Libmonster ID: UK-3434

Stress in Heat: Why We Snap and How Not to Go Crazy in the Heat

Have you ever noticed how people become more irritable on hot days? Drivers honk without reason, salespeople respond sharply, and colleagues in the office are ready to explode over the smallest things. This is not just a coincidence. Heat is a powerful stressor that hits our nervous system harder than many of us are willing to admit. We are used to attributing bad mood to "character" or "weather," but in fact, there are complex physiological processes behind this that turn the heat into a real challenge for our psyche. Let's figure out how heat causes stress, why some people cope with it better than others, and what can be done to maintain self-control on the hottest days of the year.

Physiology of Stress in Heat: What Happens to the Body

Our body is a perfect thermoregulation system. Under ideal conditions, it maintains body temperature around 36.6 degrees. When the surrounding environment heats up, the body activates cooling mechanisms: dilates blood vessels, increases sweating, and increases breathing rate. But these processes require energy and resources. The heart starts to beat faster to pump more blood to the surface of the skin. The brain receives signals of overheating and activates the stress response system.

The main player in this process is the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which releases cortisol — the stress hormone. Cortisol helps mobilize energy, but its level can remain elevated longer than usual in the heat. As a result, we feel not just tired, but "on edge." Moreover, heat disrupts the balance of neurotransmitters: serotonin and dopamine, responsible for mood and motivation. Their decline leads to apathy, anxiety, and even depression.

Dehydration exacerbates the situation. Even a loss of 1-2% of body fluids reduces cognitive abilities, worsens concentration, and increases anxiety levels. The brain, consisting of 75% water, works slower and less effectively when there is a lack of water. We become distracted, forgetful, and irritable, and often do not associate this with the fact that we simply did not drink enough water.

Why Some People Snap in the Heat, While Others Do Not

Susceptibility to thermal stress is individual. People with chronic diseases, especially cardiovascular, endocrine, or nervous, suffer more. Their adaptation mechanisms are weakened, and heat causes more pronounced fluctuations in blood pressure and cortisol levels.

Age also matters. Children under three years old do not have perfect thermoregulation; they overheat quickly and also fall into a tantrum quickly. Older people, on the other hand, lose the ability to sweat effectively, and their bodies cope worse with overheating, which also increases stress levels.

But there are also psychological factors. People with high anxiety or low stress tolerance are more likely to react to heat as a threat. They focus on discomfort, start to panic, which only increases cortisol levels. At the same time, those who perceive heat as a natural seasonal phenomenon and have coping strategies cope with it much easier.

Psychological Manifestations of Stress in Heat

How can you recognize that you are susceptible to thermal stress? Symptoms can be divided into physical and psychological. Physical symptoms include increased heart rate, sweating, headache, nausea, a feeling of fatigue even after rest. Psychological manifestations include:

  • Increased irritability, outbursts of anger over trivial matters.
  • Decreased concentration, forgetfulness.
  • Anxiety, groundless worry.
  • Apathy, indifference to what usually delighted.
  • Sleep disturbances — difficulty falling asleep, frequent awakenings.
  • A sense of depression, pessimism.

Interestingly, many people in the heat begin to experience so-called "irritated bowel syndrome" or frequent urination, which is also related to an increase in cortisol levels and the redistribution of blood flow from the digestive system to the skin.

Separately, it is worth mentioning the impact of heat on relationships. When everyone is irritable, conflicts break out out of the blue. Studies show that the number of arguments in families, traffic accidents due to aggressive driving, and even domestic crimes increases in hot weather. This is not an excuse, but an explanation: heat really reduces our self-control.

How Heat Affects Sleep and Recovery

Quality sleep is the foundation of stress resistance. But in the heat, it becomes almost impossible to sleep. The ideal sleep temperature is 18-20 degrees. When the room temperature is 26 and above, the body cannot lower the basic temperature, which is necessary for deep sleep phases. We toss and turn for a long time, wake up from the heat, have worrying dreams. As a result, sleep deprivation accumulates, and the next day we meet the heat already with an exhausted nervous system. This is a vicious circle: heat prevents us from sleeping, sleep deprivation increases sensitivity to heat.

Strategies for Managing Stress in Heat

It is possible to cope with stress in the heat, but it requires a systematic approach. Here are some strategies that really work.

1. Drink water consciously. Do not wait for the feeling of thirst — it comes when the body is already dehydrated. Drink every 20-30 minutes in small sips. Add lemon, cucumber, or a pinch of salt to the water to replenish electrolytes.

2. Control your breathing. When you feel that irritation is building up, stop and take a few deep breaths and exhales with an extended exhale (for example, inhale for 4 counts, exhale for 6). This activates the parasympathetic nervous system and reduces cortisol levels.

3. Adjust your daily routine. Move physical activity to the morning or evening. Stay in the shade or indoors during the midday hours when the sun is at its zenith. If you need to work, take short breaks to ventilate the room and drink water.

4. Use cooling compresses on the wrists, neck, and behind the knees. Large blood vessels pass through these areas, and local cooling helps lower the overall body temperature faster.

5. Review your diet. In the heat, it is better to prefer light food: vegetables, fruits, fish, dairy products. Heavy fatty food requires a lot of energy for digestion and increases heat production.

6. Reduce information noise. The brain is already overloaded in the heat, do not add extra work to it. Limit time on social networks, do not watch the news before bedtime. Better listen to calm music or an audiobook.

7. Practice "smart idleness." Sometimes the best way to cope with stress is to simply allow yourself to do nothing. Lie down, close your eyes, listen to the silence. This is not laziness, but recovery.

8. Communicate with those who support you. It is especially important to feel that you are not alone in the heat. Call a friend, send a warm message, exchange light jokes about the weather — this reduces tension.

When Heat Becomes Pathological: How to Know It's Time to See a Doctor

Stress in the heat is normal, but there are conditions that require medical intervention. If you feel severe headache, nausea, dizziness, confusion, shortness of breath, a strong heartbeat that does not go away after rest, do not wait, call an ambulance. Also, a prolonged sleep disorder, loss of appetite for several days, panic attacks, or thoughts of self-harm are reasons for concern. It is better to be safe than sorry and get a doctor's consultation than to risk your health.

Conclusion

Heat is a test not only for our body but also for our psyche. It exposes our weaknesses, deprives us of our usual mechanisms of protection, and forces us to look for new ways to cope with discomfort. But this is not a verdict. Understanding the mechanisms allows us to manage our reaction. We can drink more water, breathe deeper, move at the right time, and allow ourselves to rest. Then even the hottest day will not be a day of despair, but a day of conscious adaptation. Stress in the heat is a challenge that can be accepted and overcome. The main thing is to remember that you are not alone, and that taking care of yourself is not egoism, but a necessity that becomes especially relevant in the heat.
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Stress in heat // London: British Digital Library (ELIBRARY.ORG.UK). Updated: 28.06.2026. URL: https://elibrary.org.uk/m/articles/view/Stress-in-heat (date of access: 28.06.2026).

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