How We Recover From 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]
39 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de How We Recover From Burnout!