How We Recover From Burnout

The Biology of Burnout: Why Burnout Lives in Your Body

12 min · 14 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Biology of Burnout: Why Burnout Lives in Your Body

Descripción

Most people think burnout happens at work and stays there. It does not. Burnout is a bodily and nervous system state, which is why no workplace policy or procedure can fully fix it. Your nervous system cannot tell the difference between a difficult client and a difficult conversation at home. It only registers threats. And when it has been in threat mode long enough, threat becomes your default setting. This post breaks down the three nervous system states behind burnout, why women experience burnout differently, and where the possibility of change actually lives. Burnout does not stay at work. It comes home with you. In the past few episodes, I have talked a lot about the story: how it forms in childhood, how it lives in our subconscious, and how it quietly runs our decisions, our patterns, and our exhaustion without us ever seeing it. I want to talk about where else that story lives. Because your story does not just run in your mind. It runs in your body and in your nervous system. Until you understand what is happening there, you are only seeing half the picture. Here is what most people get wrong. They think burnout is a work problem, something that lives at the office and stays there when you go home. But we carry it home. We snap at the people we love at the end of the day. We wake up at 3am with our minds already miles ahead of us. It is the inability to be present even when everything around us is fine. It is the relationships that have quietly paid the price for years. Policies and procedures can help alleviate burnout. But here is what they will not fix. Burnout is a body state. It is a nervous system state. And our nervous system does not distinguish between a difficult client and a difficult conversation at home. It just feels a threat. When it has been in threat mode for long enough, that becomes your default setting. That is what makes burnout so much more sinister. It stops being a response to something specific. It becomes the water you swim in every single day. The three nervous system states behind burnout To understand what is happening in your body, you need to know about the three states of the nervous system. I am going to explain them simply, because this is not about memorizing science. It is about recognizing yourself. 1. The sympathetic state: survival mode This is fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. Your amygdala, the threat detection center in your brain, fires in under 200 milliseconds. That is before any conscious thought. Before you decide anything, your heart rate increases, your digestion stops, and cortisol, the stress hormone, floods your body. The part of your brain responsible for rational thinking, perspective, and clear decision-making goes offline, at least partially. You are not choosing any of this. Your nervous system is doing its job because it is designed to protect you. 2. The parasympathetic state: safety mode This is rest, digest, and recover. Your nervous system is regulated. You are thinking clearly, connecting with people, and accessing your own voice. This is the state where genuine high performance is actually possible, rather than the adrenaline-fueled version that so many of us have mistaken for it. 3. The dorsal vagal state: shutdown mode This is the one that gets missed most often because, from the outside, it can look calm. But it is not calm. Have you ever had a moment where you went and sat down in your office, or even the bathroom, and just did nothing? That is the collapse. The flatness. The disconnection. Going through the motions. It is the depression that does not always look like depression. Maybe it is anxiety sitting quietly underneath everything, and you just do not recognize it anymore. Most high-achieving women I work with have been cycling between sympathetic and dorsal vagal for years. We drive hard in survival mode, then we crash and shut down, with very little time in the regulated state in between. And I can tell you from my own experience, the crash is hard. I know when it is coming. I am tired. I have not gotten enough sleep. I feel edgy. I can feel the dark cloud coming. That is the cycle of burnout, and it plays out in our bodies every single day. What happens when the threat never turns off Your nervous system was designed for short bursts of threat. A predator. A danger. Something that passes. But chronic professional pressure never passes. The high stakes, the unpredictability, the constant evaluation, the performance requirements. Your nervous system reads all of it as a threat. Over time, it stops asking whether something is actually dangerous. It just assumes it probably is. Everything becomes a danger. Your brain gets better and better at spotting threats, but worse and worse at standing down from them. Your stress hormones, which were designed to be temporary, become a permanent backdrop. And the neural pathways that fire together, wire together. The patterns that once kept you safe become the automatic responses you run now, long after the danger has passed. All of this is not your personality. It is biology. Learned, conditioned, reinforced biology. But it is still biology. And that matters, because it means it can be changed. Why women experience burnout differently This does not get said often enough. Women’s biological experience of burnout is very different from