Sensation-Seeking: Physical Symptoms and the Mind-Body Connection

How Sensation-Seeking manifests as physical symptoms — the mind-body connection and what to do about it.

Sensation-Seeking is not 'just in your head' — it produces measurable physical symptoms through well-understood neurobiological pathways.

Why Sensation-Seeking Causes Physical Symptoms

The brain and body are not separate systems. Sensation-Seeking activates:

  • The HPA axis: releasing cortisol that affects virtually every body system
  • The autonomic nervous system: creating the physical experience of threat
  • Inflammatory pathways: affecting immune function and tissue health
  • The enteric nervous system (gut-brain axis): digestive symptoms common in sensation-seeking

Common Physical Symptoms of Sensation-Seeking

  • Muscle tension, headaches, and chronic pain patterns
  • Digestive symptoms: IBS, nausea, appetite changes
  • Sleep disruption and fatigue
  • Cardiovascular: heart palpitations, elevated blood pressure over time
  • Immune effects: increased susceptibility to illness

When Physical Symptoms Are Primarily Sensation-Seeking

Physical symptoms from sensation-seeking are real, not imaginary. But they're best treated by addressing sensation-seeking directly, alongside symptomatic relief when needed.

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free