How We Recover From Burnout
Can we talk about lies today? You heard me. Lies. We all tell them. Little white ones. Some pretty big ones. Some kinds that hurt people. But today I want to talk about a particular kind of lie. Not the ones that are obvious or dramatic. The quiet, socially acceptable ones. The kind that gets passed down without anyone ever questioning them, because they showed up dressed as wisdom. There are two I want to name today, because they are running silently underneath the exhaustion of every woman I work with. And because naming them, I mean really naming them, not just nodding along, is the first thing that makes it possible to interrupt them. The first lie: authenticity is risky. The second: if you don’t do it at all, you’re failing. Neither of them is true. But they can both feel true. And that gap between what feels true and what is true is exactly where burnout lives. What Is Actually Running Underneath the Burnout Before we go into either lie, I want to talk about what is actually running underneath them. It has a name: performance conditioning. Performance conditioning is the internal programming that women absorb early on, through our families, culture, school, and profession. It teaches us that love, validation, and acceptance are what we have to seek. And it teaches us that the only way to get them is through overachievement, self-silencing, and self-sacrifice. Tell me, did you get this script too? Because this is what I got. Be a good girl. Be agreeable. Be impressive. Don’t talk back. Be helpful. Be excellent. And then we enter professional environments, and the script upgrades. Now be productive. Be available. Be exceptional. And never drop the ball. We internalize these expectations so deeply that they stop feeling like expectations at all. They just feel like who we are. But they are not who we are. They are patterns we have been conditioned to run. And patterns can be interrupted. First, though, you have to see them. Lie Number One: Authenticity Is Risky So why do so many women feel that authenticity is risky, that we cannot be ourselves at work? Because we were taught that when we are authentic, there are consequences. We can be confident, but we know there is a price to pay if we come across as intimidating. We can be ambitious, but we cannot be threatening. This double bind actually has a name in leadership research. They call it the Goldilocks dilemma. Be too soft and you are dismissed. Be too strong and you are penalized. So what do we do? We calibrate. We adjust our tone. We filter our opinions. We soften our edges. And what happens? We become excellent performers. We are competent. We are capable. We are composed. And internally, we are completely disconnected from who we are. Here is what rarely gets said about any of that: self-editing is exhausting. When who we are on the inside does not match how we show up on the outside, our nervous system feels the misalignment every single day. It does not matter how polished the performance looks. Our bodies keep an internal score. And the cost is not just exhaustion. It is the slow erosion of our own voices. Voices we have edited so consistently, for so long, that we can no longer locate what we actually think, feel, or want. We separate what the room requires from us from who we truly are. Authenticity Is Not Oversharing Sometimes we think authenticity means oversharing. It does not. It is not disregarding professionalism either. Authenticity is alignment. And alignment reduces the cognitive load that has been quietly exhausting you for years. Being real is not reckless. It is efficient. It stabilizes your confidence. It improves how you lead. And it is the only foundation on which sustainable performance is actually possible. The myth says authenticity is a liability. The truth is that inauthenticity is the liability. It is just the one the system never made you account for. Lie Number Two: If You Don’t Do It All, You’re Failing Now for the second lie. If you don’t do it all, you're somehow failing. The cultural messaging on this one is relentless, and it has been around forever. There was a time when women were told they could have it all. You can have the house, the family, and the career. You can do it all. And underneath all of that was the quiet message that if you couldn’t do it all, you were failing. So what do we do? Instead of accepting that we might be falling short, or missing out, or dropping a ball, we over-function. We start anticipating needs before they are spoken. We say yes when we really want to say no. We take on far more than we can handle because it feels easier than the conversation that comes with saying, I just can’t do this. And underneath all of it, there is one belief running: if I don’t do this, I will lose value. That is not excellence. It is not ambition. It is certainly not passion. It is a fear of becoming dispensable. Wearing the mask of capacity without boundaries is not strength. It is self-erasure. And self-erasure, when sustained long enough, is what burnout really is. You are not failing because you can’t do everything. You are exhausted because you were never meant to do everything. The myth that said you should was never designed with your well-being as the priority. It was designed to extract the most from you while you were still willing to give. That is not a standard worth meeting. It is a standard we need to start questioning. What Both Lies Produce: Success on Paper, Empty Inside Here is what both of these myths produce when they run long enough. A woman who looks successful on paper and feels chronically empty inside. Because when external achievement is built on internal self-abandonment, when every win has been funded by suppressing your voice, overriding your needs, and performing a version of yourself to meet the room, no amount of success will ever deliver fulfillment. The disconnect is not about the resume. It is not about what you have done. It is about how you have left yourself behind. If your worth is tied to productivity, approval, or perfection, you will never feel done. You will feel temporarily validated, and then the finish line moves. So you pick yourself up and run again. You reach it, get briefly validated, and it moves again. That is not a life. That is a loop. How to Recover From Burnout: Interrupt the Story The loop does not break by achieving more. It breaks when you start seeing the story running underneath it. So the next time you catch yourself justifying the exhaustion, filtering your voice, or over-committing, pause and ask yourself two questions: Who taught me this was necessary? What am I afraid will happen if I actually stop? That question alone will interrupt the automation. Not permanently, and not all at once, but it will create a space that wasn’t there before. And that pause, the one between your conditioning and your response, is where the magic happens. Because in that moment, self-respect becomes possible. Not as a concept, but as a decision. A decision that you can be excellent without destroying yourself. That you can lead without shrinking. That rest does not have to be earned before it is allowed. And from there, a new definition of success becomes available. One that does not require self-abandonment as the price of entry. One where your values and your work are no longer pointing in different directions. One where your ambition and your nervous system are not in constant conflict. That is where fulfillment lives. Not in the next achievement. Fulfillment lives in the alignment. The Myths Were Never True The myths were never true. They were a story. A story passed down to you through environments that needed your compliance more than they needed your wholeness. And here is what I know about stories: they can be rewritten. Not because of who you were when the story was handed to you, but because of who you have become, and who you are still becoming, because of everything you have been through since then. The woman who deserves to live by her own rules. 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. 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