men’s, because our nervous system operates within a hormonal landscape that is always shifting. Whether it shifts every month or across the different stages of our lives, that fluctuation affects how easily our nervous system tips into survival mode. During certain phases of our cycle, estrogen and progesterone levels drop. When they drop, our nervous system becomes more reactive, and the threat detection system becomes far more sensitive. You are not imagining that things feel harder at certain times of the month. Your biology is genuinely primed for a survival response. Then add perimenopause. The hormonal fluctuation at that stage can begin years before most women expect it, usually in their mid-40s. It affects working memory, sleep, emotional regulation, and stress tolerance, at the exact point in our careers when the demands are highest, and the stakes are greatest. And if you are carrying the invisible load that most women carry, the second shift, the emotional labour of being a caregiver, your nervous system rarely, if ever, gets the recovery time it needs between stress cycles. This is a fact. And it is a fact that the professional world has largely been designed to ignore it because it makes people uncomfortable. What trauma has to do with burnout I want to say something about trauma, because the word stops some people. When most people hear trauma, they think of catastrophic. A single event. For some people, that is true, and significant trauma makes all of this harder and more complex. I know. I have lived through multiple traumas, and I am still coming out the other side. But there is another kind. Small t trauma. It is far more common than we acknowledge, because it is cumulative. It is years of suppressing emotion because the environment was not safe for it. It is shape-shifting to fit a system that was not designed for you. It is holding out toughness, absorbing criticism, and at the same time shrinking into yourself, holding everything together, but never letting anyone see what it costs you. All of that lives in the nervous system the same way. Not as one wound, but as a chronic pattern. A pattern your nervous system learned over the years. It learned it was safer to stay on guard. It learned that rest was a risk and that being seen was dangerous. You do not need a dramatic origin story for burnout to take root in your body. It comes from the daily, accumulated, unwitnessed cost of being a high achiever in a system that was never built for you. And quite frankly, that is enough. Self-awareness is learning to read your body This is why, when I talk about self-awareness in this work, it is not just about seeing the story in your mind. It is about learning to read what is happening in your body. Recognizing the state your nervous system is in right now, today, in this moment. Catching the shift from regulated to reactive before it is already running you. Feeling the flatness of shutdown before it becomes your baseline. Your story lives in the subconscious, and the subconscious speaks in sensations, in emotions, in your body. So when you learn to listen to the body, this is not separate from the story work. It is part of it. In fact, I would say it is the entry point. Because when you can name what is happening in your nervous system, and I mean really name it, you stop being driven by it. That space between what is happening and how you respond, that is where your choice lives. And that is what we are building together. Frequently asked questions about the biology of burnout Is burnout a mental health issue or a physical one? Both. Burnout is a nervous system state with real physical effects, including elevated cortisol, disrupted digestion, and impaired decision-making. It is not simply a mindset problem, which is why rest alone or workplace policy alone does not resolve it. Why does burnout follow you home from work? Your nervous system does not distinguish between work stress and home stress. It only registers a threat. Once it has been in threat mode long enough, that state becomes your default, regardless of your environment. Why do women experience burnout differently from men? Women’s nervous systems operate within a shifting hormonal landscape. Drops in estrogen and progesterone make the threat detection system more reactive, and life stages like perimenopause affect sleep, memory, and stress tolerance, often while career demands and caregiving loads are at their peak. What is the difference between small t trauma and big T trauma? Big T trauma usually refers to a catastrophic event. Small t trauma is cumulative, the result of years of suppressing emotion, adapting to unsafe environments, or holding everything together without being witnessed. Both can live in the nervous system as chronic patterns. Can burnout actually be reversed? Yes. Because burnout is learned, conditioned biology, it can be changed. The entry point is self-awareness: learning to recognize which nervous system state you are in so you can respond with choice rather than be driven by it. You will recover from burnout, Stacey Stacey Stevens is a lawyer-turned-speaker who helps high-achieving women break free from the patterns that keep them burnt out, overwhelmed, and stuck in performance mode. Using her FIRE Framework (Fulfilled, Inspired, Resilient, Empowered), she guides women from self-abandonment to self-actualization. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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episode Why You Cannot Recover From Burnout Without Self-Respect artwork

