How We Recover From Burnout

How To Listen to What Your Body Already Knows About Your Burnout

12 min · 28. mai 2026
episode How To Listen to What Your Body Already Knows About Your Burnout cover

Beskrivelse

I read something recently that I have not been able to stop thinking about. A psychologist, Dr. Victoria Verliza, wrote a piece about growth mindset. Her argument was this. The idea Carol Dweck gave us, that our abilities are not fixed and that we can develop through effort, persistence, and a willingness to push past our limiting beliefs, is powerful. But it becomes something else entirely when it gets weaponized. That was her word. Weaponized. In many workplaces, she argues, a growth mindset has stopped being about supporting people and has become something far less generous. It is used to place the full weight of responsibility for the struggle on the individual, while the system that creates that struggle remains completely untouched. When someone is burning out, the question becomes, “Does she have the right mindset?” instead of, “What are we asking of this person, and is it actually sustainable?” That is not empowerment. That is coercion with a motivational poster on top of it. I read that, and I thought: That was me. For years. That Was Me for Years I came to a growth mindset the way a lot of driven people do, with everything I had. I was burning out. I knew I was burning out. And I believed that if I could just get my thinking right, push past my limiting beliefs, reframe my story, and stay focused on the goal, I could work my way out of how I felt. So I applied it with discipline, commitment, and real hope. And every time, the old pattern came back. The exhaustion returned. The hollow feeling settled back in. The version of myself I was trying to build kept collapsing under the weight of the version I could not seem to shake. So I reached the same conclusion every high achiever reaches. The problem was me. I just had not applied it hard enough. I needed more discipline, a better framework, a stronger will. As a lawyer, I turned every structural reality into a personal failure. Not living up to the metrics. Not having as forceful or convincing an argument as my male counterparts. The pressure to suppress my emotions. I was judged on the strength of my presentation, my argument, and my composure, so when I could not keep up, I assumed something was wrong with me. Not something wrong with the structure. The profession handed me a mindset mandate and called it the path forward. And I took it to heart. I made myself responsible for everything. Growth Mindset Is Real. It Just Is Not the Whole Story. I want to be clear about this, because I do not want to take it away from anyone who has found real value in it. I found enormous value in it. Growth mindset is real. It is the core of Carol Dweck’s work. We are not fixed. The story we inherited about our own limits is not a fact. That matters, and it pointed me somewhere I needed to go. It opened a door I needed opened. But there is a difference between opening a door and walking through it. Why Naming a Limiting Belief Is Not Enough A limiting belief is not just sitting in your conscious mind waiting to be challenged with better logic. It is a story. One that formed before you had the language to question it. One that lives in your body, in your nervous system, in every automatic response that fires before your rational mind even has a chance to weigh in. We can identify a limiting belief intellectually and still find ourselves living completely inside it. I did that more times than I can count. I saw the belief. I named it. I challenged it. I set a new intention. And then I watched the old patterns return, quiet and familiar, like they had never left. Because the truth is, they had not. I had just painted over them with better thinking. The story running underneath was still intact. What Was Actually Missing: Self-Awareness What I learned is that I was missing self-awareness. Not the performance of it. The real thing. Learning to listen to my body instead of only my thoughts. Those are two completely different things. Your mind is very good at telling you what you want to hear. It constructs a narrative that keeps you moving, keeps you performing, and keeps you inside a story you have lived for so long that it feels like your identity. The body does not do that. The nervous system does not negotiate. When something is costing you more than it is giving you, your body knows. When the yes you just said was actually a no, your body knows. When the performance you have been running for years has nothing real left underneath it, your body knows. I spent years overriding that signal. Not because I was weak. Because I had been handed a framework. Growth mindset. Resilience. Push through. Reframe. It kept me focused on my thoughts while my body was trying to tell me something my thoughts did not want to hear. Things started shifting the moment self-awareness stopped being about what I was thinking and started being about what I was feeling. My story became visible. And a story you can see is a story you can change. That is what growth mindset opens the door to. And that is what self-awareness walked me through. If You Are Doing Everything Right and Still Waking Up Exhausted If you have been working on your mindset, reading the books, doing the journaling, challenging your beliefs, and you still find yourself back in the same exhausted place, I need you to hear this clearly. This is not a failure of effort. This is not evidence that something is fundamentally wrong with you. It may simply mean the tools you were given are the right direction, but not the full journey. You are not responsible for fixing, through mindset alone, something that was never entirely a mindset problem. What you are responsible for, and what is genuinely within your power, is learning to listen to what your body already knows. Because it has been trying to tell you something for years. There is more here. Not more to do. That is the last thing you need to hear. There is more to see. That is what self-awareness made possible for me, and it is what we are going to keep building toward together. I’m Stacey Stevens, and this is How We Recover From Burnout. Frequently Asked Questions Is growth mindset bad for burnout? No. Growth mindset is real and valuable, and it can point you toward important change. The problem is using it as the entire solution. When it becomes a mandate to “think your way out” of burnout, it can place all the responsibility on the individual while ignoring the structural and physical roots of the exhaustion. Why does growth mindset stop working for some people? Because a limiting belief does not only live in your conscious mind. It lives in your body and nervous system as an automatic response formed long before you had words for it. You can challenge the belief logically and still keep running the old pattern, because logic alone does not reach where the belief lives. What is the step most people skip when recovering from burnout? Self-awareness, specifically the kind that means listening to your body and emotions rather than only your thoughts. Your nervous system signals when something is costing more than it gives. Learning to notice that signal, instead of overriding it, is where deeper change begins. How do I know if my burnout is a mindset problem or something deeper? If you have applied every mindset tool with discipline and still cycle back into exhaustion, that is a strong sign the issue is not a lack of effort or willpower. It often points to a story or pattern stored in the body, and sometimes to structural pressures around you that no amount of reframing can fix on its own. 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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episode How to Recover From Burnout When Pushing Harder Has Stopped Working cover

