The Connection Fix with Joey Klein

TCF #016: Your Body Was Never Meant to Live Like This

Joey Klein Episode 16

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0:00 | 7:34

TCF #016: Your Body Was Never Meant to Live Like This


Your nervous system was built for short bursts of danger - not hundreds of stress activations per day.


Episode Summary

In this episode of The Connection Fix Podcast, host Joey Klein goes one layer deeper into the stress series - into how stress lives in your body and what it takes to bring the system back into alignment.

You'll learn why your body was designed for calm, how internal and external stress feed each other in a loop that rest alone can't break, and what shifts when your nervous system finally becomes regulated.


Question of the Day 🗣️

Where in your life right now are you asking more of your body than it's actually able to give? Is it sleep, stimulation, overwork, or emotional overload? Drop it in the comments - that awareness alone makes something new possible.


Key Take-aways

  • Your body was designed for calm - constant stress activation is the anomaly, not the norm
  • Most people have normalized a stress state and no longer recognize what calm feels like
  • Internal stress (emotional patterns) and external stress (overwork, under-sleep) feed each other
  • Rest or "thinking better" alone can't break a dysregulated nervous system loop
  • When regulation returns, so does energy, clarity, intuition, and performance


Timestamped Outline ⏱️

00:00 - Introduction - from macro and micro to the body
01:20 - Stress in the body isn't just physical
01:38 - Parasympathetic vs. sympathetic states
02:09 - The body wasn't designed for constant stress
02:30 - What constant activation actually looks like
03:13 - When stress becomes your baseline
03:49 - Two types of physiological stress
04:25 - How the two types feed each other
04:48 - Where most people miss it
05:08 - Internal regulation and external alignment
05:50 - What changes when you get this right
06:52 - One question to sit with


Links & Resources 🔗


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Credits

Host: Joey Klein © 2026 Inner Matrix Systems. All rights reserved.


SPEAKER_00

There's a version of physiological stress that's intentional. And then there's a version of it that most people are living with all day and they're not even realizing it. Same physiology, but very different outcomes. Let's look at what happens when we do a workout. Whether it's hitting the heavy bag, doing a Peloton ride, or tackling an intense session with your personal trainer. Your system shifts into a stress response. Heart rate goes up, focus is narrowed, energy is mobilized, and then you're ready for action. In this context, it's intentional. The stress is directed. It has a clear beginning and a clear end. But for most people, this same state is running constantly. And that's where the problems begin. Over the past couple of weeks, we've been looking at stress from a couple of different angles. First, stress in macro, what's happening in the world and how that creates internal stress. Then, stress in micro, the everyday moments that shouldn't be a big deal, but somehow they are. And if you missed those, it's worth going back and checking those episodes out, because this all builds on itself. Because now we're going a layer deeper into something that most people don't think about clearly, which is how does stress actually show up in your body? When most people think about stress in the body, they think about things like not enough sleep, working too much, overtraining, burnout, and yes, that's definitely part of it, but that's not the whole picture. Because your body isn't just responding to what you do to it, it's responding to how you live inside of it. Your nervous system is designed to operate primarily from a calm and regulated state, what's called a parasympathetic state, parasympathetic response in the nervous system. And that's where your body recovers. Your hormones regulate, your thinking is clear, and your energy is nice and steady. Like going on a hike, for example. You're grounded, you're present, and you're at ease in your body. But most people, they're not living there. They're living in the opposite, a constant low-level fight or flight response. And here's the problem: that state was never meant to be sustained over time. It was designed for short bursts, you're in danger, you respond, and then you return back to calm. But today, people are getting triggered into that state over and over again, and they're never fully coming out of the fight or flight response. And it's not just in response to big events, it's everyday life. Driving in traffic, getting cut off, a comment from your business partner or your significant other, something not getting done that that needs to be done around the house, a work interaction that doesn't land quite right. And then suddenly you're activated, you're frustrated, you're irritated, tight, and reactive. And for most people, this is happening hundreds of times a day and it's going on underneath the radar. We're not aware that we're in that stress state, to the point where it's become normalized. But it's not. It's a nervous system that's become hypersensitive or overreactive, treating everyday moments as though they are threats. And here's where it gets tricky. Most people don't even realize that they're in a stress state because they've normalized it. They don't actually know what it feels like to be calm, to be regulated, to be at ease in their own body. And when that happens, the body starts paying the price. Hormones get out of balance, cortisol stays elevated, energy drops, recovery slows, thinking becomes less clear, and intuition becomes non-accessible. Not because something is wrong with you, but because the system is being run in a way that it wasn't designed for. Now, one of the most important distinctions to understand here is this. There are actually two types of physiological stress, internal and then external. Internal stress is what we've been talking about in the last two episodes: your emotional loops, your thought patterns, your reactions to life. That's what drives your nervous system into over-reactivation. External stress is very different. This is what you've been doing to your body physically: not sleeping enough, overworking, over-training, constant stimulation, not giving your body the time it needs to recover properly. And here's the key: these two interact. If your body is physically exhausted, it becomes much harder to regulate emotionally. And if you're emotionally dysregulated, it drains your body. And now you're stuck in a loop, burning energy internally while demanding more externally, and eventually the body says no more. I can't do it. This is where most people miss it. They try to solve stress in one direction. They either try to think better or they try to rest more, but they're not looking at the full system. The real question is this: Am I asking more of my body and the nervous system than they're capable of sustaining right now? And so what does it actually look like to work with this? There are two sides to it. First, internal regulation, learning how to recognize when you're activated, centering your nervous system, shift out of reactivity, and returning to a regulated state. That's the foundation. Second, external alignment, looking at your life and asking, am I getting enough sleep? Am I overloading my schedule? Am I constantly stimulated? Am I giving my body time to recover? And adjusting accordingly, because part of the work is managing yourself, and part of the work is not creating unnecessary load on the system. When you start to get this right, everything will improve. You have more energy, your thinking becomes more clear, your emotional responses stabilize, you feel better in your body, you perform better in your life, and most importantly, you regain access to your intuition. Because just like we've talked about in the intuition series, none of that is available when your system is in a constant stress response. And so this is why stress really matters. Not just because of how it feels, but because of what it blocks. And it's also why we do the work that we do inside programs like the power series and reset, because this isn't something that you figure out once and then it's done. It's something that you train. And when you do, your body becomes an asset again, not something that you're fighting. If you want to go deeper with this and you prefer to learn in different formats, you can find this on the Connection Fits blog or on the Connection Fix podcast. Use whatever format that you train best with. And before I wrap, just take a moment and notice this. Today, where in your life were you asking more of your body than it was actually able to give? Was it lack of sleep, constant stimulation, overwork, or emotional load? And if that continued for the next 30 days, what would that create over time? If you're willing, please drop a comment and share what you've noticed because that awareness alone can start to shift the system. If you prefer, please email me. I'd love to hear your thoughts and how the work is going for you. And it helps me to support you better. More soon, and I look forward to seeing you in the next one.