Why You Cannot Recover From Burnout Without Self-Respect

If you do not develop self-respect, you will never recover from burnout. I want to say that again, because I mean it. You can be fully self-aware. You can do the work, rewrite your story, and understand exactly where your patterns came from. And you can still find yourself right back in the same place. Because if self-respect is not part of the process, none of it sticks. So today, that is what we are talking about: what self-respect actually looks like, what it feels like when it is missing, and why it is the one piece most high-achieving women skip. First, a quick word on self-awareness We have talked about self-awareness before: learning to notice how our bodies feel when our nervous systems take over and send us into survival mode. Here is what I want you to remember about that. It is not because we are actually in danger. It is because something outside of our control triggered our identity story, which ignited our nervous system, and everything flows from there. Our thoughts, our emotions, and our actions, in that order, are faster than we can consciously choose. What self-respect looks like in real life Last week, I had one of those moments. I was in a conversation, and I felt it coming. My heart was beating faster. My jaw was clenched. I felt the tension in my neck. My breathing was shallow. And I knew in that moment that I no longer had the capacity to be in that conversation. So instead of staying and losing my cool, I stood up, excused myself, and calmly walked away. Was I nervous? Yes. Did I worry about what the other person would think of me? Absolutely. But I also knew that staying would do more damage to my own wellness. So I walked away. I found a quiet spot and took the time to realign. I looked around and told myself, “I am safe.” I slowed my breathing down. I let myself be present. Nothing to fix. Nothing to manage. I just gave my nervous system the time it needed to recalibrate. After a few minutes, something shifted. The pressure was gone. That fight or flight response I felt building was gone. And I felt at peace with myself. A few minutes later, the person I had been talking to came over and tried to pick the conversation back up. I looked at them and said, calmly and clearly, that I appreciated their view and their willingness to keep going, but that right now I did not have the capacity to keep talking about this. They looked at me, a little puzzled, and said, “Okay, no problem, we will catch you later.” In that moment, I showed myself to be full of self-respect. I honoured what I needed. I did not punish myself based on what I imagined their reaction might be. I told the truth about where I was, and I accepted that this was enough. What it costs when self-respect is missing I have also had the opposite kind of moment, and I am sure you have, too. The times I did not leave. The times I pushed past my capacity, lost my temper, or said something I could not take back. Afterward, I was exhausted. Physically, mentally, and cognitively spent. All I wanted to do was sleep, and it usually carried into the next day. I call it my own little nervous system hangover. Because when we go into fight or flight, our adrenaline and cortisol spike, and that causes real physical damage. Blood vessels can be damaged. We can develop high blood pressure, an increased risk of heart attack and stroke, blood sugar spikes, weight gain, and hormone disruption. And if you happen to be perimenopausal or menopausal, you already know how those hormones fluctuate on their own. On top of all of that, I felt ashamed of how I had behaved. And of course, the people on the receiving end had something to say about it, too. What does any of this have to do with burnout? Everything. Burnout is the result of your body self-advocating for you when you have failed to do so yourself. * When you are exhausted, your body is saying you need to rest. * When you are irritable, your body is telling you that you have stepped outside of what really matters to you. * When you are disconnected, going through the motions, present in your body but somewhere else entirely, your body is telling you something more serious. It is telling you that you have abandoned yourself so much that you can no longer feel yourself in your own life. Exhaustion says rest. Irritability says something is wrong. Disconnection says you have been gone for a while. All of it is a signal. And ignoring those signals is a complete lack of self-respect. If we are being honest, it is an abandonment of what matters most to us. For the sake of what? Someone else’s expectations, comfort, or convenience. How do you know when you lack self-respect? Here are five signs to watch for: * You imagine a negative view of yourself based on what you think other people feel about something you said, who you are, or what you did. “They must think I am...” Meanwhile, you have no real proof, but you still blame yourself. * You beat yourself up, convinced you have hurt