Burnout is more than just being tired.
Burnout doesn’t announce itself. It happens quietly.
It builds in the background while you’re busy holding everything together.
You’re exhausted in a way that sleep doesn’t fix. Your mind keeps moving even when your body has stopped. The things that used to matter don’t seem to reach you anymore. You’re still functioning, still showing up, still doing what needs to be done. But somewhere underneath all of it, there’s an emptiness you can’t explain and a knowing that this isn’t sustainable, that it hasn’t been for a while.
That’s not a bad week. That’s burnout.
Why rest alone doesn’t fix it
A vacation helps for a moment. But burnout is more than exhaustion.
Most burnout is built from the same foundation: long-term overextension, limits that never fully formed, and a relationship between self-worth and output that started early and kept running quietly in the background. When your value feels tied to what you produce, slowing down doesn’t feel like recovery. It feels like failure.
Without understanding and addressing the foundation, the cycle tends to repeat.
Over time, your nervous system adapts to stress. So even when things slow down, your body doesn’t.
What created it
Long‑term overextension. Unclear limits. And self‑worth that got tied to output.
What helps
Understanding the deeper pattern and changing how you relate to your own limits.
What therapy for burnout looks like
It’s about understanding what’s been driving the overextension and starting to change your relationship with it.
We look at the beliefs underneath the doing. The places where saying yes has cost you more than you’ve let yourself acknowledge. What rest has meant to you, and why it’s felt unsafe or indulgent or earned only after enough. What it would actually mean to live at a pace that holds.
We also look at what burnout has taken. Your sense of self. Your connection to what matters. Your capacity to be present in your own life. That’s not a small thing. And it’s part of what this work is meant to restore.
This work tends to resonate if…
- You’ve always been the high-achiever, the reliable one and now you’re wondering at what cost.
- You know you need to slow down but have no idea how to do that without everything falling apart.
- You feel guilty resting and resentful when you don’t. Both, at the same time.
- You want to want things again like feeling motivated and engaged, like yourself.
What clients notice over time.

Rest actually restores you instead of just pausing the exhaustion.

You stop bracing for everything.

Saying no doesn’t spiral into guilt.

You feel like yourself. Not just functional, but present.

