Imagined Danger

Imagined danger can produce increased heart rate, blood pressure, cortisol, and preparation for action. The body can react to imagined danger as a stressor. Tension, frustration, overwhelm, anger, or fear can trigger sympathetic activation…

1 sources - 4 claims

Imagined danger can produce increased heart rate, blood pressure, cortisol, and preparation for action. The body can react to imagined danger as a stressor. Tension, frustration, overwhelm, anger, or fear can trigger sympathetic activation. Modern stress often comes from perceived or emotional threats rather than immediate physical danger.