Year-End Stress & Emotional Burnout: Why Some People Struggle More Than Others (Genetic Stress Response Explained)
pro Genome
Introduction
December is supposed to be a joyful month — holidays, gatherings, vacations, and celebration.
Yet for many Malaysians, it is also the most stressful month of the year.
- Deadlines.
- Closing accounts.
- Traffic.
- Family expectations.
- Gift pressure.
- Social fatigue.
- Financial worry.
- Holiday burnout.
But why does stress affect people so differently?
Why do some remain calm…
while others get overwhelmed, anxious, tired, or emotionally drained?
The answer is not personality alone.
It’s genetic stress response pathways that influence how your brain clears stress chemicals, how your body manages inflammation, and how your mood stabilises during high-pressure seasons.
Understanding this can help you navigate the year-end with more clarity and compassion.
1. The Year-End Stress Pattern: Why December Feels “Heavier”
December commonly brings:
- High workload (closing year, closing projects)
- Increased social gatherings
- Emotional expectations from family
- Traffic, noise, crowds
- Fatigue from long months of work
- Less sleep
- More sugar and carbs
- More caffeine
- Less structured routine
- Travel stress
For people genetically sensitive to stress, this becomes overwhelming faster.
2. COMT Gene: The Core of Stress Tolerance
The COMT gene controls how quickly your brain clears dopamine, adrenaline, and stress-related chemicals.
There are three common COMT patterns:
✔ Fast COMT (Warrior mode)
Clears stress chemicals quickly → calmer under pressure.
May feel low motivation or slow emotional response.
✔ Intermediate COMT
Balanced → feels stress but can adapt.
✔ Slow COMT (Worrier mode)
Clears stress chemicals slowly →
- Feels stress more intensely
- Needs more recovery time
- Sensitive to noise, tension, emotional conflicts
- Prone to overthinking
- Prone to emotional overwhelm
During December, slow COMT individuals often experience:
- Brain fog
- Tension
- Anxiety-like symptoms
- Emotional exhaustion
- Trouble winding down
- Difficulty sleeping
This is not weakness —
it is biology.
3. Inflammation Also Influences Stress & Mood
Many Malaysians have genetic tendencies that increase inflammation from:
- Fried foods
- High-sugar meals
- Omega-6 heavy diets
- Stress
- Poor sleep
- Seasonal overeating
- Indoor sedentary lifestyle
Inflammation affects:
- Mood stability
- Fatigue
- Motivation
- Stress sensitivity
- Cognitive clarity
This is why people feel “moody” or “exhausted” in December.
4. Vitamin D & Mood in Year-End Season
Even in Malaysia, Vitamin D dips during:
- Monsoon season
- Shorter sunlight exposure
- Indoor lifestyle
- Cloudy weather
- High pollution days
People with low Vitamin D activation often feel:
- Low mood
- Emotional heaviness
- Anxiety-like symptoms
- Difficulty waking up
- Brain fog
- Poor sleep regulation
NGx identifies whether your body activates Vitamin D efficiently or needs higher support.
5. Omega-3 EPA & Stress Recovery
Omega-3 EPA affects:
- Brain inflammation
- Neurotransmitter balance
- Emotional resilience
- Stress recovery time
People with low Omega-3 conversion may experience:
- Slower emotional recovery
- More irritability
- Higher anxiety during holidays
- Difficulty switching off mentally
- Higher inflammation from festive meals
Holiday stress + heavy eating + low EPA = emotional instability.
6. Caffeine Sensitivity Makes December Stress Worse
Many rely on coffee to survive the year-end rush.
But NGx reveals caffeine sensitivity:
✔ Fast caffeine metaboliser
Energy boost → stable.
✔ Slow caffeine metaboliser
Caffeine stays longer →
- Heart palpitations
- Anxiety
- Overthinking
- Rebound fatigue
- Disrupted sleep
This affects how you handle stress the entire day — especially when coffee is paired with December deadlines.
7. Sleep Genes & Year-End Fatigue
Poor sleep amplifies stress.
Some individuals have genetics influencing:
- Melatonin production
- Circadian rhythm
- Sleep efficiency
These people feel:
- Exhausted
- Unfocused
- Emotionally unstable
- More reactive
- More irritable
Especially in chaotic months like December.
8. Case Example (Anonymised)
A 33-year-old woman struggled every December:
- Emotional overwhelm
- Tearfulness
- Lack of motivation
- Stress eating
- Trouble sleeping
- Chest tightness during deadlines
Her NGx report showed:
- Slow COMT (stress-sensitive)
- Low Vitamin D activation
- Low Omega-3 conversion
- High caffeine sensitivity
- Inflammation tendency
Plan included:
- Controlled caffeine timing
- EPA support
- Vitamin D optimisation
- Anti-inflammatory meals
- Scheduled rest
- Evening wind-down routine
Within 4–6 weeks:
- Mood stabilised
- Reduced stress-eating
- Less overwhelm
- Better sleep
- Stronger emotional resilience
Her December became manageable, not draining.
9. How to Manage Year-End Stress Based on Your Genetics
✔ If you have slow COMT
Use slow breathing, structured routines, and reduce overstimulation.
✔ If you have low Vitamin D activation
Morning sunlight + D3 under HCP guidance.
✔ If you have low EPA conversion
Include direct EPA sources.
✔ If you have caffeine sensitivity
Limit coffee after 2 PM.
✔ If you have inflammation tendencies
Avoid too much fried and sugary food.
✔ If you have circadian rhythm sensitivity
Use consistent sleep cues.
The goal isn’t avoidance — it’s personalised management.
Conclusion
Stress does not affect everyone equally.
Some struggle more not because they are weak —
but because their biology requires different support.
Understanding your genetic tendencies helps you approach December with:
- Compassion
- Better planning
- Better energy
- Better emotional stability
- Healthier coping strategies
The year-end season becomes easier when you work with your biology, not against it.


