The Weight We Carry: How Stress Affects Immunity in Black Women
When people say “stress kills,” it’s not just a dramatic saying. It’s biological truth. And for Black women, who live at the intersection of racial, gender, and economic pressures, that truth hits harder and younger.
Let’s talk about it.
🌡️ Stress Isn’t Just Mental. It’s Cellular.
Stress triggers your body’s fight-or-flight response, flooding your system with cortisol and adrenaline. Over time, constant exposure to these hormones leads to chronic inflammation, which chips away at your immune defenses.
That’s why stress isn’t just about feeling overwhelmed. It shows up as flare-ups, fatigue, frequent colds, and for many of us, autoimmune conditions like lupus, multiple sclerosis, Hashimoto’s, and rheumatoid arthritis.
💥 The Weathering Effect
Back in 1992, public health scholar Dr. Arline Geronimus introduced the concept of weathering. It’s the idea that prolonged exposure to stress from social, economic, and political systems literally wears down the bodies of Black women. We age faster. We get sicker sooner. And our immune systems stay in a state of constant defense.
It’s not in your head. It’s in your cells.
📊 Autoimmune Disease & Black Women
- Black women are three times more likely to develop lupus than white women
- Multiple sclerosis (MS) is increasing among younger Black women
- Stress has been linked to the onset and worsening of thyroid disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, and more
So what do we do?
🛠️ Real Tools to Manage Stress and Strengthen Your Immune System
You already know about meditation and exercise. But let’s go deeper with options that are restorative, joyful, and rooted in culture
- Black Joy as Medicine
Laugh out loud. Dance in your kitchen. Sing like you mean it. Joy isn’t trivial. It’s revolutionary. When you feel good, your body produces endorphins that lower stress hormones and support your immune system.
Try This: Curate a 20-minute joy playlist and move like nobody’s watching.
- Adaptogens with a Side of Ancestry
Herbs like ashwagandha, holy basil, and reishi mushrooms may support adrenal health and reduce stress responses. Work with a Black herbalist or naturopath who can recommend what works for you.
Try This: Brew a nightly tea ritual with calming herbs and no screens.
- Protect Your Mindspace
There’s always something demanding your attention — texts, DMs, emails, headlines, group chats. Constant connection can wear you down and wire you up. Taking intentional breaks from screens, noise, and information overload can help your nervous system reset.
Try This: Choose one evening a week to go low-stimulation. Put your phone on Do Not Disturb. Light a candle. Play music that soothes you. Let your brain breathe. If even that feels like a lot, start with one hour.
- The Power of Saying “No” Without Guilt
Every yes to someone else is a maybe to yourself. Boundaries are your immune system’s best friend.
Try This: Practice saying, “Let me get back to you,” before you automatically agree to anything.
- Somatic Stress Release
Sometimes stress lives in the body. Practices like EFT tapping, breathwork, or restorative yoga can help you release what talk therapy alone might not reach.
Try This: Try a tapping video or breathwork session led by a Black wellness educator.
🖤 Remember This
You don’t have to earn rest. You don’t need to be in crisis to deserve care. Your immune system doesn’t care how strong you are. It responds to how safe you feel.
If you’re looking for ways to go deeper, here are some powerful reads by Black women to help you reclaim your peace and shift your relationship with stress:
- Rest Is Resistance by Tricia Hersey
- Set Boundaries, Find Peace by Nedra Glover Tawwab
- Sacred Woman by Queen Afua
- Radiant Rest by Tracee Stanley
Curl up with one. Breathe. Your healing is not a luxury. It’s a right.