Welcome to Nurturing Notes,
the blog for Rise Gently Therapy.
This is a safe and gentle space for you to explore topics that matter to you — from coping with burnout and overwhelm to finding small ways to nurture yourself amidst life’s challenges. Here, you’ll find encouragement, practical tools, and reflections to help you feel less alone on your journey.
Whether you’re curious about starting therapy or just looking for a moment of calm, I hope you’ll find something here that speaks to your heart.
When the Things That Used to Help… Don’t Anymore
When the coping strategies that once helped you feel steady suddenly stop working, it can feel confusing — even discouraging. You’re not failing. You may be burned out. This post explores why your nervous system can reach a tipping point and what it actually means when “trying harder” isn’t the answer.
There’s a moment many women quietly reach — though they rarely talk about it out loud.
You’re still doing the things that used to help.
You’re still showing up.
You’re still pushing through.
But something feels different.
The strategies that once helped you manage stress — staying organized, pushing through, staying positive, taking care of everyone else — don’t seem to land the same way anymore.
You’re not falling apart.
But you’re not feeling okay either.
And that can feel confusing… even scary.
A Personal Reflection
I’ve felt this shift myself.
There was a season when life required me to step up in ways I hadn’t before — supporting my family through a health crisis while also navigating my own transition back into work after many years at home.
From the outside, I was handling things. I was doing what needed to be done.
But internally, I could feel how much more effort everything was taking. The things that used to help me reset didn’t seem to touch the level of exhaustion I was carrying.
It wasn’t a failure of effort.
It was a signal that my nervous system had been holding too much for too long.
When Coping Strategies Stop Working
Most of us develop coping strategies early in life — ways to manage stress, stay responsible, keep things moving.
For many high-functioning women, those strategies look like:
Being dependable
Staying busy
Taking care of others first
Staying organized
Pushing through exhaustion
Keeping emotions contained
These strategies often work… until the load becomes too heavy.
As invisible responsibilities accumulate — emotional labor, caregiving, life transitions, chronic stress — the nervous system begins to fatigue.
If you haven’t already read about how invisible emotional load builds over time, you might find yourself nodding along with this piece on Emotional Labor: The Invisible Weight You Were Never Meant to Carry Alone.
Because the issue usually isn’t that you stopped coping well.
It’s that you’ve been coping for too long without enough support.
Signs Your Coping Strategies May Be Fatigued
You might notice:
You’re doing all the “right” things but still feel exhausted
Rest doesn’t feel restorative
You feel more reactive or more numb than usual
Small tasks feel disproportionately overwhelming
You feel emotionally flat or detached
You’re harder on yourself than ever
You keep pushing through even when you know you need support
If this sounds familiar, you might also resonate with High Functioning Burnout: When You're Doing Everything Right and Still Exhausted.
This experience is more common than many people realize.
Why Rest Alone Doesn’t Always Fix It
Many women assume they just need more sleep, a break, or a vacation.
And while rest absolutely matters, chronic stress changes how the nervous system responds to rest.
When your body has been operating in a prolonged state of responsibility and vigilance, slowing down can actually feel uncomfortable — or even impossible.
If you’ve ever wondered why rest feels harder than it “should,” this may resonate: Why Rest Feels So Hard (Even When You're Exhausted).
Because this isn’t just physical tiredness.
It’s nervous system fatigue.
This Isn’t a Personal Failure
One of the most painful parts of this experience is the self-criticism that often comes with it.
You might think:
Why can’t I handle things like I used to?
What’s wrong with me?
Why does everything feel harder?
But the truth is — this is not a sign of weakness.
It’s information.
Your mind and body are asking for a different kind of support than what you’ve needed before.
If you’ve ever worried that burnout means you’re broken, you may find comfort in Burned Out Not Just Broken.
Because needing support is not failure. It’s human.
What Support Can Look Like
Support doesn’t always mean making big dramatic changes.
Sometimes it looks like:
Having a space where you don’t have to hold everything together
Learning how to listen to your nervous system instead of pushing past it
Releasing unrealistic expectations
Letting someone else help you carry the emotional weight
Exploring new ways of coping that are sustainable
Therapy can be one place where this kind of support begins — not because you’re falling apart, but because you deserve somewhere to set things down.
If you’re curious what that process actually looks like, you can read more about What to Expect in Your First Therapy Session.
A Gentle Turning Point
Sometimes the moment when coping stops working isn’t the end of resilience.
It’s the beginning of recognizing you don’t have to do everything alone.
You don’t have to wait until you’re completely burned out to deserve support.
You’re allowed to seek help simply because carrying everything feels heavy.
You’re Not Alone
If this resonates with you, I want you to know you’re not the only one quietly navigating this shift.
So many capable, caring women reach this point — especially those who have spent years being the strong one for everyone else.
There is nothing wrong with you.
Your capacity isn’t gone.
Your nervous system is asking for care.
If You’re Feeling Ready
If you’re starting to notice this shift in yourself, you don’t have to figure it out alone.
Therapy can be a space to slow down, understand what your mind and body are telling you, and begin finding a way forward that feels gentler and more sustainable.
If this feels like the right next step, you can learn more about working together here → You can explore my services here.
In my next post, I’ll share more about what therapy actually looks like today — and why it’s often very different from what people imagine.