someone. Again, no evidence required. The story just keeps running on repeat. * You assign a blanket judgment to yourself rather than to your behaviour in that moment. It stops being “I was this way because of these reasons” and becomes “I am this.” It turns into a label you affix to the middle of your forehead. * You replay the moment on a loop, trying to figure out what you did wrong, long after it has passed. Everyone else has moved on. You are still stuck in that room. * You make yourself responsible for how other people feel. Their mood, their reaction, their perceived disappointment, somehow, all of it is on you. Look at all five and notice what they have in common. We make ourselves the defendant, the judge, and the jury all at once. We tell ourselves we are just being accountable. We are not. It is self-prosecution, and it is one of the clearest signs that self-respect is missing. So what does self-respect actually look like? It means you are aware of your actions and you assess them based on your capacity in that moment. Because let us be real, we are not always showing up in our best form, and that is okay. That is life. It does not make you a certain type of person. It just means you had a moment where your capacity was low, and your response reflected that. Self-respect means you do not beat yourself up for being human. You acknowledge that your behaviour may or may not have been appropriate, and then you move on. And if it calls for an apology, give one. But make sure it is an apology that supports your well-being. If all you have the capacity for in that moment is a text, then send a text. If the thought of picking up the phone and rehashing the whole thing exhausts you, you probably do not have the capacity for that call right now. Do what is within your capacity in that moment. That is not a weakness. That is self-respect in action. Self-respect is a decision, not a feeling Hold the full picture of what happened in my story. I saw the signals. I was aware of them. I honoured them. And I walked away before I caused damage I would have spent days recovering from. I found a quiet spot, slowed my breathing, and let my nervous system come back to itself. It took maybe three to five minutes. Then, when someone tried to pull me back in before I was ready, I told them the truth. Calmly. Clearly. Without apologizing for being the person I needed to be for me in that moment. That whole sequence, from self-awareness to self-respect, is not a feeling you wait to have. It is not a permanent state; you arrive at it one day. It is a decision you make in the moment, over and over again, based on whatever capacity you have available. And here is the other thing I want you to notice. The thing I was afraid would happen did not. The person did not keep rehashing the conversation. They did not challenge my reasons for excusing myself. They just said, “Okay, I will catch you later.” The story my nervous system was running about what they would think, how they would react, and what it would cost me was not true. And it rarely is. We already know when we have crossed our own line. Your body will tell you every time. Your jaw, your neck, your shallow breath, your racing heart. The question is whether you are willing to listen, and whether you respect yourself enough to act on what you hear, not on what you fear. That is what self-respect asks of you. Not perfection. Just the willingness to hear yourself, and to trust that what you hear is worth honouring. I am Stacey Stevens, and this is How We Recover From Burnout. Frequently asked questions What is self-respect in the context of burnout recovery? Self-respect is the willingness to notice your body’s signals, assess your actions based on your capacity in the moment, and honour what you need without punishing yourself for being human. It is a decision you make repeatedly, not a feeling you wait to arrive. How do you know if you lack self-respect? Common signs include imagining negative judgments others have not made, beating yourself up without evidence, labelling yourself rather than your behaviour, replaying moments on a loop, and feeling responsible for other people’s emotions. Together, these turn you into your own defendant, judge, and jury. Why is self-respect essential to recovering from burnout? Burnout is your body advocating for you when you have failed to advocate for yourself. Exhaustion, irritability, and disconnection are signals. Ignoring them is a form of self-abandonment, so without self-respect, the rest of the recovery work does not stick. What does self-respect look like in practice? It looks like recognizing when you no longer have capacity, removing yourself before you cause harm, giving your nervous system time to recalibrate, and telling the truth calmly without over-apologizing or over-explaining. You will recover from burnout, Stacey Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Ayer14 min
episode What a Burnout Flare-Up Feels Like (and the First Step to Recovery) artwork

