How We Recover From Burnout
I want to begin somewhere I don’t usually begin. Not with a framework. Not with the research. With me. Because I was that woman. The one who was achieving everything and disappearing at the same time. I was delivering at every level, hitting every external marker, and quietly going through the motions of my own life. I wasn’t falling apart in any way you could see. I was doing everything I could just to get through the day, and I gave the people around me whatever was left at the end of it. Most days, that wasn’t much. And I kept telling myself the same thing: this is just the price of what I do. This is the cost of success. I’m a lawyer. I have to give my clients everything, every single day. Underneath it was a quiet hope that one day I would have paid enough, and the burnout would simply, mysteriously, go away. It didn’t. So today I want to tell you why “get your mindset right and push a little harder” was never going to be enough, and what actually was. What high-achievers get wrong about burnout Here is the quick version for anyone skimming: burnout in high-achieving women is often not a mindset problem. It is a conditioning problem that lives in the body. You cannot think your way out of a pattern you learned before you had language to question it. What changes things is self-awareness at the level of the nervous system, not another motivational reframe. Now, let me explain how I got there. The growth mindset trap At some point, I read an article by a psychologist, Dr. Victoria Veliza, about what happens when a growth mindset stops being empowering and becomes something else entirely. Growth mindset, Carol Dweck’s foundational idea, is the belief that our abilities are not fixed, that we can grow through effort and persistence. Her argument was this: a growth mindset turns dangerous when it is used to place the full responsibility for the struggle on the person, while the system creating the struggle stays completely untouched. When someone is burning out, and the response is “Well, do they have the right mindset?” instead of “What are we actually asking of this person, and is it sustainable?” that is not empowerment. That is coercion dressed up as growth. I sat with that for a long time because it was my experience. There was never one dramatic moment. It was slow and accumulated, which makes it so much harder to name. And my profession, which, let’s be honest, is male-dominated and tends to reward male traits over female ones, handed me the mindset mandate and called it the path forward. Be more resilient. Think differently. Push past your limiting beliefs. I want to be clear: this is not a criticism of my firm, my partners, my colleagues, or my clients. This is me describing how my own experiences culminated in a lifetime of burnout. It is my truth. And for some of you reading, it may be your truth too. Why you can’t think your way out of burnout Here is what kept happening. Every time I convinced myself the burnout was a mindset failure, that I just wasn’t resilient enough, the same pattern came back. The exhaustion returned. And I was left with that hollow feeling and only one conclusion: the problem must be me. I took a structural reality and turned it into a personal failure for years. I am not saying growth mindset is wrong. It was the first door that opened for me. Dweck’s core idea, that I am not fixed, that the story I had been telling about my own limits is not a fact, pointed me exactly where I needed to go. But I could not think my way through that door. Because what I was dealing with was not just a limiting belief sitting politely in my conscious mind, waiting to be challenged. It lived in my story. And my story formed long before I had any language to question it. It lived in my body, in my nervous system, in every automatic response that fired before my rational mind even had a chance to weigh in. You can identify a limiting belief intellectually and still live completely inside it. I did that more times than I could count. New goal, new plan, new story, and then I would watch the old patterns come back, quiet and familiar, as they had never left. Because they hadn’t. A growth mindset opened the door. Self-awareness is what walked me through it. What self-sabotage looks like in high-achieving women Here is something it took me a long time to see in myself. Self-sabotage in women who are achieving does not look like falling apart. It looks like the opposite. It looks like over-delivering. Saying yes when every cell in your body is saying no. Pushing through because stopping feels more threatening than continuing. Performing capability so consistently, for so long, that you genuinely stop being able to find the person underneath the performance. And I want to name the difference between that and self-sacrifice, because they are not the same thing. Self-sacrifice is a conscious, values-aligned choice. I am going to do this hard thing because it serves something I have decided matters to me. There is agency in that. It is chosen, and that changes how your nervous system interprets it. Self-sabotage occurs when agency disappears. When you are running on conditioning instead of conviction. Going with the flow because it is expected, because it is what you have always done, because it is what you were trained to do. Not because you decided it was right for you, but because you stopped asking whether it was. I built my career, my reputation, my whole life inside the walls of playing small. Ignoring what my body was telling me. Ignoring the exhaustion that a holiday never touched. That is not a failure of willpower. That is what chronic disconnection looks like, dressed up as being professional. The cost you think is yours alone Here is what I wish someone had told me earlier. When you are running on empty, you assume the cost is yours to carry alone. It isn’t. The people closest to you feel it before you can name it, because energy does not lie the way words can. They sense the version of you that is present in your body but somewhere else entirely, and they adjust. They stop bringing you their full weight because they know there is no room. They pull back, not out of distance but out of care, trying not to add to what already looks too heavy. And sometimes this is the part that stays with me the longest: they start to think they are the reason. Now they are carrying something that was never theirs. Think about it. You come home exhausted after a long day. One of your kids runs up, lit up, wanting to show you something that matters to them. You didn’t mean to do it, but the reflex kicks in. “That’s great, honey, thanks. Can we look at it later?” You turn back to whatever has to get done. What you don’t see is the small slump in their shoulders as they walk away. You don’t see it because this ripple is quiet. It does not announce itself. It just becomes the new shape of the relationships around you. The only way to stop it is to stop pretending the cost is only yours. Put the shame down If you are sitting with all of that and feeling guilt settle in, I want to say this clearly. You could not have done differently with what you had. Not because you weren’t capable. You are extraordinarily capable, and you have proven it a hundred times over. But because the story was invisible, so was the conditioning, and the self-sabotage running underneath it stopped feeling like a choice and started feeling like who you are. It is impossible to know what you didn’t know. Which means the shame does not fit either. Shame is one of the most effective ways our old stories keep running. It keeps us anchored to the past and casts us as someone who failed, rather than as someone who is choosing something different now. Your history has no place in your future. Not as a mantra. As a fact. The past is the starting point. It is not the sentence. What I actually changed So what did I do when a growth mindset wasn’t enough? I started learning to listen to my body instead of only my thoughts. That is something entirely different. Your nervous system does not negotiate the way your mind does. It does not perform. It does not tell you what you want to hear. When something costs more than it gives, your body knows. When the "yes" you said was really a "no," your body knows. When the performance has run so long that there is nothing left of who you really are, your body knows that too. Self-awareness at that level is not an intellectual exercise. It is how you learn to catch yourself mid-override. Mid yes when you mean no. Mid push when you are already empty. And then you pause long enough to ask one question: Whose decision is this, actually? Is this really me, or the conditioned version of me showing up right now? That question changed everything for me because the moment I started asking it, I realized I had a choice I had not had before. Maybe not a perfect choice, and not always an easy one, but a real one. And real choices are where agency begins. That is where self-sacrifice becomes something you choose, rather than something that happens to you. You don’t need to be fixed. You need to be seen. So if you are that person, the one achieving and self-abandoning at the same time, getting through and calling it enough, hear this. You do not need to be fixed. You need to be seen. And not by me, and not by your peers. By yourself first. Clearly and compassionately, with no verdict and no judgment. My goal is not to hand you a better strategy or a stronger mindset. It is to give you the principles and the framework to design a life that actually fits who you are. Not the version of you that was built to survive under pressure. The real one. The one who has been there the whole time, waiting underneath everything you built and everything you pushed through. That part of you has not gone anywhere. She is just waiting for you to stop long enough to find her. 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]
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