In Traditional Chinese Medicine, we transition from autumn into winter through the element of water. This brings a time of reflection, conservation, and restoration. Short days cause your circadian rhythm to naturally urge you to rest more, eat warmer foods, and do less. When we fight this instinct, it can leave us feeling depleted and run-down, but nature reminds us that rest is not laziness, its rhythm,
Our culture is obsessed with constant productivity, a constant pulse on the next thing, and so tuning into November’s slower, more grounding energy can be a radical act of self-healing… One that deeply supports your immune system, hormones, and mental health.
The Link Between Rest and Immunity
Our immune systems are especially sensitive to stress and not enough sleep. When we push through exhaustion, cortisol (the stress hormone) stays elevated, which can weaken our immune defenses and increase inflammation in the body. Resting, including both physically sleeping and mentally having space to recharge are both crucial to reducing stress, and giving our bodies a chance to regulate hormones and activate immune cells.
The Nervous System Physiology of Slowing Down
Rest doesn’t just feel good, it rewires your whole body. When you rest, you allow your body to move out of constant “fight or flight” mode and into the parasympathetic “rest and digest” state. Your heart rate slows, your blood pressure stabilizes, and your brain shifts into ‘repair’ mode. This is when tissue healing, hormone production, and immune regulation occur. Supporting your nervous system also improves digestion, sleep quality, and emotional resilience.
Gentle daily practices like deep breathing, meditation, or even 10 minutes of silence can reset your vagus nerve, which is like the key communication highway between your brain and your body.
Talk with your health care provider to consider supplementing adaptogenic herbs such as ashwagandha, rhodiola, or holy basil to help buffer the effects of stress and support balanced cortisol rhythms. Magnesium-rich foods (pumpkin seeds, dark leafy greens, cacao) or a magnesium bisglycinate supplement, and omega-3s (from salmon, walnuts, or flax) nourish the nervous system and help the body cope with stress.
When your nervous system feels safe, every other system in your body begins to function optimally.
Hormonal Harmony Through Everyday Habits
Our hormones thrive on rhythm and consistency, and chronic stress throws that delicate balance off. As we slow down in November, our adrenals will get a chance to reset, which in turn stabilizes cortisol and then supports better thyroid and reproductive hormone balance. In other words, resting is no small feat!
Here are some ways to bring the art of rest into our everyday:
- Of course, movement is still key for our wellness as well, but we can try practicing the art of active rest such as stretching, yin yoga, or walking in crisp fall air. Gentle movements like these help to circulate lymphatic fluid and support detoxification, without pushing the body to extremes and spiking cortisol.
- Getting adequate sleep (ideally 7–9 hours) is our body’s nightly immune tune-up, and is also key for hormone regulation. So, prioritize good sleep hygiene with dim lights, no screens an hour before bed and wind-down rituals like reading, journaling, herbal tea, meditation, or prayer.
- Choose warm, grounding foods such as root vegetables, molasses, oats, soups and stews, and spices like cinnamon and ginger to help us support blood sugar balance and hormonal steadiness during this slower season.
- Think of every meal as a form of medicine. A moment to nourish rather than rush. Eat slowly, put the screens away, and take a few minutes to sit in enjoyment afterwards. This signals safety to your nervous system, allowing your body to rest and digest more fully.
Women especially benefit from syncing rest with their menstrual cycle, and using the luteal and menstrual phases as a cue to nourish, reflect, and restore, while saving the heavy workouts and big projects for the follicular and ovulation phases.
The Mental Health Gift of Stillness
Resting isn’t just about the body, it's medicine for the mind too. This season and the approach of the new year invites introspection, gratitude, and emotional digestion. Mindfulness practices like journaling, meditation, and gentle walks in nature can help us process the year’s experiences and make peace with the transitions ahead.
When we honor the natural ebb and flow of energy, we stop fighting life’s rhythm and start living in harmony with it. So this November, take nature’s cue to slow down, soften your schedule, and allow rest to become your most productive act of all!