What a Burnout Flare-Up Feels Like (and the First Step to Recovery)

If you have been with me from the beginning, you already know what I believe. Burnout is what happens when your body finally starts self-advocating because you were never given the tools to do it for yourself. It shows up when three things collide: the demands of the ecosystem you live in, the identity you carry into it (the story you tell yourself about yourself), and your own biology. When those three meet, and you have no map, no language, and no tools to navigate it, your body rebels. Quietly at first. Then louder. Eventually, it is screaming so loudly that you finally start to listen. The exhaustion. The frustration. The disconnection. The lack of passion you feel every single day. That is your body telling you that you are burnt out. And it is asking you to make a choice: live like this for the rest of your life, or do something about it. It took me 20 years to listen I am not telling you this as a lawyer who read about burnout in a study. I became a lawyer, and I was already well past burnt out by the time I got there. It took about 20 years of my body trying to advocate for me before I finally paid attention and heard what it was trying to say. When I did, I made a decision. Because I did not want to spend the rest of my life feeling empty on the inside while making sure everyone on the outside believed I was full. What is a burnout flare-up? Over the past five years, the one thing I have learned above all else is this: self-awareness is the foundation for recovering from burnout. It starts with learning to feel what happens in your body during what I call a burnout flare-up. A flare-up is the moment your old identity story wakes up and triggers your nervous system to fire. If you are burnt out, that response usually shows up as one of four reactions: fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. And in that moment, you make choices that go against your own wants, your own beliefs, and your own needs, all to meet someone else’s expectations. That is exactly why self-awareness comes first. Once you know what your flare-up feels like, you can catch it the moment it happens. You can learn your automatic reaction. Then you can build your self-respect, develop your self-advocacy, and rewrite your story into one that actually gives you peace. That is the work that moves you from burnt out to living on FIRE: Fulfilled, Inspired, Resilient, and Empowered. What I am working on right now I will be honest with you. This is not theory for me. It is what I am practicing today. I can now recognize my own flight response the moment a flare-up hits. I know what the outcome will be, and I know it will not be good for my wellbeing. Has it been easy? No. But someone once told me that nothing worth having is easy to attain. And I knew that if I wanted to live on fire every single day, I had to put in the work. Here is the part I want to share, because it is hard to rewrite your story into one that gives you peace if you have forgotten what peace actually feels like. The 30-Day Moment of Peace Challenge So I am challenging you. For the next 30 days, every single day, set aside time and space to give yourself 2 to 5 minutes of peace. A moment where you are being, not doing. Here is how it works: * Breathe and sit with it. Take a big inhale. Let out a big breath. Then simply sit with how it feels to be at peace. * Find your trigger. It can be anything that helps you feel calm: looking out your window, sitting by the water, being in nature, watching your dog, or looking at your children. * Capture it. Take a picture of where you are or what you see. You can return to that photo anytime and use it to bring back the exact same feeling of peace. That picture becomes your anchor. Over time, you teach yourself how to find your way back to that moment whenever you need it. How to join Every day, I will post a note about how I created my own moment of peace, with my picture in the comments. If you are up for the challenge and want to join me, leave a comment about how you created your moment of peace and post your picture too. Let’s start talking about what it really takes to recover from burnout. Frequently asked questions What is burnout? Burnout is what happens when the demands of your environment, the identity story you carry, and your own biology collide without the tools to navigate them. Your body responds with exhaustion, frustration, disconnection, and a loss of passion. What does a burnout flare-up feel like? A flare-up is the moment your old story is triggered, and your nervous system fires into fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. It often pushes you to act against your own needs in order to me’ expectations. How do you start recovering from burnout? Recovery begins with self-awareness: learning to recognize your flare-up the moment it happens, understanding your automatic reaction, and then building self-respect and self-advocacy so you can rewrite the story you tell yourself. What is the Moment of Peace Challenge? It is a 30-day practice of giving yourself two to five minutes of stillness each day, anchoring the feeling with a photo so you can return to that sense of peace whenever you need it. You will recover from burnout, Stacey Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

1 de jun de 20267 min
episode Self-Sacrifice vs. Self-Sabotage: The Hidden Difference That Keeps High-Achieving Women Burned Out artwork