How to Recover From Burnout When Pushing Harder Has Stopped Working

If you are burnt out and exhausted from doing everything right, here is the short version: burnout recovery does not start with more discipline or a better routine. It starts with seeing the unspoken rules you have been following for years, naming them, and recognizing that you never actually chose them. That awareness is the first real step out. Now let me explain why. Why does burnout happen to high-achieving people who seem to be coping? For most high performers, burnout does not arrive because we lack resilience. It arrives because we have been performing resilience for decades without even realizing it. We learned early how to adapt, endure, and override ourselves to stay safe, be accepted, and succeed. The strategy works until it does not. And when it stops working, the first conclusion most of us reach is that something is wrong with us. We look at the people beside us. They appear to be managing fine. So the problem must be personal, right? It is not personal. It is structural. And it started long before your current job, your role, or the season of life you are in. The hidden curriculum no one hands you There is a curriculum no one gives you on paper, but everyone expects you to follow: * Work harder than you need to in order to prove your value. * Be confident, but not intimidating. * Be likable, but not emotional. * Be ambitious, but grateful. * Be capable, but never inconvenient. No one says these rules out loud. They get enforced quietly, through the feedback you receive, through silence, through the way a tone shifts, through a stalled promotion, through subtle penalties that teach you over time when to shrink and when to soften. The people who are best at reading the room eventually stop feeling the rules at all. They just feel pressure, tension, and fatigue, plus a quiet sense that success keeps moving further away no matter how much they achieve. That is not because you are doing it wrong. It is because the rules were never designed to be sustainable. What is the Goldilocks Dilemma? From a young age, many of us are conditioned to seek love, validation, and acceptance. We learn to read the room, anticipate needs, and adjust ourselves accordingly, and we get praised for it. In professional environments, that early conditioning collides with what I call the Goldilocks Dilemma: * Be too warm, and you are not taken seriously. * Be direct, and you are difficult. * Be authentic, and you risk your credibility. * Be guarded, and you feel disconnected. There is never a right version. The zone keeps shifting. So you keep calibrating, managing perceptions, always performing, always monitoring. Am I being too much? Am I not enough? Is this safe to say? Will this cost me? That constant internal calculation is exhausting, and it is not random. It is a learned pattern, the direct output of years of being rewarded for managing yourself and penalized for being yourself. Where does burnout actually come from? Burnout does not come from workload. It comes from suppression, the constant overriding of the internal signals you run in order to stay acceptable. Burnout is not a sign that you lack discipline. It happens when discipline becomes self-erasure. Every time you override your own needs, you teach yourself to say yes when your body says no, and to push through discomfort instead of listening to it. That ability probably helped you build everything you have. It did for me. But it also quietly trains your nervous system to tie your worth to what you can endure. It teaches you to treat rest as something you have to earn. It makes you believe that saying no is a risk, and that being fully yourself is conditional on the approval of the room. Are these symptoms a failure or a message? At some point, this stops working, and your body starts sending stronger signals: fatigue, irritability, brain fog, resentment, anxiety, numbness. These are not failures. This is feedback. Burnout is not your body betraying you. It is your body refusing to be ignored any longer. How do you actually start recovering from burnout? This brings me back to something Viktor Frankl wrote, words I keep coming back to: When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves. Most people read that and feel only pressure. Another thing to fix. Another way they are falling short. But that is not what it means. What it means is that your agency does not live in the situation. It lives in you. In your capacity to see what is actually happening, clearly and honestly, and to choose something different. You cannot change the situation by pushing harder through it. What you can change is your relationship with the story running underneath it. That is where your agency lives: in the naming, in the seeing, in the moment you recognize the script you were handed for the first time and understand that yes, it was given to you, but you did not choose it. Recovery from burnout begins when you stop confusing your endurance with excellence. Journal prompts to start seeing your script You do not have to fix anything today. Just notice the rules you are following and ask, maybe for the first time, whether you ever actually chose them. Once you see the story, you cannot unsee it. And a story you can see is a story you can change. Sit with these: * What rules am I still following that no longer serve me? * What expectations are quietly shaping my decisions? * What parts of myself have I been editing out just to stay safe? You do not need answers right away. Just let the questions work on you. That is the whole job for now: building self-awareness, naming the script, and seeing it clearly. Those are the steps you need to take before you can rewrite it. 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]

