How Despair Transforms You

by Deborah Maragopoulos FNP | Jul 29, 2017 | Blog, Mind/Body | 0 comments

A long time ago but not so far away, lived a girl and a boy very much in love. Gino was tall and handsome with rich brown hair and eyes, good strong Italian looks. Elana was elegant with long sable hair, a classic Greek beauty, her once slender figure swollen with their first child. Only nineteen, she became concerned when she noticed some blood and called her doctor. Her flustered young husband took her straight to the emergency room. After filling out the necessary paperwork, she was examined by the nurse, and labor was induced by the doctor’s order. Yet the doctor never saw her and the nurse was the only one running the emergency room that night.

Labor progressed under the influence of the drugs dripping into her veins, one painful contraction after the next. Elana cried out, begging Gino to do something. He ran to get the nurse, who was too busy to come. The pain intensified and their helplessness was magnified by the sheer lack of professional attention. Elana didn’t know how to do this. She hadn’t been taught how to breathe, unprepared to give birth four weeks early. Gino didn’t know how to help her. He held her hand and brushed the damp hair from her face, but there was nothing he could do to relieve her of her pain or himself of the anxiety.

A ripping contraction, a gush of blood, Elana screamed. Gino ran for help and in the back of the emergency room behind pea-green curtains, Elana was left all alone. The wetness pooled on the bed as the next contraction pushed the baby forcibly through Elana’s pelvis. Bones cracked. Were they hers or the baby’s? Elana cried out, but nobody came. The baby lay silent between her wet thighs. Where’s Gino and the nurse? Somebody please help me!

The pea-green curtains roughly brushed aside, the nurse looked at the baby still between her thighs and muttered, “He won’t make it.” Why isn’t my son crying? Elana thought but anguish stole away her voice as surely as death stole away her son. Gino asked what she could not, but there was no answer only the sound of the knife severing the cord. No longer attached, Elana wailed.

The baby was whisked away before she could see his face. Did he look like Gino? Her husband cried helplessly at her side. An attendant came for her, still soaked in blood on the gurney. “Call Mama!” Her plea cracked through a throat swollen with tears. The attendant threw a sheet over her, the throbbing of her broken pelvis intensified by every bump on the journey. Where are they taking me, she wondered. Through a door and into a brightly lit room, shelves lined with gallon-sized jars surrounded her. Three, seven, five-month fetuses floated lifeless inside the cloudy liquid. Will they put my son in one of these jars? Afraid to know the truth, she didn’t ask when the doctor came to sew her up.

Her mother arrived but could do nothing to ease the pain in Elana’s heart. Gino hardly spoke, ashamed to look at her. Did she do something wrong? Was God punishing her? When she healed enough to walk, she went to church. “What will happen, Father, to my son? Will he go to heaven?” The priest shook his head wondering where the baby was buried. They never gave us the body! What happened to my baby? Afraid, but clutching Gino’s hand, she returned to the hospital, but no one knew what happened. No records of the baby could be found.

Something happened that night between the young couple. She got pregnant again right away. A year later a healthy baby girl was placed in Elana’s arms, but even the joy of new life could not soften the pain in Gino’s heart. As he lost faith in himself, she lost faith in them. Another baby girl born two years later, yet no son. Certainly she didn’t want her husband to go to Vietnam, so Elana stayed as long as she could. She told her beautiful daughters about their brother. “Can we go see him, Mommy?” With no little grave, there were no goodbyes.

After Gino, she met a man with three boys. They never married, but she loved those boys. The eldest was the son she never had. He grew up, met a nice girl, and had babies. Elana loves them like her own grandchildren and especially adores their mother, the only daughter-in-law, she would know.

Over thirty years later, her youngest preparing to give birth to her second grandchild—a son—calls Elana in tears. Her close friend just lost a baby, only four weeks old; the little boy died of a gastric anomaly. “Will that happen to my son, Mom?” Of course Elana reassures her precious daughter, but in her heart she prays that all will be well, because you never know.