Self-Sacrifice vs. Self-Sabotage: The Hidden Difference That Keeps High-Achieving Women Burned Out

Self-sacrifice is a conscious, values-aligned choice you make with full access to yourself. Self-sabotage is what happens when that choice disappears, and you give automatically, out of conditioning rather than conviction. The difference is not visible in what you do. It is visible in what is driving it. I want to tell you about someone I know very well. She is always up before everyone else. She moves through the morning on autopilot. She makes the coffee, checks the emails that cannot wait, and does a mental inventory of everything the day is going to ask of her before it has even started. And somewhere underneath all of it is a feeling she has learned not to look at directly. A low, steady hum. A sense that something is not quite right. She is delivering at every level. She is reliable, capable, and present in every room that needs her. She does not complain. She does not ask for much. She has built something genuinely impressive, and she knows it. But she is disappearing inside of it. Not dramatically. Not in a way anyone around her would notice. Quietly. Incrementally. The version of herself that existed before performance became her entire job has been getting smaller for a very long time. She tells herself this is just what it costs. Everyone at this level carries this. When things settle down, when she gets through this next thing, it will feel different. But it does not settle down. And she knows that too. I know that woman because I was her. And if you are still reading, I suspect she might be you, too. So today I want to give you something nobody gave me for a very long time: the language to understand exactly what is happening here. What Is the Difference Between Self-Sacrifice and Self-Sabotage? The world tends to celebrate both without distinguishing between them. The woman who works through illness, who stays late, who gives more than is asked, who holds everything together, gets called dedicated, committed, and strong. But dedication and self-abandonment are not the same thing. And the difference between them is not visible in the action. It is visible in what is driving it. What Self-Sacrifice Actually Is Self-sacrifice, when it is real, is chosen. It is a decision to do something hard, to give something significant, because it aligns with what you value, with what you are building, and with what matters to you. There is agency in self-sacrifice. You have looked at the cost and decided it is worth it. Not because you had to. Because you chose to. That is not self-abandonment. That is integrity. I want to name this clearly, because so many women in this conversation have been taught to feel guilty about every sacrifice, as if choosing to give fully is itself a sign that something is wrong. It is not. A woman who makes a conscious, values-aligned choice to work through a hard season, to prioritize a goal that genuinely matters to her, to carry more for a period of time she has decided is finite, is not the woman I am talking to today. She knows why she is doing it. She has access to herself. She is not lost inside the performance. What Self-Sabotage Looks Like in High-Achieving Women Self-sabotage occurs when that choice disappears. When you are no longer deciding to give, you are just giving automatically, because that is what is expected. In women who are driven and achieving, self-sabotage rarely looks like destruction. It looks like the opposite. It looks like yes when the body is screaming no. It looks like pushing through illness, exhaustion, grief, and depletion, not because you have decided the cost is worth it, but because you have stopped asking yourself whether it is. It looks admirable on the surface and feels corrosive underneath. Because here is what is really happening: you are not acting from your values. You are acting from your conditioning. From the story that formed long before you had the wisdom to question it. The story you agreed to but never consented to. The Story You Agreed To But Never Consented To It is the story that decided, in circumstances you did not choose, that your worth lies in your output. Stopping is dangerous. That needing things is a liability. That story has been running your life quietly for so long that it stopped feeling like a story and started feeling like a fact. That is what mine was. I was not lazy. I am not weak. I was not broken. I was a woman who had spent years living inside a story I never agreed to. And the first step out of it is seeing the difference between what I chose and what I was conditioned to do. The Hidden Cost Nobody Talks About Here is what chronic self-abandonment does over time, because it did this to me, too. You think the cost is yours to carry. It is not. The closest people in your life feel it before you ever name it, because our energy is honest even when we are not. The version of me that was running on empty was present in my body but somewhere else entirely. My family sensed it and adjusted without realizing they were adjusting. They stopped bringing me the full weight of themselves because they knew I had no room to manage it. So they managed around me. Not out of distance, but out of care. They were trying not to add to what already looked like too much. And sometimes, and this is the hardest part to sit with, they start to carry something that was never theirs. My boys read my energy and concluded, the way people who love us often do, that the distance was about them. That they were the problem. That they should ask for less. When, in fact, it was just me showing up with no more room to give. That is the generational piece that does not get talked about enough. Self-sabotage does not stay with the woman living it. It moves through her, into the people she loves most, into the patterns they build around her absence, even while she is standing right there. This is not something to feel guilty about. That took me a long time to reconcile. But it is a truth to see, because you cannot change what you cannot name. Why Shame Keeps the Old Story Running To the woman sitting with the weight of all this, I want to say something directly, because I know how heavy it can be. You could not have done differently with what you had. The story was invisible. The conditioning was invisible. The self-sabotage ran so quietly for so long that it stopped feeling like a pattern and started feeling like your personality. It is impossible to know what you do not know. Which means the shame or guilt you may be feeling does not fit. The verdict you have been carrying about what those years cost the people around you, and about who you should have been, was built on a standard that required you to know something you simply had not learned yet. This is not an excuse. It is the truth. And the truth matters here, because shame is one of the most effective ways the old story keeps running. It anchors you to who you were rather than opening the door to who you choose to become. Your history has no place in your future. Not as a mantra, as a fact. The past is a starting point, not a life sentence. How Self-Sabotage Starts to Loosen Its Grip So what does recovery look like? It does not feel like a transformation. It feels like a pause. A moment, mid-yes when you mean no, where something in you catches it. Where you have just enough space to ask: Whose decision is this, really? Am I choosing this from my values, or doing it because the story says I have no choice? The pause is everything, because t’s where your agency lives. It is not about making a perfect choice or an easy one. It is about making a real one. Your ability to tell the difference between a sacrifice you are making consciously, on your terms, and one that is simply happening to you because you were conditioned to let it, is the distinction that changes your trajectory. Not just how you work. How you live. And what the people closest to you inherit from being near you. What Recovery Actually Looks Like To the woman from the beginning of this, the one up before everyone else, moving through her morning on autopilot, carrying a feeling she has learned not to look at directly, hear this: You are not failing. You are not weak. You are not too much, and you are not not enough. You are a woman who has been doing what she felt she had to do. That is admirable. But it has been costing you more than you can afford to keep paying. The work ahead is not about doing less, carrying less, or being someone who asks less of herself. It is about designing a life that actually fits who you are. Where the sacrifices you make are the ones you choose. Where giving comes from fullness, not depletion. Where you are fully present in your own life because you have stopped abandoning yourself to perform it. That life is possible. And it starts with seeing the difference between what you choose and what you were conditioned to do. Frequently Asked Questions What is the difference between self-sacrifice and self-sabotage? Self-sacrifice is a conscious choice that aligns with your values and is made with full access to yourself. Self-sabotage is automatic, given that it stems from conditioning, in which you have stopped asking whether the cost is worth it. The action can look identical. The driver is what differs. Why do high-achieving women experience self-sabotage as overwork rather than self-destruction? For driven women, self-sabotage usually shows up as over-delivering, saying yes when the body says no, and pushing through depletion. It looks like dedication on the surface, which is exactly why it stays hidden for so long. How do you start recovering from this pattern? Recovery begins with the pause: the moment you catch yourself agreeing to something automatically and ask whether the choice is yours or your conditioning’s. Agency lives in that pause. Is the cost of burnout only personal? No. Chronic self-abandonment is felt by the people closest to you, who often adjust around your depletion and can even absorb burdens that were never theirs. You will recover from burnout, Stacey Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