29. juni 20268 min
episode How to Recover From Burnout by Building Real Capacity, Not Just Tolerance cover

How to Recover From Burnout by Building Real Capacity, Not Just Tolerance

Tell me if you recognize this woman: She is good at enduring. Good at pushing, delivering, holding it together while everything around her moves fast and asks for more. She has built a capacity for tolerance that is genuinely impressive. And she has paid for every inch of it with something she cannot quite name. She is not calling it self-destruction. That feels far too dramatic for someone who is still showing up, still functioning, still getting it done. She calls it what it costs. The price of being serious about her work. Just what she has to do. But here is the question I want to sit with: What if the capacity she has been building is not actually capacity at all? What if it is just a higher threshold for abandoning herself? What is the difference between tolerance and capacity? For most of my career, I believed capacity and resilience meant the same thing: tolerance. Tolerance for long hours. Tolerance for being the steady one while everyone around me unravelled. Tolerance for doing the emotional labour. I left home young. I became a wife, a mother, a student, and eventually a lawyer. Every time, my capacity to endure expanded a little more, and a little more, until it hit its limit. Tolerance and capacity look identical from the outside. The difference is what is happening on the inside. Tolerance is pushing through despite the signals. Capacity is meeting pressure without internal collapse. One is self-betrayal dressed up as ambition. The other is strength with alignment. Most of us have been building tolerance our whole lives and calling it resilience, because that is what we were socialized to do. And we have been doing it inside a nervous system that pays the price the entire time. How does burnout show up in the body? Here is what I learned about a body under chronic tolerance. It knows. The jaw that has been clenched since Tuesday. The fatigue the weekend cannot touch. The breath that shortens the moment a certain name appears on your phone. The tension in your neck is so constant that you have stopped noticing it is there. That is your nervous system doing exactly what it was built to do. It is communicating with you in the only language it has. And when that has been your default for so long, it starts to feel normal. It starts to feel like your personality. So you tell people, “It is just how I am.” But we are not built to run on chronic activation. It is not possible. When we override these signals in the name of capacity, we are not building resilience. We are accumulating a debt that the body will eventually collect. Burnout is the receipt. It is the receipt for the payment you have already been making. Why are boundaries necessary for high performance? We talk about boundaries as if they were personality traits. Something some people have and others do not. They are not. Boundaries are a mechanism. They are the thing that makes high, sustained performance biologically possible. When you are constantly accessible, accommodating, and overextending, cognitive clarity declines. Decision fatigue sets in. Emotional regulation drops. The very performance you are trying to protect by staying available to everyone gets compromised by the act of staying available. Regulated energy needs boundaries. That is not a value statement. It is physiology. So when you say no to something misaligned, when you protect your time, energy, and attention from what does not serve your values or your work, you are not being selfish. You are being strategic. You are protecting the capacity on which everything else depends. The question worth sitting with: when you say yes to something, do you know what you are really saying no to in your own life? Is the yes coming from genuine alignment, or from the fear of disappointing someone? One builds capacity. The other drains it. What does real self-advocacy look like? Some people think self-advocacy means standing up to other people. Asking for the promotion. Setting boundaries in meetings. Naming what you need. It starts somewhere else entirely. It starts with the voice in your own head. The one that says do not be too much, do not be too direct, do not be too honest, just stay in the right zone. Never too soft, never too strong. That voice is performance conditioning. It is programming that many of us absorbed from environments that reward a narrow version of acceptable, and it runs so early and so automatically that most of us never experience it as conditioning at all. Self-advocacy means answering that voice with: I am not here to be acceptable. I am here to be aligned. You make that internal shift first, and the external becomes possible. My mentor Jan Dowdy taught me something I keep coming back to: Say what you mean. Mean what you say. Without being mean. That is the entire external advocacy framework in one sentence. At work, it might sound like naming your contribution directly instead of hoping someone notices. Setting a timeline that reflects reality instead of what you think they want to hear. Declining what does not belong in your role, and saying so clearly. At home, it might be naming when you are overwhelmed, rather than absorbing it in silence. Delegating instead of doing everything because it is easier. Resting without turning the rest into a recovery performance. Self-advocacy is not aggression. It is clarity. And it is always anchored in self-respect. How do you close the gap between who you are and who you perform to be? Here is something we do not talk about enough. The most exhausting thing you carry is not the workload. It is the gap. The distance between who you are on the inside and who you perform to be on the outside. You can look confident, sound decisive, and appear completely in control while feeling entirely disconnected. That internal friction is not a mindset issue. It is a nervous system issue. When your authentic self and your performed self live too far apart, your nervous system reads the misalignment as a chronic, low-grade threat, because it knows something essential in you is being overridden. Leading without betraying yourself means closing that gap. Not in a dramatic, everything-changes-at-once way. Through small, daily, deliberate decisions that move the performed version of you closer to the real one. Aligning your work with your values. Reconnecting with why you started instead of chasing the next hit of external validation. Expanding your capacity without running yourself into the ground. Taking ownership of your story instead of letting the system write it for you. It is not about becoming someone new. It is about becoming who you were before your conditioning taught you to shrink. So, how do you actually recover from burnout? We were never meant to burn out. The version of capacity that requires you to push past every signal, override every need, and perform your way through exhaustion is not capacity. It is tolerance. Do not mistake it for strength. Real capacity is built differently. It is built when you stop abandoning yourself in the name of ambition, and when you treat your own well-being with the same precision and intention you bring to your work. It is built by advocating for yourself internally before you try to advocate for yourself anywhere else. This is not softness. This is the most sophisticated form of high performance. You do not need to burn out to prove your worth. You do not need to shrink to be accepted. Suffering is not the road to success. Every time you choose self-alignment over self-betrayal, you build something endurance alone never could. That is how we build capacity. Not just to do our jobs, but for the people we love and the life we keep deferring until things settle down. They never settle down. We settle into ourselves. And that changes everything. Frequently asked questions Is burnout just part of being ambitious? No. Burnout is not the inevitable cost of caring about your work. It is the result of running on chronic activation, overriding your body’s signals, and mistaking tolerance for resilience. Sustainable high performance is built on alignment and boundaries, not exhaustion. What is the difference between tolerance and capacity? Tolerance is pushing through despite your body’s warning signals. Capacity is meeting pressure without internal collapse. They look the same from the outside. The difference is whether you are betraying yourself or staying aligned on the inside. Are boundaries selfish? No. Boundaries are the mechanism that makes sustained performance physiologically possible. Protecting your time, energy, and attention preserves the cognitive clarity, decision-making, and emotional regulation your work depends on. Where does self-advocacy actually start? It starts with the voice in your own head, not with other people. Before you can advocate for yourself in a meeting, you have to stop telling yourself to be smaller, quieter, and more acceptable. Internal advocacy comes first. 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]

