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Overachiever Recovery

Podkast av Dasha

engelsk

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Les mer Overachiever Recovery

You wake up already exhausted. You snap at your kids before school, say yes to things you don't have capacity for, send perfectly professional emails while your jaw is clenched — and by the time you get home, your family isn't getting your best. They're getting what's left. You've tried therapy, but you're tired of rehashing the same things for months without anything actually changing. You've tried setting boundaries, but guilt floods in the second you see their face. You've tried self-care routines and time management hacks, but nothing sticks — because the deeper issue isn't your schedule.

Alle episoder

8 Episoder

episode You're Grateful. You're Also Miserable. Both Can Be True. cover

You're Grateful. You're Also Miserable. Both Can Be True.

You've built the life you were supposed to want. Good partner, good career, healthy kids. So why does it feel flat? This is the question successful but unhappy women rarely let themselves ask out loud. Because asking feels like ingratitude. And for women raised to be good girls, ungrateful is just about the worst thing you can be. But gratitude and desire are not opposites. You can be genuinely thankful for everything you have and still feel a persistent ache for something more. That ache isn't a character flaw. It's information. It's telling you that your inner world is ready to evolve, even if your outer world hasn't caught up yet. Dasha shares the story of a client who would scroll Instagram late at night and see women launching creative projects, traveling solo, doing things that felt alive. And she would feel it, that pull, followed immediately by the shame spiral: who am I to want more when I already have so much? That's not ingratitude. That's what happens when you've been measuring success by boxes checked instead of by how you actually feel inside. Three truths worth sitting with: enough is a moving target, not a finish line; desire isn't greedy, it's the signal that there's more of you to express; and the exhaustion behind your achievements isn't ambition. It's years of over-functioning to prove you deserve to be here at all. Key Topics: * Why "I should be happy" keeps you stuck in a life that doesn't feel like yours * The shame that comes with wanting more when your life already looks good on paper * How the "good girl" rulebook turns desire into something to hide * Why gratitude and wanting more aren't in conflict * The difference between achieving to prove your worth and living from it "Gratitude grounds you. Desire expands you." If this episode put words to something you've felt but couldn't say, Learning to Love Yourself: A 15-Day Journey [https://coachingbydasha.thrivecart.com/learning-to-love-yourself/] is the next step. Over 15 days, you'll work through the beliefs that keep you earning your place instead of simply occupying it. This is the practical, structured version of everything Dasha talked about today. $17.  Connect with Dasha: * Website: coachingbydasha.com [https://www.coachingbydasha.com/] * LinkedIn: Dasha Tcherniakovskaia [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dashat/]

16. april 2026 - 8 min
episode You Forgave Them. So Why Are You Still Resentful? cover

You Forgave Them. So Why Are You Still Resentful?

You said the words. You told yourself to let it go. But you're still replaying that conversation at 2am, still feeling the burn of something that isn't moving. That's not a healing problem. That's what happens when we swap real processing for forced positivity and call it growth. Overachievers are especially susceptible to this. We're drawn to the idea of being high vibe, conscious, healed. So when something bothers us, we talk ourselves out of the feeling before we've even understood it. We forgive before we've processed the harm. We say "it's fine" when it isn't. And then we wonder why we're still resentful months later. Here's what I want you to hear: resentment isn't low vibe. It's information. It's your nervous system flagging that something mattered and wasn't honored. The goal isn't to get over it faster. The goal is to understand what it's actually telling you, so you can stop giving your power away in the same situation again. In this episode I walk through three questions I use with myself and my clients when something feels off. Not to process your feelings in circles, but to move from "this happened to me" to "here's what I'm doing differently now." That shift is the difference between staying stuck and stepping back into your own life. Key Topics: * Why "good vibes only" culture keeps you feeling stuck long-term * What resentment is actually trying to tell you (and why suppressing it doesn't work) * The difference between forgiving too fast and genuinely processing something * How replaying conversations in your head signals unmet needs, not weakness * Using your emotions as data to stop people-pleasing on autopilot "Resentment doesn't vanish because you tell yourself to rise above. It lingers because it has a message." If this episode hit close to home, Dasha's free toolkit Stop Bottling Up Your Feelings is a practical starting point for anyone who's spent years pushing feelings down to keep the peace. It walks you through what emotional suppression actually costs you and gives you concrete tools to start expressing what's real without blowing everything up. Access it here. [https://www.coachingbydasha.com/stop-bottling-up-your-feelings] Connect with Dasha: * Website: coachingbydasha.com [https://www.coachingbydasha.com/] * LinkedIn: Dasha Tcherniakovskaia [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dashat/]

7. april 2026 - 8 min
episode 5: You Can't Relax. That's Not a Personality Trait. cover

5: You Can't Relax. That's Not a Personality Trait.

