Most of the women I work with are brilliant, thoughtful, and deeply capable.
They’ve been praised for how much they can hold and quietly wonder how much longer they can keep holding it.
Quiet burnout is tricky. You might still be productive. Still show up to meetings. Still run the business or manage the team. But inside… something feels off.
Especially for emotionally intelligent women
You’re trained to keep going.
You’ve done therapy. You’re emotionally aware.
You know how to regulate yourself.
You know how to push through.
But this kind of burnout is sneaky, not because it’s mild, but because it’s been normalized.
You might Google phrases like:
And the results don’t quite fit.
Because what you’re experiencing is a slow loss of your inner spark, your vision, your energy.
This is especially common for:
Quiet burnout doesn’t stay quiet forever.
Left unaddressed, it usually does one of three things:
That low-level fog becomes chronic fatigue.
You wake up exhausted. You feel no motivation, even for things that matter.
Every decision feels like a trap.
“Even after the weekend, I still feel tired.”
“I can’t feel excitement anymore — even for things I used to love.”
You’re still working — but now with headaches, digestive issues, a frozen cycle, or autoimmune symptoms that traditional medicine can’t explain.
“I feel fine in public, but I crash the moment I’m alone.”
“I need structure, but not pressure. I can’t handle any more pressure.”
You lose self-trust. You overthink simple decisions.
You no longer feel like you.
“I’m tired of pretending I’m okay just to get through the day.”
“I function on autopilot. But inside, I feel nothing.”
These subtle patterns are your nervous system’s early warning signs.
“Every decision feels like a trap — even what to eat.”
“I used to have so much drive. Now it’s just pressure and silence.”
“I’m learning to walk away when I’m overwhelmed.”
“I want to be someone who is calm — even if the world is in chaos.”
The context you’re living in.
On one side: systems and responsibilities. The pressure to keep a job, pay a mortgage, show up for your people. Capitalism doesn’t make rest feel safe.
On the other side: a kind of freedom that no one taught you how to use. Flexible work, access to healing tools, more choice than ever… but still, your body says no.
If you’re neurodivergent, highly sensitive, chronically ill, or emotionally attuned… this conflict is even sharper.
(btw, you don’t need to burn it all down)
As a somatic coach and therapist who’s lived through my own waves of burnout and supports clients in your position, everyday, I’ve created numerous types of support, designed to meet you.