25. juni 20269 min
episode How to Recognize Burnout Before It Becomes Your Identity: The Quiet Survival Mode Most High Achievers Miss cover

How to Recognize Burnout Before It Becomes Your Identity: The Quiet Survival Mode Most High Achievers Miss

Survival mode does not announce itself. It arrives gradually, one small adaptation at a time, until your adapted state becomes the only state you can remember. Then it stops feeling like survival, and it starts feeling like you. If you are a high achiever who is still showing up, still delivering, and still holding everything together, this is the version of burnout you are most likely to miss. The good news: the first step out of it is not a complicated recovery plan. It is recognition. Here is how to tell whether you are living in survival mode right now. What Survival Mode Actually Is Most of us hear the words “survival mode” and picture a crisis. Rock bottom. The moment everything falls apart. But that is not the version that runs people for years. The quiet version looks like nothing from the outside, because you are still functioning. It often sounds like this: * “I just need to get through this week.” * “Once this project is done, I will have more time.” * “When things settle down, I will start taking better care of myself.” * “When the kids are older. When I make partner. When I get to the other side of this.” This is small-s survival: the perpetual deferral of your own life. The finish line that keeps moving. The version of yourself you keep promising to come back to, just not yet, just a little longer. What makes it so hard to name is that it does not feel like a crisis. It feels like responsibility. It feels like discipline. It feels like simply doing what needs to get done. Which is exactly why it can run for years without ever being questioned. Your Body Knows Before Your Mind Does The physical signs are always there, even when your mind is overriding them. Watch for: * Chronic tension in the jaw, neck, and shoulders. * Fatigue that a full night of sleep does not fix. * A racing heart or shortened breath in situations that other people seem to navigate without any trouble. * Unexplained symptoms that come and go with no clear cause. These are not weaknesses. You are not being hypersensitive. This is data. Your body is the first and most honest signalling system you have, and it has been communicating a state your mind keeps filing under “I will deal with it later.” Your body does not negotiate, and it does not wait until you have time. It registers the state you are in, and it tells you. The only real question is whether you have been listening. Why Survival Mode Costs You More Than Energy Here is a truth worth sitting with: you cannot navigate toward where you want to go if you do not know where you are right now. Think about it practically. If you open a map and you do not know your starting point, the destination is meaningless. You can see it, want it, and know exactly what it looks like, and you still have no idea how to get there. That is what survival mode does. It removes your starting point. When your nervous system is in survival mode, it is not interested in your identity, your values, your direction, or your long-term vision. It is interested in one thing: getting through the immediate threat, whether real or perceived. Every fight, flight, freeze, and fawn response redirects your biological resources away from who you are and toward what you need to be in order to survive. The cost of that redirection is not just your energy. It is your alignment. In survival mode, you make decisions from fear instead of values. You react out of self-protection rather than self-expression. You measure your worth against external signals because your own internal signal has been drowned out by the noise around you. Survival is not broken when it does this. It is doing exactly what it was designed to do: keep you alive in the short term, regardless of the cost to your long-term direction. How to Know If You Are in Survival Mode: Four Questions When you are in it, you cannot easily see it, because survival and self-awareness cannot occupy the same space at the same time. So instead of trying to feel your way to an answer, use these four orientation questions. They are not therapy questions. They exist to answer one thing: am I operating from my own internal reality right now, or has a survival response taken the wheel without my permission? 