29 de may de 202615 min
episode How To Listen to What Your Body Already Knows About Your Burnout artwork

How To Listen to What Your Body Already Knows About Your Burnout

I read something recently that I have not been able to stop thinking about. A psychologist, Dr. Victoria Verliza, wrote a piece about growth mindset. Her argument was this. The idea Carol Dweck gave us, that our abilities are not fixed and that we can develop through effort, persistence, and a willingness to push past our limiting beliefs, is powerful. But it becomes something else entirely when it gets weaponized. That was her word. Weaponized. In many workplaces, she argues, a growth mindset has stopped being about supporting people and has become something far less generous. It is used to place the full weight of responsibility for the struggle on the individual, while the system that creates that struggle remains completely untouched. When someone is burning out, the question becomes, “Does she have the right mindset?” instead of, “What are we asking of this person, and is it actually sustainable?” That is not empowerment. That is coercion with a motivational poster on top of it. I read that, and I thought: That was me. For years. That Was Me for Years I came to a growth mindset the way a lot of driven people do, with everything I had. I was burning out. I knew I was burning out. And I believed that if I could just get my thinking right, push past my limiting beliefs, reframe my story, and stay focused on the goal, I could work my way out of how I felt. So I applied it with discipline, commitment, and real hope. And every time, the old pattern came back. The exhaustion returned. The hollow feeling settled back in. The version of myself I was trying to build kept collapsing under the weight of the version I could not seem to shake. So I reached the same conclusion every high achiever reaches. The problem was me. I just had not applied it hard enough. I needed more discipline, a better framework, a stronger will. As a lawyer, I turned every structural reality into a personal failure. Not living up to the metrics. Not having as forceful or convincing an argument as my male counterparts. The pressure to suppress my emotions. I was judged on the strength of my presentation, my argument, and my composure, so when I could not keep up, I assumed something was wrong with me. Not something wrong with the structure. The profession handed me a mindset mandate and called it the path forward. And I took it to heart. I made myself responsible for everything. Growth Mindset Is Real. It Just Is Not the Whole Story. I want to be clear about this, because I do not want to take it away from anyone who has found real value in it. I found enormous value in it. Growth mindset is real. It is the core of Carol Dweck’s work. We are not fixed. The story we inherited about our own limits is not a fact. That matters, and it pointed me somewhere I needed to go. It opened a door I needed opened. But there is a difference between opening a door and walking through it. Why Naming a Limiting Belief Is Not Enough A limiting belief is not just sitting in your conscious mind waiting to be challenged with better logic. It is a story. One that formed before you had the language to question it. One that lives in your body, in your nervous system, in every automatic response that fires before your rational mind even has a chance to weigh in. We can identify a limiting belief intellectually and still find ourselves living completely inside it. I did that more times than I can count. I saw the belief. I named it. I challenged it. I set a new intention. And then I watched the old patterns return, quiet and familiar, like they had never left. Because the truth is, they had not. I had just painted over them with better thinking. The story running underneath was still intact. What Was Actually Missing: Self-Awareness What I learned is that I was missing self-awareness. Not the performance of it. The real thing. Learning to listen to my body instead of only my thoughts. Those are two completely different things. Your mind is very good at telling you what you want to hear. It constructs a narrative that keeps you moving, keeps you performing, and keeps you inside a story you have lived for so long that it feels like your identity. The body does not do that. The nervous system does not negotiate. When something is costing you more than it is giving you, your body knows. When the yes you just said was actually a no, your body knows. When the performance you have been running for years has nothing real left underneath it, your body knows. I spent years overriding that signal. Not because I was weak. Because I had been handed a framework. Growth mindset. Resilience. Push through. Reframe. It kept me focused on my thoughts while my body was trying to tell me something my thoughts did not want to hear. Things started shifting the moment self-awareness stopped being about what I was thinking and started being about what I was feeling. My story became visible. And a story you can see is a story you can change. That is what growth mindset opens the door to. And that is what self-awareness walked me through. If You Are Doing Everything Right and Still Waking Up Exhausted If you have been working on your mindset, reading the books, doing the journaling, challenging your beliefs, and you still find yourself back in the same exhausted place, I need you to hear this clearly. This is not a failure of effort. This is not evidence that something is fundamentally wrong with you. It may simply mean the tools you were given are the right direction, but not the full journey. You are not responsible for fixing, through mindset alone, something that was never entirely a mindset problem. What you are responsible for, and what is genuinely within your power, is learning to listen to what your body already knows. Because it has been trying to tell you something for years. There is more here. Not more to do. That is the last thing you need to hear. There is more to see. That is what self-awareness made possible for me, and it is what we are going to keep building toward together. I’m Stacey Stevens, and this is How We Recover From Burnout. Frequently Asked Questions Is growth mindset bad for burnout? No. Growth mindset is real and valuable, and it can point you toward important change. The problem is using it as the entire solution. When it becomes a mandate to “think your way out” of burnout, it can place all the responsibility on the individual while ignoring the structural and physical roots of the exhaustion. Why does growth mindset stop working for some people? Because a limiting belief does not only live in your conscious mind. It lives in your body and nervous system as an automatic response formed long before you had words for it. You can challenge the belief logically and still keep running the old pattern, because logic alone does not reach where the belief lives. What is the step most people skip when recovering from burnout? Self-awareness, specifically the kind that means listening to your body and emotions rather than only your thoughts. Your nervous system signals when something is costing more than it gives. Learning to notice that signal, instead of overriding it, is where deeper change begins. How do I know if my burnout is a mindset problem or something deeper? If you have applied every mindset tool with discipline and still cycle back into exhaustion, that is a strong sign the issue is not a lack of effort or willpower. It often points to a story or pattern stored in the body, and sometimes to structural pressures around you that no amount of reframing can fix on its own. You will recover from burnout, Stacey Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

28 de may de 202612 min
episode Burnout Isn’t Your Problem. The Story You’re Living Is. artwork

Burnout Isn’t Your Problem. The Story You’re Living Is.

