How We Recover From Burnout
The one statistic that should be making headlines There is a number in the 2026 Women in the Workplace progress report that should be making headlines, and it isn’t. The report measured inclusion, representation, allyship, culture, and flexibility. Almost every metric either improved or held steady. But one moved in the wrong direction: women speaking out against discrimination. It declined from 18 percent in 2025 to 15 percent in 2026. It is the only metric in the entire report that goes backward. And it happened in a year when more organizations than ever described their workplaces as inclusive. A year when the language of self-advocacy is everywhere. The truth is, women are speaking up less, not more. The report frames this as an allyship problem. I want to look at it from a different angle because I don’t think that is the whole story. I think this is what happens when you have been the woman who is just tired for long enough. Tired of scanning the room. Tired of calculating the cost of speaking up. Tired of carrying the weight of the silence that followed in the moments you didn’t. Is workplace culture really the problem? Yes, and the report is right about that part. Nearly half of respondents identified workplace culture as the primary obstacle to women’s progression, and that number increased by seven percentage points in a single year. Culture is not one factor among many. It is the environment in which every other barrier either thrives or gets dismantled. But the report stops exactly where the most important question begins. When women stopped speaking out, when that percentage slid from 18 to 15, what were they standing on when they tried? If the answer is courage, then that is a problem. Because courage alone will not hold up under sustained pressure. Courage depletes. It runs out. It is not a foundation. It is a resource, and like most resources, if it is not replenished, it eventually runs dry. In my opinion, the women in that statistic did not go quiet because they stopped caring. They went quiet because they were standing on something that could not hold the weight of the room. Why teaching women to “speak up” hasn’t worked For the past decade, the solution to women not speaking up has been to teach us how to speak up. Negotiation workshops. Assertiveness training. Advocacy frameworks. Communication coaching. All of it is useful. None of it is sufficient. Because there are two kinds of self-advocacy, and they are not the same thing. Self-advocacy as a skill This is the language, the timing, the technique. You prepare your scripts, and you practice your delivery. In a safe environment, with a regulated nervous system and a room that is already somewhat receptive, the skill works. Self-advocacy as a foundation This is the deeper layer. It is the nervous-system-level conviction that your perception is valid, that your experience is real, and that your need deserves to be named. Regardless of whether the room confirms it. Regardless of whether anyone else is nodding. Regardless of the consequences. Self-advocacy, as a skill, eventually falters under pressure. Self-advocacy as a foundation does not, because it does not draw on courage. It is drawing from your identity, from the settled internal knowing that you are worth hearing. And that knowing does not depend on the room’s response to survive. Most women are handed the first kind. Workshops, frameworks, and scripts. The skill without the foundation. Then they walk into a high-stakes room, their old identity story fires, and the skill holds for a while. Until it doesn’t. And then they go quiet, and the statistic slides from 18 percent to 15 percent. What is performance conditioning, and why does it override skill? When women go quiet in a hard room, it is usually not a skills gap. Something fires in the nervous system faster than conscious thought, faster than any practiced technique, and it tells us that speaking is more dangerous than staying silent. That signal does not come from the meeting. It comes from something much older. I call it performance conditioning: the conditioning absorbed early in life about what happens when we take up too much space, when we challenge authority, when we are too direct, too much, too visible. That conditioning does not disappear when you learn a self-advocacy framework. It runs underneath it. And when the room gets hard enough, and the stakes get high enough, our conditioning overrides our skills every single time. Because the conditioning is not a habit. It is a story. A story that formed long before we had the language to question it, one that tells us our voice is a risk and our silence is our safety. That deep story is confirmed by decades of experience, and it cannot be overwritten by a workshop. It can only be changed by going to the root. Self-advocacy is not a skill gap. It is a story gap. And the story is what has to change before the voice can hold. How I learned this the hard way I know this because I spent years of my younger life in an environment where using my voice to stand up for myself, to advocate for myself, to say “no, this is what I want” was dangerous