How We Recover From Burnout
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]
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