Chronic Illness and Your Window of Tolerance: Working Within Your Capacity

How the window of tolerance explains Chronic Illness responses and guides effective treatment.

The 'window of tolerance' — a concept from trauma therapy — explains why chronic illness pushes us into states where we can't function well, and how to expand our capacity.

What Is the Window of Tolerance?

The window of tolerance is the zone of arousal in which we function optimally. Outside it:

  • Hyperarousal (chronic illness 'too high'): Panic, overwhelm, rage, anxiety — above the window
  • Hypoarousal (chronic illness 'too low'): Numbness, dissociation, shutdown, depression — below the window

How Chronic Illness Narrows the Window

Trauma and chronic chronic illness narrow the window of tolerance, making us more easily triggered into dysregulated states by smaller stimuli.

Widening Your Window with Chronic Illness

Trauma-informed therapy specifically works to widen the window of tolerance — building capacity to experience chronic illness triggers without dysregulation.

Titrated exposure (small doses of difficult material), somatic practices, and skill-building all contribute to window expansion.

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