The pain revives as Elana shares her story with her daughter-in-law who says something unresolved must be cleared. Perhaps the gift of the baby’s death was in separating from Gino, Elana made room in her life for a man who would revere her as she deserved. Her current husband raised the girls as his own, supporting his wife in her every desire. Elana has become the embodiment of the goddess. A strong lovely woman, wise and compassionate, having learned from her own adventurous and rocky path that life is to be fully enjoyed.

Elana’s son is her little guardian angel, hovering about his earth mother, steering her toward the best in life. And Elana knows without a doubt that death is not an ending, but a transition to another reality, one in which she will fully enjoy when the time comes to join him.

Based on a true story.

Love and Light,

Deborah Maragopoulos MN FNP
Intuitive Integrative Health

Frequently Asked Questions:

Can your hypothalamus cause weight gain?

Yes. The hypothalamus is the master regulator of metabolism, controlling how your body stores and burns energy through its signaling to the thyroid, adrenals, and pancreas. When the hypothalamus becomes dysregulated by chronic stress, poor sleep, inflammation, or blood sugar instability, it defends a higher weight "set point" — causing the body to hold onto fat regardless of diet or exercise. This makes hypothalamic dysfunction an upstream root cause of stubborn weight gain.


What is a weight set point and why won't mine move?

A weight set point is the body weight your hypothalamus works to defend, calibrated over time by stress, sleep, hormones, and inflammation. When you diet, the hypothalamus perceives scarcity and responds by slowing metabolism, increasing hunger hormones, and suppressing satiety signals to return you to that set point. This is why most people regain lost weight within two to five years of conventional dieting — the set point itself was never recalibrated, only temporarily overridden.


Why do I gain weight under stress even when I'm not eating more?

Chronic stress raises cortisol, which disrupts blood sugar regulation, promotes abdominal fat storage, and signals the hypothalamus that the body is under threat. In survival mode, the hypothalamus defends fat stores and slows metabolism — so weight can increase even without any change in calorie intake. The stress chemistry, not the food, is driving the weight gain, which is why stress reduction is essential to any lasting metabolic reset.


Why do I regain weight after stopping GLP-1 medications?

GLP-1 medications work peripherally on appetite and gastric signaling, but they do not address the underlying hypothalamic dysregulation that sets your defended weight. Because the hypothalamic set point is never recalibrated, the body resumes defending its original weight once the medication stops — leading to significant regain. Long-term success requires restoring hypothalamic regulation so the set point itself lowers, rather than relying on appetite suppression alone.


How long does it take to reset your metabolism?

Genuine metabolic recalibration takes a minimum of 90 days, because the hypothalamus needs consistent signals of safety and sufficiency before it will lower its defended set point. This differs from a diet, which produces temporary suppression the body quickly corrects. A 90-day reset typically moves through three phases: stabilizing stress chemistry (days 1–30), rebuilding metabolic efficiency (days 31–60), and lowering the weight set point (days 61–90).


Why does my thyroid feel slow even though my labs are "normal"?

Under chronic stress, the body converts thyroid hormone into reverse T3, which blocks active thyroid receptors and slows metabolism at the cellular level — even when standard lab values appear normal. This means you can experience genuine symptoms of slow metabolism, such as fatigue, cold intolerance, and brain fog, while your thyroid panel looks unremarkable. Addressing the upstream hypothalamic and stress signaling often improves thyroid conversion and symptoms.


Is stubborn weight gain a willpower problem?

No. Stubborn weight gain is a signaling problem, not a willpower problem. The hypothalamus governs weight through survival mechanisms that operate below conscious control — defending its set point by slowing metabolism and increasing hunger when it perceives threat. No amount of discipline can override this system; lasting change comes from restoring hypothalamic regulation through reduced stress, balanced blood sugar, restorative sleep, and targeted nutritional support.

About the Author - Deborah Maragopoulos FNP

Known as the Hormone Queen®️, I’ve made it my mission to help everyone - no matter their age - balance their hormones, and live the energy and joy their DNA and true destiny desires. See more about me my story here...

     

Last Updated: April 5, 2022

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *