When You Feel Foggy, Fatigued, Frustrated or Overwhelmed: How Your Liver Reflects Your Emotional and Physical Health

Book Personalised Care with Claire Russell

Struggling with fatigue, restless sleep, brain fog, bloating or emotional overwhelm? You are not alone. These symptoms often reflect deeper body-mind strain.

Book a consultation with
Claire Russell MSc. BSc. DipNT. Cl.Hyp. MNTOI. MICIP
Registered Nutritionist, Clinical Medical Hypnotherapist, Integrative Psychotherapist, Counselling and Advanced RTT Therapist with more than 20 years of clinical experience in health working with adults teenagers and children

Consultations Available ONLINE or in person in:
Adare, Newcastle West, Limerick, Abbeyfeale, Charleville, Kanturk, Midleton, Youghal, Cork, Dublin, Dungarvan and ONLINE worldwide

Perfect for Addictions, Eating Disorders, Anxiety, Stress, Metabolic health, Depression,  Drug Addictions, PTSD and Trauma recovery, Weight loss and weight, GUT / Digestive problems, Fertility, Post partum, Menopause, Perimenopause, Addictions and Binge-related habits, Anxiety,  Depression, CFS, ME, and Burnout support.


Summary

You might start noticing small changes like waking at 2 a.m., feeling hot after wine, irritability that is new to you, or stubborn weight under the ribs. Maybe bloating after food, itchy skin or feeling flat emotionally.

These can be signs your liver is working harder than it should. Many people link them only to gut problems, hormones, or stress. In truth, they are often connected.

This article explores how your liver supports emotional health, hormones, metabolism, weight balance, detoxification and mood. You will learn how stress and emotion impact the liver, what symptoms to watch for, and how our Registered Nutritionist, Counselling or Clinical Hypnotherapy can restore balance and peace of mind


How Your Liver Affects How You Feel

The liver quietly filters every drop of blood. It transforms toxins, balances hormones and supports digestion and metabolism. When the liver becomes overwhelmed, subtle changes appear in mood and energy.

You may notice:

  • Short temper or frustration that surprises you
  • Bloating after meals or feeling “heavy”
  • Overheating at night or waking up sweating
  • Brain fog, flat emotions, morning grogginess
  • Feeling low, irritable or burnt out
  • Weight gain around the midsection
  • PMS or hormonal acne
  • Trouble waking refreshed or staying asleep

The liver is not only a metabolic organ. It participates in a sensitive neurochemical cycle that connects the gut, hormones, blood sugar and mental wellbeing.

Supporting your liver supports your whole nervous system.


Three Phases of Detoxification Explained

Detoxification is not a juice cleanse. It is a daily liver-led process driven by nutrients, rest and digestion.

  1. Phase One
    Toxins such as Alcohol, medication residues, estrogens or industrial chemicals begin being broken down. Requires vitamins B6, B12, folate, iron and antioxidants.
  2. Phase Two
    The liver joins these compounds with amino acids or sulphur to make them water soluble. Needs protein, sulphur-rich foods (such as eggs, garlic, onion, cauliflower and broccoli) to function.
  3. Phase Three
    Processed waste is excreted via bile and bowel movements. If digestion is slow, these compounds can be reabsorbed.

If any phase is slowed down, you experience symptoms. You feel it emotionally and physically.


Signs Your Liver May Be Struggling

  • Fat tissue building under the breast line or chest
  • Itchy skin or flushed cheeks
  • Feeling irritable and snapping easily
  • Difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep
  • Eyes feel gritty or vision floaters (with iron levels confirmed normal)
  • Waking hot or soaked in sweat around 2 to 3 a.m.
  • PMS or worsening perimenopause symptoms
  • Low tolerance for alcohol, worse sleep if you drink
  • No appetite until after coffee
  • Raised cholesterol or blood sugar
  • Retaining water, feeling puffy or bloated
  • Heavy periods or emotional swings
  • Daily alcohol intake or medication load

Even if your blood work appears normal, your liver may need nutritional or emotional support long before disease shows up.


How Stress and Liver Health Connect

It is not just food and alcohol that impact liver function. Stress drives enormous metabolic change. When the nervous system is in overdrive, cortisol and adrenaline force the liver to metabolise harder.

Emotional suppression, trauma, chronic anxiety and burnout also show up somatically through the liver.

That is why Counselling, Clinical Hypnotherapy and RTT can make a major difference. These interventions help lower stress hormones, stabilise mood and calm the autonomic nervous system.

People often report calmer gut function and fewer cravings once emotional stress is addressed.


What to Eat and What to Avoid for Liver Balance

Increase:

  • Leafy greens (spinach, rocket, kale)
  • Brassicas (broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts)
  • Eggs, poultry, beans, legumes for amino acids
  • Onion, garlic, shallots for sulphur
  • Bitter foods (dandelion greens, radish, fermented veg)
  • Lemon water and herbal teas
  • Protein at every meal to support detox enzymes

Reduce:

  • Alcohol, particularly wine or spirits
  • Trans fats and processed snacks
  • Artificial sweeteners
  • Long-term painkillers or unnecessary medication
  • Pesticide-heavy fruits (choose organic where possible)

If your gallbladder has been removed, your liver is now working extra hard. Smaller meals with healthy fats help digestion and bile flow.


From some of our Clients in Ireland

Kate, 52, Midleton Youghal
Came with in with exhaustion, irritability and weight gain after menopause. After three months of weekly counselling and a tailored nutrition plan, her energy returned, nighttime hot flushes reduced and she reported “feeling like myself again.”