You can't slow down. Not really. Even when nothing is on fire, your body stays braced for it. You go on vacation and pack it full of activities. You come home more exhausted than when you left. You eat fast, walk fast, move through your days like something is always about to go wrong if you stop. And when someone suggests you just rest, something in you resists so hard it almost feels like offense. That's not ambition. That's your nervous system doing exactly what it learned to do. Most overachievers didn't choose the pace they're running at. They learned that staying busy kept them safe. That being useful, responsible, and on top of everything was how love worked. That stillness, in the homes they grew up in, wasn't peaceful. It was loaded. And so your body learned to fill it. What looks like productivity from the outside is often something quieter on the inside: the fear that if you stop moving, something will fall apart. That if you're not doing enough, you are not enough. Slowing down doesn't feel lazy. It feels like a threat. Dasha shares what it actually looks like to start unwinding this — without slamming on the brakes and sending your nervous system into revolt. The goal isn't stillness. It's safety. And that gets built in 5% increments. Key Topics: * Why your body treats calm like a warning signal * How childhood environments wire the nervous system for overdrive * The identity cost of letting go of being "the one who handles everything" * Why rest doesn't feel restful — and what's actually going on * What slowing down by 5% looks like in practice "If your life collapses because you paused, it wasn't an authentic life. It was a performance designed to keep someone else comfortable." If this episode hit close to home, Stop Running on Empty [https://coachingbydasha.thrivecart.com/empty/] is the next step. It's built for overachievers who know they're depleted but don't know where the drain is actually coming from.  Connect with Dasha: coachingbydasha.com [https://www.coachingbydasha.com/] | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dashat/]

31. mars 2026 - 9 min
episode 4: Everyone Relies on You. Nobody Checks on You. cover

4: Everyone Relies on You. Nobody Checks on You.

Everyone Relies on You. Nobody Checks on You. You're the one who remembers everything, notices everything, holds everything together. And somehow, you're also the one nobody thinks to ask about. You're the person who senses tension the second you walk into a room. The one who smooths things over before anyone else realizes something was wrong. At work, you see the problem before it becomes one. At home, you're the one holding it together when everyone else falls apart. In friendships, you're the listener, the helper, the steady one. And you go home at night feeling completely depleted. And a little invisible. Most women who end up carrying this role didn't choose it. It started early — as a survival strategy. Maybe you were the easy child, the one who didn't make waves. Maybe you grew up around adults who couldn't regulate themselves, so you learned to read the room and adjust yourself before anything could blow up. Over time, that strategy became your identity. Being responsible bought you appreciation. Being useful bought you love. Being the strong one bought you a sense of belonging. So by the time you're an adult, you're not just managing tasks. You're managing emotions, expectations, and other people's comfort — often without realizing it. Here's what that costs. Responsibility without limits turns into resentment. Depletion that isn't just physical — it's that bone-deep tiredness where everything feels like too much. And a slow loss of self, because when you're always scanning for what everyone else needs, you stop knowing what you want. The hardest part to say out loud: when you're always the one holding everything together, no one holds you. Key Topics: * How the "responsible one" role gets assigned in childhood — and why it sticks * The hidden cost of managing everyone else's emotions, not just their tasks * Why the people who rely on you most are often the least likely to ask if you're okay * The difference between being capable and carrying what was never yours * Where overfunctioning lives in the body — and where healing starts "When you're always the one holding everything together, no one holds you." If you recognized yourself in this episode, Dasha's free guide Stop Feeling Drained by Other People is a practical place to start — because your biggest energy leak isn't your schedule. It's carrying what isn't yours. Grab it here. [http://coachingbydasha.kit.com/stop-feeling-drained] Connect with Dasha: * Website: coachingbydasha.com [https://www.coachingbydasha.com/] * LinkedIn: Dasha Tcherniakovskaia [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dashat/]

24. mars 2026 - 8 min
episode 3: How to Set Boundaries That Don't Push People Away cover

3: How to Set Boundaries That Don't Push People Away

How to Set Boundaries That Don't Push People Away You spent years saying yes to everything. You finally learned to say no. So why do your relationships feel worse? As overachievers, we tend to run without boundaries for a long time, saying yes, carrying what isn't ours, pleasing and accommodating until we hit exhaustion and resentment. That's usually when we discover boundaries, and at first they feel life-changing. But sometimes, in the process of protecting ourselves after years of over-giving, our boundaries get rigid. They keep us safe, but they also keep us separate from the people we're actually trying to stay connected to. Dasha sees this constantly in her work with individuals and couples. The popular advice sounds empowering: state your boundary, and if someone crosses it, walk away. "No is a complete sentence." And there's truth in that. But she challenges the idea that boundaries have to be hard lines in the sand. When your partner wants to talk after a fight and you shut down with "my boundary is I need space," it can land like a door slammed in their face. Two people protecting themselves, both more disconnected than before. The better version isn't about enforcement. It's about agreement. It's learning to say "I know my limits, I'm going to take care of myself, and I'm going to consider your needs too." That's not people-pleasing. That's relational strength. You can say no without making someone feel bad for asking. You can honor your limits without guilt and still nurture the relationship. Key topics: * When boundaries stop protecting you and start isolating you * The difference between rigid boundaries and relational agreements * Why "no is a complete sentence" isn't the whole story * How to say no with kindness instead of guilt * Taking radical responsibility for your needs while staying connected "Your emotional strength isn't just in your boundaries. It's in your ability to stay connected while honoring yourself." If you struggle with guilt every time you say no, download Dasha's free guide Stop Feeling Guilty for Saying No — simple boundary scripts that actually work, plus how to tolerate people's reactions when you use them. Grab it here. [http://coachingbydasha.kit.com/say-no] Connect with Dasha: * Website: coachingbydasha.com [https://www.coachingbydasha.com/] * LinkedIn: Dasha Tcherniakovskaia [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dashat/]

10. mars 2026 - 10 min
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