territory. The worst part is that after I got out of those years, the story stayed with me. It kept running until I finally understood that this was never about whether I was a good advocate or a bad one. My ability to sustain my voice was not the problem. The problem was the meaning that lived underneath it every time I thought about using it. What burnout-driven silence actually feels like There is a signal you can watch fire in women right before they speak up in a high-stakes room, and most of us have learned not to name it. We call it nerves. We call it being underprepared. We tell ourselves we need to be more polished, more professional. The words that run through the mind sound like this: Is this really worth it? What will they think? Am I reading this right, or am I being too sensitive? No, this isn’t the right moment. I think I’ll wait. That internal negotiation, that rapid and automatic scan for whether speaking is safe, is not strategic thinking. It is a survival response. The nervous system is calculating the cost of visibility before the prefrontal cortex has even assessed whether the threat is real. And for a woman who has been running that calculation for most of her life, in every room, at every table, the nervous system gets very efficient at it. The question fires faster. The silence arrives sooner. The voice keeps getting quieter. And every year, the number goes down. Somewhere, a report will note it as a data point and move on. But it is not a data point. It is a woman who knew exactly what needed to be said and could not get it out of her body and into the room. That is not a skill problem. That is a story problem. A message to the woman who went quiet If you are the one who had the thought and did not say it, who knew and stayed silent, who still carried the weight of that silence afterward, I want to speak to you directly. This is not you being weak. This is your nervous system doing the only thing it was trained to do: assess, determine if it is a threat, and respond accordingly. Your conditioning was working exactly as designed. The question is not why you went quiet. The question is what you were standing on when you tried to speak, and whether your foundation, your story, your sense of who you are in the world, is strong enough to hold you the next time the room gets hard. How to recover from burnout, starting today Recovering from burnout is not only about rest, boundaries, or a better calendar, although those matter. The deeper work happens at the level of identity, at the level of the story running beneath everything else. Building the internal conviction that your perception is valid, your voice is worth using, and your story is worth telling is not a skill you pick up in a workshop. It is foundational work. And while that work is underway, here is the smallest possible place to start. Before you speak in a room where it matters, take three seconds. Feet flat on the floor. One breath. Let the pause exist without filling it. Three seconds of genuine nervous-system regulation will produce a different kind of communication than zero seconds. It may not be perfect, and it will not transform the nervous system overnight. But it will be just enough to let your voice arrive from somewhere steadier than fear. Your voice going quiet was never the problem. The story that made silence feel safer than speaking is where the recovery begins. Frequently asked questions about burnout recovery What is the first step to recovering from burnout? Start at the level of the story you tell yourself about yourself. Before restructuring your schedule, notice the internal narrative that tells you your voice is a risk. Recovery begins when you build the foundational belief that your perception and needs are valid, independent of how any room responds. Why do high-achieving women burn out even in “inclusive” workplaces? Culture is a real and dominant barrier, but performance conditioning runs underneath it. Many women were conditioned early to equate visibility and directness with danger. When the stakes rise, that conditioning overrides learned skills, driving the silence and self-suppression that quietly fuel burnout. Is self-advocacy a skill or a mindset? Both, but they are different layers. Self-advocacy as a skill is the language, timing, and technique. Self-advocacy, as a foundation, is a nervous-system-level conviction that you are worth hearing. Skills deplete under pressure. A foundation does not, because it draws from identity rather than courage. What is a quick technique to feel steadier before speaking up? Take three seconds before you speak. Plant both feet flat on the floor, take one breath, and let the pause exist without rushing to fill it. This brief nervous-system regulation helps your voice arrive from a steadier place than fear. Is burnout just part of a demanding career? No. Burnout is not the inevitable price of ambition. It is often the cost of running on conditioning that equates exhaustion and silence with safety and success. That story can be interrupted and rewritten. 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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