Michael, 44, Limerick
Felt foggy, had bloating and reported kept waking around 2am and 3 a.m. Drank four beers on average daily. After Hypnotherapy and RTT for habit change and nutrition sessions, he reduced drinking to weekends, lost belly weight and reported “calmness and great energy I never had before, and great relationship success!”

Sarah, 31, Dublin and ONLINE 
Struggled with anxiety, PMS and sugar cravings. RTT helped address childhood triggers, and nutrition support helped regulate hormones and imbalance. She no longer feels ruled by food and no longer wakes in the night, has great focus and energy.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is liver detox good for weight loss?
Yes, when performed naturally through food and support. A sluggish liver may hold onto fat and hormones.

Why am I always waking at 2 a.m. or 3am?
This time corresponds with liver metabolic activity. A sign of emotional overload, unstable blood sugar or liver congestion.

Can counselling or hypnotherapy help liver symptoms?
Yes. The emotional stress response affects liver function. Clinical Hypnotherapy and RTT often shorten recovery time for liver-related fatigue and cravings.

Do I need supplements to detox?
Only if nutrient deficiencies are found. Whole foods do most of the work.

Is hypnotherapy safe?
Yes. Clinical Hypnotherapy is a regulated and studied therapeutic technique supported by neuroscience. Studies confirm its safety and effectiveness for anxiety, chronic pain, addictions, habit change and much more

Can I work with a Nutritionist online, and Hypnotherapist ONLINE in Ireland?
Yes. Tele-health Nutrition sessions, Counselling and Hypnotherapy sessions are available nationwide. Whether in person or online is a matter of personal preference. Both are equally effective and produce excellent results. We work with people across Ireland, the UK, UAE and in-person in Limerick, Cork, Dungarvan, Dublin, Midleton, Fermoy, Adare, Newcastle West Limerick and more.

Is fatty liver reversible?
In most cases, yes. Reduction of alcohol, increased movement and Mediterranean-style eating leads to regeneration and reversal within months along with targeted personalised support dealing with your specific health needs, mental health and medical history

Can stress cause fatty liver?
Yes. Stress hormones overload the metabolic process, increasing inflammation and fat storage.

How quickly do symptoms change if I support my liver?
Most feel a difference within 3 to 8 weeks. It depends on consistency and emotional support.

Can RTT Rapid Transformational Therapy or Clinical Medical Hypnotherapy really help addictions or emotional eating?
Yes. Rapid Transformational Therapy RTT is solution-focused and evidence-informed. It combines hypnotherapy and cognitive work to shift emotional triggers in one to three sessions. Claire is one of the first trained RTT practitioners in Ireland, personally trained by Marisa Peer in London in 2016


Book a Consultation

To rebuild your energy, calm emotional strain and re-balance metabolism, book a consultation today.

Contact Claire Russell MSc. BSc. DipNT. Cl.Hyp. MNTOI. MICIP
Registered Nutritionist, Psychotherapist, Clinical Medical Hypnotherapist and Advanced RTT Practitioner.

Book your Nutritionist, RTT, Hypnotherapy or Counselling session now.

Appointments in:
Adare, Newcastle West, Limerick, Abbeyfeale, Charleville, Kanturk, Midleton, Youghal, Cork, Dublin, Dungarvan
Or ONLINE from anywhere in Ireland.

Start feeling like yourself again.


Academic References

  1. European Association for the Study of the Liver. Liver disease prevention. https://easl.eu/publication/liver-disease-prevention-facts
  2. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Fatty Liver. https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/liver-disease/nafld-nash
  3. British Liver Trust: Fatty Liver and Diet Support. https://britishlivertrust.org.uk
  4. Harvard Medical School. Stress and Digestion. https://www.health.harvard.edu/diseases-and-conditions/the-gut-brain-connection
  5. Journal of Hepatology: Sleep and liver function study. https://www.journal-of-hepatology.eu/article/S0168-8278(20)30603-7
  6. Mayo Clinic: Liver detox clarification. https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/expert-answers
  7. British Medical Journal. The Gut-Liver Axis: a review. https://gut.bmj.com/content/early/2021
  8. American Psychological Association: Stress and Inflammation. https://www.apa.org/monitor/2018/07-08/cover-health
  9. PubMed: Hypnosis for emotional regulation. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35050306/
  10. Gut: Microbiome and liver function. https://gut.bmj.com/content/69/11/2192
  11. Psychology Today. RTT overview. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapy-types/rapid-transformational-therapy
  12. Liver International: Estrogen metabolism and liver detox. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/liv.14987
  13. ScienceDirect: Sulphur and detoxification. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214764X20303038
  14. New England Journal of Medicine: Alcohol metabolism and liver. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMra0901212
  15. British Journal of Nutrition: Weight gain and liver enzymes. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/british-journal-of-nutrition
  16. Lancet: Gallbladder removal and liver implications. https://www.thelancet.com
  17. Clinical Nutrition Journal: Liver and mood disorders. https://www.clinicalnutritionjournal.com
  18. Cochrane Review: Hypnotherapy for IBS and gut symptoms. https://www.cochranelibrary.com
  19. Irish Journal of Medical Science: impact of stress on Irish adults. https://link.springer.com
  20. WHO: Non-communicable disease and liver risk. https://www.who.int
  21. Nature Reviews: Circadian rhythm and liver detox. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41575-022-00634-0
  22. Gastroenterology: Stress impacts on gut permeability. https://www.gastrojournal.org/article/S0016-5085(17)36462-4/fulltext

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