The Load We Carry

The Hidden Cost of Masking: Burnout, Identity, and Learning to Come Back to Yourself

17 min · 8 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Hidden Cost of Masking: Burnout, Identity, and Learning to Come Back to Yourself

Descripción

In this deeply reflective episode of The Load We Carry, Emily Mori explores the emotional and psychological impact of masking in late diagnosed neurodivergent adults, especially women, caregivers, and helping professionals. Emily discusses how masking often begins as a survival strategy rooted in observation, adaptation, and the desire to avoid judgment or conflict. Over time, these patterns can become so automatic that people lose touch with their authentic needs, emotions, and identity. The episode examines the hidden exhaustion that comes from constantly monitoring behavior, managing expectations, and carrying invisible mental loads while appearing capable on the outside. https://canva.link/t2jdhlijvm3u84r [https://canva.link/t2jdhlijvm3u84r]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Load We Carry!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

15 episodios

episode The Hidden Cost of Masking: Burnout, Identity, and Learning to Come Back to Yourself artwork

The Hidden Cost of Masking: Burnout, Identity, and Learning to Come Back to Yourself

In this deeply reflective episode of The Load We Carry, Emily Mori explores the emotional and psychological impact of masking in late diagnosed neurodivergent adults, especially women, caregivers, and helping professionals. Emily discusses how masking often begins as a survival strategy rooted in observation, adaptation, and the desire to avoid judgment or conflict. Over time, these patterns can become so automatic that people lose touch with their authentic needs, emotions, and identity. The episode examines the hidden exhaustion that comes from constantly monitoring behavior, managing expectations, and carrying invisible mental loads while appearing capable on the outside. https://canva.link/t2jdhlijvm3u84r [https://canva.link/t2jdhlijvm3u84r]

8 de jun de 202617 min
episode When Both Parents Are Neurodivergent artwork

When Both Parents Are Neurodivergent

In this episode of The Load We Carry, Emily Mori explores the realities of dual-neurodivergent households and the emotional complexity that comes with parenting while managing two overwhelmed nervous systems. Drawing from her experience as a therapist and educator, Emily discusses executive functioning fatigue, sensory overload, emotional regulation, communication struggles, burnout, and the hidden mental load many neurodivergent parents carry every day. She shares how these relationships can hold deep empathy, connection, humor, and understanding while also feeling exhausting and emotionally intense. Through compassionate storytelling and practical insight, this episode reframes overwhelm as a nervous system response rather than a personal failure and encourages families to replace shame with understanding, communication, and shared support. https://canva.link/5qw1mvxhdishnte [https://canva.link/5qw1mvxhdishnte]

1 de jun de 202617 min
episode Dads Carry a Load Too artwork

Dads Carry a Load Too

This episode of The Load We Carry centers a perspective that is often present but rarely acknowledged—fathers navigating the emotional, practical, and systemic weight of raising neurodivergent children. Emily Mori explores how societal expectations around masculinity, provider roles, and emotional suppression shape the way many dads carry stress, grief, and responsibility in silence. Through a compassionate and nuanced lens, this conversation highlights the invisible labor fathers hold, the impact of isolation and delayed processing, and the ways their contributions are often misunderstood or overlooked. By naming these experiences and reframing strength to include vulnerability, connection, and self-awareness, this episode invites fathers into a more supported, visible, and emotionally sustainable role within caregiving. https://canva.link/9rp3uc2ifjppnoa [https://canva.link/9rp3uc2ifjppnoa]

24 de may de 202618 min
episode In Conversation: What Support Really Looks Like artwork

In Conversation: What Support Really Looks Like

This episode of The Load We Carry pulls back the curtain on what “support” actually looks like for families navigating mental health, disability, and care systems. Emily Mori, alongside another professional voice, explores the hidden realities behind services—highlighting the coordination burden, emotional labor, system fragmentation, and caregiver burnout that often go unspoken. Rather than simplifying support, this conversation names the complexity, validating the experiences of parents who find themselves managing more, not less, after asking for help. Grounded in honesty and compassion, the episode reframes support as partnership, transparency, and sustainability—empowering listeners to advocate for care that truly reduces burden and honors their lived experience. https://canva.link/kxlau7gw2hil2xg [https://canva.link/kxlau7gw2hil2xg]

17 de may de 202619 min
episode Not All Therapy Is the Same artwork

Not All Therapy Is the Same

This episode of The Load We Carry explores a truth many people sense but rarely hear validated: not all therapy is the same. Emily Mori unpacks the wide range of therapeutic approaches and why a lack of progress in therapy is often about poor fit—not personal failure. Through a neurodivergent-affirming and trauma-informed lens, she examines how different modalities like CBT, DBT, ACT, EMDR, and somatic therapies can help or harm depending on the individual, while highlighting the critical role of the therapeutic relationship itself. This conversation empowers listeners to approach therapy with discernment, ask better questions, and advocate for care that truly aligns with their needs, identity, and nervous system—because healing is not one-size-fits-all. https://canva.link/p2txucm5tvcvk59 [https://canva.link/p2txucm5tvcvk59]

10 de may de 202627 min