1. What is my body doing? Where is the tension or the fatigue? What physical sign has been present so long that I no longer notice it? 2. What is my mind doing? Am I rehearsing conversations before they happen and replaying them afterward, scanning for what might go wrong? Am I second-guessing decisions that should have been straightforward? When your mind is running on survival, it is not running on you. 3. How am I showing up? Am I editing what I say to manage other people’s reactions rather than to be clear? Am I saying yes when I mean no? Is it costing me more, physically and mentally, than I was prepared to pay? Guarded relating is not a personality trait. It is a survival strategy. 4. Is the noise drowning out my own signal? Have other people’s expectations, demands, and needs become so loud that I can no longer hear my own? If you answered yes to any of these, you are in it. That is survival mode. The Story Running Underneath It Every survival mode has a story underneath it, and the story usually sounds something like this: there is not enough time, capacity, or safety to stop, to rest, to ask for what I need, or to exist as anything other than useful. That is a fear-based, scarcity story. It is the belief that the ground only feels solid when you are moving across it, so you keep moving, keep getting through, keep deferring. And the story that convinces you that you have no choice goes like this: this is just what it costs, this is what everyone operating at this level carries, stopping is a luxury I have not earned yet. The story gets louder and more convincing the longer you live inside it. So ask yourself honestly: what is the story driving my survival mode? What do I believe will happen if I stop getting through and actually start living? Whatever that belief is, it is the thing running the show. Until you see it, it will keep running you. What Chronic Survival Mode Does to Your Body This part matters, and most of us never think about it. Your stress response, your cortisol, and your adrenaline are designed for short bursts. A threat arrives; your body responds; the threat passes; and the system resets. Short burst, reset. That is the design. But when survival mode becomes your permanent setting, the reset never comes. It no longer matters whether you are somewhere safe. Your cortisol stays elevated, your adrenaline keeps firing, and your body stays in a state of readiness it was never built to sustain. The result is not just exhaustion. You stop thinking clearly when you need it most. Your emotional reactivity comes out of nowhere. Sleep stops restoring you. Your immune system slowly breaks down. The body keeps the score, even when you are not keeping it yourself. Recognition Comes First This is not the moment when I tell you how to get out of survival mode. That comes later. This is about what has to come first: recognition. The first question is not “how do I get out of this?” The first question is “Am I in it?” So here is what I want you to remember. Survival mode is a biological state your nervous system adopted to keep you safe. It is an intelligent adaptation that formed at a time when it was doing exactly what the situation required. It is not your identity. It is not your ceiling. It is not the truth about who you are or what you are capable of. Naming it is not defeat. Naming it is the first and most important act of self-awareness you can give yourself, because you cannot make a conscious choice about what happens next from a location you cannot see. So before anything else, just look. Not where you are going. Not where you have been. Right now, in this body, in this life: where are you? Frequently Asked Questions What is “quiet” survival mode? It is a low-grade, sustained state of survival in people who are still functioning well on the outside. Instead of a visible crisis, it shows up as constant deferral of your own needs, chronic low-level stress, and the sense that you will rest “once things settle down.” How do I know if I am in survival mode or just busy? Run the four questions above: what your body is doing, what your mind is doing, how you are showing up, and whether outside noise has drowned out your own signal. Why is recognizing burnout the first step? Because you cannot choose a way out from a place you cannot see. Survival and self-awareness cannot coexist, so naming your current state restores the starting point you need for any recovery strategy to work. Can survival mode harm your health even if you feel fine? Yes. Chronically elevated cortisol and adrenaline disrupt clear thinking, emotional regulation, sleep, and immune function over time, even when you are in a safe environment and believe you are coping. 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]

