of the parasympathetic nervous system, vagus nerve and gut microbiota in stress modulation: A narrative review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 26, 11706.

Park, S.-H., Seong, C., Kang, N., Jeon, K., Kil, S., Ahn, H., & Lim, S.-T. (2025). The effects of vagus nerve stimulation on stress, competitive anxiety, and depression in elite shooters: Randomized controlled trial. Applied Sciences, 15, 9105. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15169105

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