The temporary feeling of depression after a vaccine is a direct physiological response. The immune system's activation sends inflammatory signals to the brain, mimicking the biological state found in chronic depression and suggesting an immune basis for mood disorders.
Chronic low-grade inflammation often presents not as obvious swelling but as subtle, persistent symptoms. Issues like increased fatigue, difficulty concentrating, poor sleep, and skin problems can be driven by an under-the-radar inflammatory state that even doctors may miss.
The gut barrier is a single cell layer protecting your immune system. When it weakens (leaky gut), food particles and toxins cross over into the bloodstream, triggering a 24/7 immune response. This constant, low-level battle is the primary driver of chronic low-grade inflammation throughout the body.
Dr. Bolsiewicz reframes major depression not as a purely psychological issue, but as a physiological condition rooted in inflammation. He states with "total clarity" that depression, along with neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, is a manifestation of chronic inflammation affecting the brain.
Contrary to the dominant medical model, mental health issues like depression and anxiety are not illnesses. They are normal, helpful responses that act as messengers, signaling an underlying problem or unresolved trauma that needs to be addressed rather than a chemical imbalance to be suppressed.
Dr. Will Bolsiewicz distinguishes between life-saving acute inflammation (fighting infection, healing injury) and detrimental chronic low-grade inflammation. The latter is a constant, damaging immune response likened to a “forever war” inside the body, which is at the root of many modern diseases.
The modern definition of sepsis is not "blood poisoning" but a dysregulated host response. The immune system's inflammatory reaction spirals out of control, causing organ damage long after the initial infection is gone. In fact, fewer than half of sepsis patients have a detectable infection in their bloodstream.
The immune system deploys powerful "weapons" to fight invaders. However, an over-activated response, triggered by proteins like C5a, can cause these weapons to harm the body's own organs and tissues, similar to the collateral damage from a dirty bomb.
The fatigue, apathy, and loss of appetite you feel when sick are not just passive symptoms. They are an evolved, intelligent response to conserve energy by shutting down non-essential processes (like digestion and motivation) to redirect that energy budget to fight infection.
A negative inner critic activates the body's "fight or flight" response. This isn't just psychological; it leads to the production of inflammatory proteins, suppresses the immune system, and increases stress hormones like cortisol. This chronic physiological state is directly linked to developing long-term diseases and impairs cognitive function.
Severe trauma in early life can cause a lasting physiological change. It can trigger the immune system to remain in a heightened state, permanently raising baseline inflammation levels and increasing the risk for numerous brain diseases later in life.