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.

Mindful Living, Burnout & Overwhelm Elizabeth Ainsworth Mindful Living, Burnout & Overwhelm Elizabeth Ainsworth

How to Find Calm When Life Feels Loud

December can feel loud — not just around you, but inside you. If the season already feels overwhelming, here are six gentle, practical ways to find steadiness again without matching the noise.

You don’t have to match the noise — not this season, not ever.

 

December carries a particular kind of noise. Some joyful, some heavy — expectations, overstimulation, emotional labor, family dynamics, financial pressure, grief, and the constant sense that you’re supposed to make everything meaningful.

If you’re heading into December already stretched thin, burned out, or emotionally overloaded, the noise can feel deafening — especially if you’ve been operating in burnout mode for a while. In this earlier post, I talk more about what burnout really looks like behind the scenes, not just in a checklist.

And then there’s social media. What you see online is curated, not real life. If you’re stretched thin, the noise can feel even louder.

“You don’t have to match the noise to have a meaningful holiday.”

Finding calm in a loud season doesn’t require a major life overhaul — just a few grounded shifts that help you move through December with more steadiness and less overwhelm. Here are six ways to create more calm, clarity, and emotional breathing room when everything around you feels loud.

1. Release the pressure to create a picture-perfect holiday.

For example, when I bought an Elf on the Shelf years ago, the tradition was simple: he moved at night after ‘visiting the North Pole.’ That felt manageable.

Then social media added elaborate scenes and nightly performances. Moving the elf at all was sometimes more than I could manage — so I didn’t. And my kids turned out more than fine.

“Traditions don’t require performance — they require presence.”

2. Identify where the “noise” is coming from — and respond intentionally.

Holiday noise can come from sensory overload, decision fatigue, pressure to make memories, family dynamics, grief, finances, and the mental load.

Once you name the source, choose the response that matches the need:
• Sensory overload → lower stimulation.
• Decision fatigue → simplify and delegate.
• Family pressure → set boundaries.
• Grief → compassion over performance.
• Financial stress → simplify gifting.
• Mental load → write things down and remove non-essentials.

“Clarity is calming. Naming the noise tells you what actually needs support.”

If you need help finding calm in the moment, I created the Gentle Reset Tools — simple grounding practices you can use anytime you feel overstimulated or emotionally overloaded.
Grab them here: Gentle Reset Tools

3. Create micro-moments of quiet.

Calm doesn’t require long breaks; it comes from small resets: slower breaths, dim lights, stepping outside briefly, or pausing in your car.

If you want more ideas for gentle ways to reconnect with yourself, I share additional small-but-powerful shifts in my post on tiny moments of joy and why they matter, especially when you’re overwhelmed.

4. Honor the boundaries that protect your emotional well-being.

One grounding boundary in my family: my kids almost always woke up in their own home on Christmas morning. We broke that only for deeply meaningful reasons connected to loss and family connection.

And if setting boundaries feels especially hard because you’re used to being the “reliable one” or the peacekeeper in your family, I go deeper into this in my post about setting boundaries when you’re a people-pleaser.

5. Choose honesty over guilt.

Guilt says you should be doing more. Honesty says your capacity matters. Shift toward honesty: ‘Simple is enough,’ ‘My bandwidth is lower,’ ‘I don’t need to perform.’

“Honesty creates calm. Guilt creates noise.”

6. If calm feels impossible, you’re not failing — you’re overloaded.

December magnifies everything you’ve carried all year. Therapy offers space to set the noise down and regain steadiness.

You’re allowed to choose calm — even in December.

If you’re craving a steadier season, I support burned-out women and moms in East Cobb/Marietta and across Georgia (in-person and online).

You can schedule a consultation when you’re ready.

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Elizabeth Ainsworth Elizabeth Ainsworth

How to Set Boundaries When You’re a People-Pleaser

Feeling stretched thin by the holidays? You’re not alone. When you’ve spent years keeping the peace, saying “yes,” and carrying the emotional load for everyone around you, setting boundaries can feel downright dangerous. But here’s the truth: saying no isn’t selfish — it’s how burned-out moms start to breathe again. This post walks you through how to set boundaries that actually stick, even if you’ve always been the people-pleaser in the room.

A therapist’s guide to setting limits with less guilt — especially during the holidays

If you’re someone who says yes even when you’re exhausted…
…who feels responsible for keeping everyone happy…
…who dreads disappointing people even a little…

You’re not alone. And you’re not broken

People-pleasing is often a survival skill learned early. But when you’re juggling work, family, parenting, emotional labor, and the pressure cooker that is the holiday season?

That same survival skill can quietly pull you toward burnout.

The good news: boundaries are something you can learn.
And they don’t require you to become someone cold, rigid, or “selfish.”
They can be gentle. Clear. Loving. And completely aligned with who you already are.

Let’s walk through how to set boundaries when you’re a people-pleaser — without the guilt spiral.

Why People-Pleasers Struggle With Boundaries (Especially During the Holidays)

The holidays are basically a people-pleaser’s Olympics. School parties, work expectations, extended family dynamics, gift exchanges, travel, hosting, volunteering — it’s a lot.