23. juni 202613 min
episode How to Recover From Burnout: The 4 Hidden Patterns That Keep High-Achieving Women Stuck cover

How to Recover From Burnout: The 4 Hidden Patterns That Keep High-Achieving Women Stuck

Burnout is not a single event. It is the receipt for everything that came before it. If you are a high-achieving woman who has read the books, taken the courses, and learned every framework, yet still feel exhausted, overextended, and disconnected from yourself, this is for you. The problem was never a lack of information. The problem is that we have spent years, sometimes decades, treating the symptoms without ever seeing the underlying structure. I want to walk you through four categories that live inside the core human challenges I see over and over in the women I work with. Not as a checklist to diagnose yourself with. As a mirror. My hope is that you see yourself in at least one of them. And if you are struggling with burnout, you will probably see yourself in more than one. I certainly did. What is burnout, really? Burnout is not laziness, weakness, or a sign that you are not cut out for your life. It is what happens when a nervous system has been running on survival for so long that the cost finally becomes visible. It moves along a timeline, starting quietly with reduced focus and a little more friction than usual, long before anything looks broken from the outside. The four categories below are the patterns that drive it. They all trace back to one root: an early story, a nervous system conditioned to stay on guard, and an identity built around survival rather than self-authorship. Category 1: Identity and Core Beliefs This is where everything starts, before your day has even begun. Low self-worth, imposter syndrome, perfectionism, and the quiet, limiting belief whispering underneath all of it: I am not enough. These are not personality traits. They are not simply “who you are.” They are patterns formed early, reinforced by experience, and mistaken for reality because they have been running so long they feel like just the way things are. Low self-worth rarely announces itself. It shows up as over-delivering to prove your value, saying yes when you mean no because your worth feels conditional on approval, or being unable to receive a compliment without deflecting it. Imposter syndrome does not feel like a belief. It feels true, as if everyone else in the room knows something you do not. I lived with that for a long time as a 41-year-old first-year lawyer, waiting for someone to point out that I did not belong. Perfectionism looks like high standards from the outside. On the inside, it is driven by fear that anything less than perfect confirms the very thing you are most afraid is true. All of it functions as noise. External expectations get so loud that your own internal signal becomes inaudible. You lose access to what you actually want, separate from what others want from you. Rest starts to feel like failure. Your own needs feel like an imposition. Slowly, the noise does not just distract you from yourself. It replaces you. Category 2: Emotional and Cognitive This is what happens in the mind and nervous system when those identity patterns go unaddressed. Chronic worry, negative rumination, fear of uncertainty, and emotional overwhelm. The mind replays. The nervous system stays activated. Calm starts to feel like something that happens to other people. Here is what is happening neurologically. Survival mode pulls cognitive resources away from the part of your brain responsible for reasoning, creativity, clear decision-making, and planning, and redirects them toward managing perceived threats. Your mind cannot tell the difference between a real threat and an imagined one. So you rehearse conversations before they happen and replay them afterward. You scan for what might go wrong. Chronic worry is a threat-detection system with nothing to detect, so it makes something up. Rumination is your past playing on repeat, returning not because it is unresolved but because the story you carry about yourself has never been addressed. Fear of uncertainty and emotional overwhelm are not weaknesses. They are what an overloaded system looks like from the inside. Category 3: Performance and Habit This is where internal patterns show up in daily behaviour. Procrastination, addictive distractions, inconsistent discipline, and the shame that lives in the gap between who you want to be and who you actually are. Procrastination is not laziness. It is almost always fear of wearing a different coat: fear of failure, of judgment, of starting something that might confirm the whisper that you do not belong. Addictive distractions, the doomscrolling, the overeating, the glass of wine that became two, are not moral failures. They are the body reaching for the fastest available relief from a state it cannot sustain. Inconsistent discipline is not a willpower problem. It is a story