The deadline lands. Your shoulders rise. And somewhere, quietly, your stomach has already noticed.
Maybe it's the flutter before a difficult conversation. The unsettled morning before a big day. The week when nothing tastes quite right and bloating shows up out of nowhere. Most of us learn to brush these off as nerves, as something we ate, as a bad week.
They're rarely just nerves. Your gut isn't reacting to stress after the fact. It's part of the conversation in real time.
In our gut health series with nutritional therapist Ruth Sharif, we covered why so many things, from mood to skin to energy, trace back to the gut. This piece zooms in on one of the most under-discussed parts of that picture: not just how stress affects digestion, but the loop that runs both ways between your gut and your brain.
A quick word on cortisol
We covered the broad physiology of chronic stress in our Stress Awareness Month piece. That post explains how the HPA axis releases cortisol, and why the stress hormone that's useful in short bursts becomes a problem when it doesn't switch off. [Read that here] for the full picture.
This piece picks up where that one ended: with the gut. Of all the systems chronic stress affects, the gut may be the most overlooked, and the most consequential.
Your gut and your brain are talking. Constantly.
The gut-brain axis is the two-way communication system between your central nervous system and the enteric nervous system that runs through your digestive tract. It uses three main channels.
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The vagus nerve. The longest cranial nerve in your body. Roughly 80% of its fibres run from gut to brain, not the other way around. Your gut is sending more signals up than your brain is sending down.
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The microbiome. The trillions of bacteria in your gut, which produce signalling molecules including neurotransmitters, short-chain fatty acids, and inflammatory or anti-inflammatory compounds.
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The gut lining itself. A single layer of cells that decides what gets absorbed and what stays out. When it's working well, you don't notice. When it isn't, your immune system does.
These three are constantly influencing each other. Stress lands on all of them at once.

What sustained stress actually does inside the gut
Reviews across Frontiers in Psychiatry, the Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility, and the International Journal of Molecular Sciences describe a consistent pattern when stress is prolonged.
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Digestion slows. Blood is redirected to muscles and brain. Food sits longer than it should.
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The mucus layer that lines and protects the gut wall thins.
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The intestinal barrier becomes more permeable, sometimes called "leaky", making it easier for inflammatory compounds to cross into the bloodstream.
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Microbiome composition shifts. Helpful species often decline. Diversity tends to fall.
None of this requires a major life event. The everyday stuff is enough to start the process: a busy quarter at work, broken sleep, a hard fortnight.

The serotonin point most people miss
Ruth Sharif made this point in our first gut piece, and it bears repeating because it reframes how most people think about mood:
"Something like 95% of our serotonin is produced in our gut. That's massive. But it's also that gut environment that influences the signalling, how well serotonin is produced, and how effectively it's communicated."
The figure is well-established in scientific literature. Approximately 95% of the body's serotonin is synthesised in the gut, predominantly by enterochromaffin cells in the gut lining.
Gut-derived serotonin doesn't cross into the brain in the same way the brain's own supply does. But it activates the vagus nerve, signals to the enteric nervous system, and helps regulate immune responses, intestinal motility and gut barrier integrity.
Which means the state of the gut you feed today is part of the mood machinery you'll wake up to tomorrow.
Why it becomes a loop, not a straight line
Here's the part that surprises people. The relationship doesn't run in one direction.
Yes, stress changes the gut. But a disrupted gut also changes how the brain handles stress.
Studies have found that people with stress-related disorders tend to have lower levels of certain beneficial bacteria, and that microbiome composition is associated with how the body regulates inflammation, neurotransmitter production, and the stress response itself.
In other words: a stressed gut can make the next stressor feel bigger. The loop tightens.
This is one reason chronic stress is so hard to think your way out of. Some of the work has to happen below the neck.

What actually helps your gut handle stress
There's no single fix. What the research consistently points to is the cumulative effect of daily inputs. The interventions below are the ones with the best evidence specifically for the gut-brain axis.
Eat for diversity
Dietary fibre is the main fuel for the gut microbiome. A meta-analysis of 21 fibre intervention studies found highly consistent shifts in microbial composition when people increased their fibre intake, even over short periods. Variety matters as much as volume; different plants feed different bacteria.
This is the principle behind the "30 plants a week" goal Ruth covers in part 2 of the gut health series. It's not a target to panic about. It's the direction of travel.
Train your vagus nerve
Vagal tone, essentially how well your vagus nerve is functioning, is associated with better stress regulation and lower inflammation. Slow breathing with longer exhales than inhales engages it directly. Cold exposure, humming, and singing all do something similar. None are silver bullets, but the research base is real, and these are interventions you can start today, for free.
Add fermented foods
A 2021 Stanford study found that a diet high in fermented foods, including yoghurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut and kombucha, increased microbiome diversity and decreased markers of inflammation in healthy adults over ten weeks. Fermented foods feed the gut directly. They're an underused lever.
Don't underestimate sleep and movement
Both have well-documented effects on microbial diversity and gut barrier function. They aren't sexy interventions, but they're working at the same system from a different angle.
Where KURK fits
KURK is a food supplement, not a medicine, and we're careful about the claims we make. What we can say is that the gut is central to how the body processes almost everything we put into it. That's why we obsess over what does and doesn't go into every drop. No fillers, no excipients, nothing your microbiome has to negotiate around.
Our research partnership with Swansea Medical School is grounded in that thinking: that the right ingredient, in the right form, delivered in a way the body can actually use, is worth paying attention to.
More on the formulation thinking on the KURK Science page.