Many women tell me:

  • “I don’t want to let anyone down.”

  • “It’s easier if I just do it.”

  • “I should be able to handle this.”

  • “They’ll be upset if I say no.”

And underneath all of that? A quiet fear that saying no means you’re letting someone down or being “too much.”

In my own life, I’ve noticed how often I used to say yes to every school event, holiday task, or extra request — and then had nothing left for the things that actually mattered to me. I’d skip the simple, meaningful moments (like those holiday traditions I always imagined doing with my kids) because the mental load and the cleanup felt too overwhelming. And a lot of that came from my own perfectionistic-avoidance tendency — if I couldn’t do it perfectly, I’d avoid it completely. That’s the hidden cost of people-pleasing: when you say yes to everything, you quietly say no to the things you genuinely care about.

If that feels familiar, take a breath. Awareness is step one.

A Boundary Isn’t a Rejection — It’s a Recalibration

This is the part many people-pleasers have never been taught:

A boundary isn’t about pushing people away.
It’s about protecting the parts of your life that matter most.

Boundaries help you conserve your limited emotional and mental bandwidth.
They help you show up more fully in the places you actually want to show up.
They help you feel like you again.

Step 1: Notice the Early Warning Signs

Before you can set a boundary, you need to recognize when one is needed.

Common signs you’re slipping into overcommitment:

  • Instant yes → later resentment

  • Dreading events you technically “agreed” to

  • Feeling responsible for everyone’s emotional comfort

  • Canceling your own needs but never canceling for others

  • Anxiety at the thought of disappointing someone

If your stomach drops or your shoulders tense when someone asks you for something… that’s data. Pay attention.

Step 2: Get Clear on What You Actually Want

People-pleasers often don’t check in with themselves before responding.
It’s automatic. Reflexive.

Before answering:

  • Do I genuinely want to do this?

  • Do I have the emotional/mental capacity?

  • What is this costing me?

  • If I say yes, what am I saying no to?

Your needs are not inconveniences.
They are valid and worthy of space.

Step 3: Scripts for Saying No (Without Guilt or Over-Explaining)

Here are simple, kind, therapist-approved ways to set limits:

✔️ “That won’t work for me this week.”

✔️ “I need to pass on this, but I hope it goes well.”

✔️ “I can help with one part, not all of it.”

✔️ “I’d love to, but I’m keeping my schedule lighter right now.”

✔️ “That’s not something I can commit to, but thank you for thinking of me.”

Short. Clear. Compassionate.
Not one of these requires a TED Talk explanation.

And yes — “No.”
is a complete sentence.

Step 4: Expect It to Feel Uncomfortable at First

If you’ve spent years (or decades) prioritizing others, setting boundaries will feel:

•weird
• selfish
• awkward
• anxiety-inducing

This discomfort isn’t a sign you’re doing something wrong.
It’s a sign you’re doing something new.

You’re rewiring a lifetime pattern — give yourself some grace.

Step 5: Maintain Your Boundaries (Kindly but Firmly)

A boundary isn’t a one-time announcement.
It’s a practice.

You may need to repeat yourself.
You may need to disappoint someone.
You may need to tolerate their feelings while honoring your limits.

That’s okay.
Other people can handle their own emotions.
Your job is to protect your well-being — not their comfort.

Boundaries teach others how to treat you.
More importantly, they teach you how to treat yourself.

You’re Not Alone — Burnout Isn’t a Personal Failure

So many burned-out women believe they “should” be able to handle everything.
But peace doesn’t come from pushing harder.
It comes from creating breathing room — and letting the unnecessary fall away.

As a therapist who works with overwhelmed moms, high-functioning women, and lifelong people-pleasers, I want you to know this:

You’re not weak for needing boundaries.
You’re wise for finally setting them.

And if you’re navigating burnout, perfectionistic avoidance, or holiday overwhelm — you don’t have to do it alone.

If You Need Support Setting Boundaries, I’m Here

I help burned-out women, overwhelmed moms, and people-pleasers learn to rest, regulate, and reconnect with themselves — without shame and without pressure.

If you're in East Cobb, Marietta, or the surrounding area and need compassionate support around boundaries, holiday stress, or burnout, I’d love to connect.

Book your consultation appointment by clicking here.

You deserve boundaries that protect your energy.
You deserve a life that doesn’t require you to overextend yourself to be loved.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is it so hard for people-pleasers to set boundaries?

Because many people-pleasers learned early that being helpful, agreeable, or self-sacrificing made relationships safer. Boundaries can feel “mean” or “selfish,” even though they’re healthy and necessary.

How can I set boundaries without feeling guilty?

Start small, use simple scripts, and remind yourself that guilt doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong — it just means you’re doing something unfamiliar.

How do I stop overcommitting during the holidays?

Identify your top priorities, say no to lower-priority invitations, protect white space on your calendar, and ask for help where you can. The holidays don’t have to run your life.

What’s perfectionistic avoidance?

It's a form of perfectionism where you avoid tasks because you fear not doing them perfectly. This often leads to procrastination, overwhelm, and missing out on things that matter.

 
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