Ava Heartwell mold recovery and healing from toxic mold and mold exposure tips and lived experience

Why Symptoms Changed With the Seasons

Why Symptoms Changed With the Seasons

The patterns made more sense when I looked at the year as a whole.

I used to track my symptoms by the week — or even by the day.

I thought I was being precise.

But clarity didn’t come until I stepped back and looked at the bigger cycles.

What I thought were random shifts had been following the seasons all along.

My symptoms didn’t change without reason — they changed with the environment.

Seasonal rhythms can explain what day-by-day tracking can’t.

When the Pattern Was Too Big to See Up Close

Some symptoms felt temporary, so I brushed them off.

Others came back just often enough to feel familiar but not consistent.

It wasn’t until I started remembering how I’d felt the same time last year that things clicked.

The pattern was quiet — but it was there.
why my symptoms were worse in winter and why I felt better in summer without changing anything — shifts I only noticed once the season changed.

Not all symptoms make sense when you’re too close to them.

Why Spring Didn’t Always Mean Renewal

I expected spring to bring lightness and energy.

Sometimes it did — but other times, symptoms spiked.

New blooms, allergens, indoor cleaning, and weather shifts stirred things up.

It was a season of change — and my body felt every part of it.
why sensory sensitivity showed up without anxiety, spring didn’t always bring calm — sometimes it just brought more input.

Even hopeful seasons can overload a body already running near capacity.

When Fall Brought Relief — and Then a Dip

Cooler air felt grounding at first.

But then the indoor shift began — windows closed, heaters on, less time outside.

By the time I noticed, the heaviness had returned.

The relief was real — and so was the slow return of pressure.
why balance and grounding felt hard indoors, where the shift happened more in space than in mood.

Transitions can feel good at first — and still lead to a later spike.

Why I Needed to Stop Expecting Consistency From Myself

I blamed myself for not being stable year-round.

I thought I was failing to maintain progress.

But my environment wasn’t consistent — so how could I be?

My body wasn’t backsliding — it was responding.
why my health didn’t feel bad enough to make sense. I wasn’t wrong — I was missing the broader context.

Sometimes resilience looks like adapting to cycles, not resisting them.

When I stopped expecting my body to stay the same across every season, I finally began to understand its rhythms.

If your symptoms seem to shift without cause, it might help to step back — not to find something wrong, but to recognize the cycles you’re already living inside.

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