Burnout isn’t your problem. The story you’re living is. I know that sounds bold. But I lived it too. Be the strong one. Hold it all together. Never drop the ball. From the outside, I looked like a success. On the inside, I felt a pressure I could never escape. It wasn’t until I saw it clearly that everything changed. It wasn’t my life that was exhausting me. It was the identity I was trying to prove. So I questioned it. I chose differently. And everything shifted. If you’re feeling that same pressure right now, there is nothing wrong with you. You may just be living inside a story you haven’t questioned yet. This, my friends, is how we recover from burnout. A Real Conversation About Burnout In this episode of How We Recover From Burnout, I sat down with my guest Blair, a serial entrepreneur navigating one of the most disorienting seasons of her life. What started as a conversation about workload quickly revealed something much deeper. Something most high-achieving women carry without ever naming it. Here is how it unfolded. What Burnout Actually Feels Like I asked Blair what she knew about burnout. Her answer was familiar to anyone who has ever pushed themselves past their limit. She told me she is a workaholic. A serial entrepreneur. Over the last 20 years of building businesses, there were times she probably should have sought medical attention but didn’t. Then she said something I hear often. She mentioned that she hadn’t been “officially diagnosed” with burnout. So I stopped her right there. Burnout is not a medical diagnosis. And I am not here to give her or anyone one. When I talk about burnout, I am talking about something your body already knows. It is the moment your body starts saying no because you never did. The times you kept showing up, kept performing, kept delivering, and somewhere in all of that, you stopped advocating for yourself. You don’t need a doctor to tell you that is happening. You can feel it. Blair could. She described waking up after a deep sleep and still feeling exhausted. Her eyes twitching. A shorter fuse. Mental health dipping. Depression creeping in. These are the signals. Your body is the messenger. The Workaholic, the Overachiever, the People-Pleaser Blair called herself a workaholic. So I asked her what that meant. She told me she was addicted to the rush of new clients, of finishing the work, of achieving. An overachiever. Someone who used to easily put in 12-hour days, take no time off, and say yes to everything. But as we kept talking, something shifted. She paused and said, “Maybe it’s more people-pleaser than overachiever.” There it was. I asked her, “When was the very first time you felt it was necessary to be beyond the best version of yourself?” She traced it back to age 23, when she left her job to start her own public relations agency without her family’s support. She felt she always had to prove herself. But it went further back than that. The Seven-Year-Old Who Made a Decision When Blair was seven, her father developed a drug addiction and left the family. She was close to him. And in that moment, her young mind made a decision. I asked her how it felt. “Heartbroken. Abandoned. Confused.” Then I asked the question that matters most. “What did it mean about you?” She answered quietly. “That I wasn’t good enough.” This is what most women never get to see clearly. When something painful happens to us as children, our minds do not just register the event. They make meaning out of it. And that meaning, “I am not enough,” “I am not safe,” “I will be abandoned,” becomes the operating system we run on for the rest of our lives. Blair grew up with intense anxiety. Constantly checking with friends to make sure they weren’t mad at her. Always bracing for the good things to end. Becoming a people-pleaser, because if she could just make everyone happy, maybe no one would leave again. That belief, formed at seven years old, did not stay in childhood. It followed her into her marriage. Into her career. Into her current life crisis, where her husband of 15 years recently decided to end their marriage without ever telling her he was unhappy. The Pattern That Connects Every Painful Chapter Here is what I wanted Blair to see, and what I want you to see if you are reading this. The most significant man in her life at age seven made a decision that had nothing to do with her. He didn’t become a drug addict because of her. But her seven-year-old mind made it mean she wasn’t enough. Decades later, the most significant man in her adult life made another decision without her input. And the same wound cracked open. The same story resurfaced. “I am not enough. I will be abandoned.” I asked her, “If we cut you open, would there be a manufacturer’s label inside that says, ‘Hi, I’m Blair, made in Canada, and I’m not enough’?” That is the story she has been living inside. And until you see the story, you cannot question it. Why This Connects to Burnout You might be wondering what any of this has to do with burnout. Everything. When you believe at a subconscious level that you are not enough, your nervous system is constantly scanning for safety. Every situation where you feel uncertain or unseen activates that old wound. And then you do what you have always done to survive it. You over-deliver. You people-please. You overachieve. You say yes when you mean no. You make sure everyone else is okay so that maybe, finally, you will be safe. This is performance conditioning in action. It is the hidden engine behind so much of women’s exhaustion. We are not just tired from our workload. We are tired from carrying a story we never agreed to write. And here is the truth. If you believe you are not enough, you will never be safe. No external success, no title, no relationship, no amount of overworking will ever quiet that voice. Because the problem is not out there. The problem is the story. The First Step Out Recovering from burnout does not start with a vacation. It does not start with a new boundary or a yoga class, although those things help. It starts with self-awareness. It starts with asking yourself the question Blair had to ask. Is it the absolute truth that I am not enough? Look at your life. Look at what you have built, what you have survived, what you have accomplished. Are those the achievements of someone who is not enough? No. It is because you are enough. You have always been enough. The people in your life who walked away, who let you down, who hurt you, made those decisions based on their own stories, not yours. Their choices are theirs to own. You do not need to keep carrying them as evidence of your worth. What I Want You to Take From This If Blair’s story sounds anything like yours, I want you to hear me. You are not broken. You are not failing. You are not weak. You are running a story that was written for you a long time ago, by experiences you did not choose, when you were too young to know any better. But you are not seven anymore. You get to question the story now. You get to rewrite it. And when you do, everything starts to change. The over-functioning eases. The people-pleasing loosens its grip. The burnout that felt inevitable starts to lift. Not because your circumstances changed, but because you finally changed the story you were telling yourself about who you have to be. This is the work. This is how we recover from burnout. Not by managing it, but by going underneath it and pulling out the root. Reflection Questions for You Before you close this post, sit with these for a moment. * What is the story you have been telling yourself about who you have to be? * When was the first time you decided you were not enough? * What would your life look like if you stopped trying to prove it? If something in this resonated, leave a comment below. I read them all. And if you know a woman who needs to hear this today, share it with her. You will recover from burnout, Stacey Stacey Stevens is a lawyer-turned-speaker who helps high-achieving women break free from the patterns that keep them burnt out, overwhelmed, and stuck in performance mode. Using her FIRE Framework (Fulfilled, Inspired, Resilient, Empowered), she guides women from self-abandonment to self-actualization. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 de may de 202619 min