problem. You cannot build sustainable habits on a foundation of “I am not enough,” because every setback reinforces the story rather than being just a setback. There is also what I call guarded relating. You edit what you say before you say it, not for clarity but to manage someone else’s response. You feel responsible for everyone’s emotional state. You say yes when you mean no, not occasionally but as your default, because no feels more costly than whatever you are agreeing to. None of this is a personality trait. It is a survival strategy, and one of the clearest signs that your nervous system is running your relationships rather than you. Category 4: Physical and Connection This is where the internal stops staying internal. It lives in your body, your home, and the people who love you most. Your body says what the mind has been overriding: chronic tension in the jaw, neck, and shoulders, fatigue that sleep does not fix, and a heart that races in situations everyone else seems to move through easily. These are not random symptoms. This is your nervous system telling you something needs your attention. Sleep disruption follows, because a system that believes it is in danger never fully rests. Then there is loneliness, one of the most underreported costs. Not because no one is around, but because the version of you that shows up running on empty does not have the capacity to connect. The people around you feel it, even if they cannot name it. Our patterns do not stay contained. They move through us and reach the people we love most. How these four categories connect to burnout A woman showing up every day, giving 40% of what she is capable of because 60% is consumed by the effort of survival, is still giving 100% of what she has available. So much is being left behind, and it never shows up on any dashboard. Every ignored signal, every pattern left unaddressed, every time the symptom was managed instead of the root being touched. That is what burnout is showing you. The cost of what you have already paid. You do not need more willpower. You need to see what is actually driving you. Self-respect and self-advocacy: where the real work begins The missing piece for most women is almost never information. It is the internal belief that your own perception is valid, that what you are experiencing is real and deserves to be named, whether or not anyone else in the room acknowledges it. Self-respect is a decision, not a feeling. It is deciding that your experience is worth taking seriously, that the signals your body sends deserve a response, and that you are worth the same quality of care you give everyone else. Self-advocacy is self-respect in action. It is the moment you stop pushing through and start asking what is actually driving this. It is treating burnout as the signal rather than the inconvenience you have been filing it under. The work moves through four stages: learning to see the pattern, building the internal foundation of self-respect that makes change sustainable, learning to advocate by speaking up for your own well-being, and finally reaching the kind of mastery that becomes available when the story at your root level actually changes. Not a mindset shift. A story shift. That changes everything else. The one question to sit with Which of the four categories did you recognize yourself in? Not to diagnose yourself. Not to add to a list of things wrong with you. Just to name it and see it. Because you cannot address a root you cannot see. And you cannot advocate for your own well-being until you believe it is worth advocating for. That belief, that you are worth this, is where the real work begins. Frequently asked questions about burnout recovery What are the four categories of burnout patterns? Identity and core beliefs, emotional and cognitive patterns, performance and habit, and physical and connection. Each builds on the one before it, and they all trace back to a single root story formed early in life. Is burnout a personal failure? No. What feels like a personal failure is usually a shared human pattern shaped by conditioning and a nervous system stuck in survival mode. Shared patterns have shared solutions. What is the root cause of burnout in high-achieving women? A story formed early, a nervous system conditioned to stay on guard, and an identity built around survival rather than self-authorship. The symptoms are downstream of that root. How do you start recovering from burnout? By seeing the pattern rather than managing the symptom, then building self-respect and self-advocacy. Recovery starts with believing your own experience is valid and worth taking seriously. What is the difference between self-respect and self-advocacy? Self-respect is the internal decision that your experience matters. Self-advocacy is what happens when that decision is put into action, both in your own head and out loud with others. 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]

19. juni 202614 min
episode How to Know If You Are in Burnout Survival Mode (And Why You Cannot See It From the Inside) cover

How to Know If You Are in Burnout Survival Mode (And Why You Cannot See It From the Inside)

Most people think survival mode looks like a crisis. Rock bottom. The moment everything falls apart. But the version that quietly runs the lives of high-achieving women rarely announces itself at all. It arrives gradually. You keep adapting in small ways over time until your adapted state becomes the only state you can remember. And that is exactly where it gets dangerous, because it stops feeling like survival and starts feeling like you. If you are still showing up, still delivering, and still holding it all together, you may be in it without knowing. This is how to tell. What is survival mode, really? Survival mode is a biological state your nervous system adopts to keep you safe. The kind I want to talk about is not the dramatic kind. It is the quiet version. From the outside, it looks like nothing, because you are functioning. I call it small “s” survival. It sounds like this: * “I just need to get through the week.” * “Once this project is done, I will have more time.” * “When things settle down, I will start taking better care of myself.” * “When the kids are older. When I make partner. When I get to the other side of this.” That is the perpetual deferral of your own life. The finish line keeps moving, and the version of yourself you keep promising you will come back to is never quite available. Not yet. Just not now. Maybe a little longer. Why is survival mode so hard to name? Because it does not feel like a crisis. It feels like you are being responsible. Disciplined. Doing exactly what needs to be done. That is precisely why so many women run on it for years without ever questioning it. Your body knows before your mind does Your body is the most honest signal system you have, and it registers your state long before your mind admits it. The signals are probably already there: * Chronic tension in your jaw, neck, and shoulders * Fatigue that a full night of sleep does not fix * A racing heart or shortened breath in situations others seem to navigate with no visible effort * Unexplained symptoms that come and go without a clear cause These are not weaknesses or hypersensitivities. They are data. Your body has been sending signals, but your mind keeps overriding them and filing them under “I will deal with it later.” The real question is not whether you feel burnt out. It is whether you have been listening. Why you cannot find your way out without knowing where you are Think about it practically, not philosophically. If you opened a map without knowing your starting point, your destination would be meaningless. You could see it, want it, know exactly what it looks like, and still have no idea how to get there. That is what survival mode does. It removes your starting point. When your nervous system is in survival mode, it is not interested in your identity, your values, or your long-term vision. It is interested in one thing: getting through the immediate threat, real or perceived. Fight, flight, freeze, fawn. Every one of those responses redirects your resources away from who you are and toward what you need to survive. The cost of that redirection is more than energy. It is alignment. In survival mode, you make decisions from fear instead of values, you react from self-protection instead of self-expression, and you measure your worth against external signals because your own internal signal has been drowned out by the noise around you. And while you are in it, you cannot see it. Survival and self-awareness cannot occupy the same space at the same time. The four questions that tell you exactly where you are These are not therapy questions. They exist to answer one thing: Am I operating from my own internal reality right now, or has a survival response taken the wheel without permission? 1. What is my body doing? Where is the tension or fatigue? What physical sign has been present so long that I have stopped noticing it? 2. What is my mind doing? Am I rehearsing conversations before they happen and replaying them after? Am I scanning for what might go wrong before I have even registered what is happening? Am I second-guessing decisions that used to feel straightforward? 3. How am I showing up with others? Am I editing what I say, not to be clear, but to manage someone else’s reaction? Am I saying yes when I mean no, not occasionally but as a default, because no feels more costly than whatever I am agreeing to? Guarded relating is not a personality trait. It is a survival strategy. 4. Is the noise drowning out my own signal? Have other people’s expectations, demands, and needs become so loud that I have lost access to what I actually want? If the answer to any of these is yes, you are in it. Not partially. The moment one of those signals is present, the survival response takes control. The story underneath survival mode Survival mode does not arrive randomly. There is a story underneath it, and it almost always sounds like scarcity. There is not enough. Not enough time, not enough capacity, not enough safety to stop, to rest, to ask for what I need, or to exist as anything other than useful. It is a fear-based story. The ground only feels solid when you are moving across it, because stopping means feeling how uncertain it actually is underneath. So we keep moving. We keep getting through. We keep deferring. And the story that says we have no choice, that this is just what it costs, that everyone at this level carries it, only grows louder the longer we live inside it. So ask yourself honestly: what do I believe will happen if I actually stop getting through and start living? Whatever that belief is, it is running the show. And until you can see it, it will keep running you. What chronic survival mode does to your body Your stress responses, cortisol and adrenaline, were designed for short bursts. A threat arrives; your body responds; the threat passes; your system resets. Burst, reset. That is the design. When survival mode becomes the permanent setting, the reset never comes. Cortisol stays elevated. Adrenaline keeps firing. You stay in a state of readiness your body was never built to sustain. The cost is not only exhaustion. It is the inability to think clearly when you need it most, emotional reactions that seem to come from nowhere, sleep that does not restore you, and an immune system quietly paying the price while you keep going. The body keeps score even when you are not keeping it yourself. So how do you get out of survival mode? Not yet. That is not what this is for. Awareness has to come first. The first question is never “How do I get out?” It is “Am I in it?” Here is what I want you to hold onto. Survival mode is not your identity. It is not your ceiling. It is not the truth about who you are or what you are capable of. It was an intelligent adaptation formed at a time when it was exactly what the situation required. Naming it is not defeat. It is not weakness. Naming it is the first and most important act of self-awareness you can perform, because you cannot make a conscious choice about what happens next from a location you cannot see. So before anything else, just look. Not where you are going. Not where you have been. Right now. In your body. In your life. Where are you? Frequently asked questions What is the difference between burnout and survival mode? Burnout is the exhaustion you can feel. Survival mode is the underlying nervous system state driving it, often invisible because you are still functioning and even performing well. What are the early signs of survival mode? Persistent jaw, neck, or shoulder tension, sleep that does not restore you, mentally rehearsing and replaying conversations, defaulting to yes when you mean no, and losing track of what you actually want underneath everyone else’s expectations. Can you be in survival mode without a major trauma? Yes. The most common version builds gradually through small adaptations over time, with no single dramatic event to point to. 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]

16. juni 202614 min