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.
Healing Isn’t Linear: Why You Feel Better… Then Not… Then Better Again
Healing from burnout or anxiety doesn’t happen in a straight line. If you’ve felt better… then not… then better again, you’re not failing—you’re experiencing what real healing often looks like.
You had a good day.
Maybe even a good week.
You felt a little lighter. A little more like yourself.
You thought, “Okay… maybe I’m finally getting better.”
And then, seemingly out of nowhere, you weren’t.
The heaviness came back.
The irritability. The exhaustion. The overwhelm.
And just like that, your mind starts spinning:
“What happened?”
“Was that progress even real?”
“Why can’t I just stay better?”
If this sounds familiar, I want you to hear this clearly:
You’re not going backwards.
You’re experiencing what healing actually looks like.
The Part No One Talks About
We’re often sold this quiet expectation that once you start “doing the work”—whether that’s therapy, rest, setting boundaries, or just trying to take better care of yourself—things should steadily improve.
But for most people, especially those navigating burnout, anxiety, or emotional exhaustion, that’s not how it unfolds.
It’s much more like this:
Better → dip → doubt → try again → better → another dip
And those dips?
They can feel like failure.
Especially if you’ve already been carrying so much for so long.
If you’re not sure whether what you’re feeling is burnout or something deeper, you might find it helpful to read
“Burnout vs Depression: How to Tell the Difference (and Why It Matters)”
Because understanding what you’re experiencing is often the first step toward responding to it differently.
Why Healing Feels So Inconsistent
There’s nothing wrong with you.
Your nervous system isn’t a switch you flip—it’s something that slowly, gradually recalibrates over time.
When you’ve been in a prolonged state of stress or burnout, your system gets used to operating in survival mode:
always anticipating
always managing
always pushing through
So when things start to soften—even a little—your system doesn’t instantly settle.
It tests.
It adjusts.
It moves forward… and then pulls back.
Not because you’re failing.
But because it’s learning a new way of being.
The Moment Most People Get Stuck
That “dip” is often where the spiral begins:
“See? This isn’t working.”
“I’m right back where I started.”
“Maybe this is just how I am.”
And from there, it’s easy to:
stop doing the things that were helping
shut down emotionally
or push yourself even harder to “fix it”
But here’s the shift that matters:
The dip isn’t the problem.
The meaning you attach to the dip is what hurts you.
What If This Isn’t Failure?
What if feeling worse for a moment doesn’t erase the progress you’ve made?
What if it’s part of how your system integrates change?
What if healing isn’t about staying “better” all the time…
…but about:
recovering more gently
recognizing what’s happening sooner
and not turning against yourself when it does
That’s real progress.
Even if it doesn’t feel like it in the moment.
You’re Not Back at Square One
It might feel like you’ve undone everything.
But you haven’t.
You’re moving through layers.
And each time you come back from a hard day or a hard week—even slowly—you’re building something different:
awareness
capacity
self-trust
If this resonates, you might also connect with
“Why Rest Feels So Hard (Even When You’re Exhausted)”
Because for many people, the challenge isn’t just exhaustion—it’s learning how to respond to it in a new way.
A Gentle Reframe to Hold Onto
The next time you find yourself thinking:
“I thought I was doing better…”
Try shifting it to:
“I am doing better.
And this is part of it.”
Not in a forced, positive way.
Just as a quiet possibility.
You Don’t Have to Figure This Out Alone
This is the kind of pattern that can feel confusing, discouraging, and honestly… a little defeating.
And it’s also exactly the kind of thing therapy can help you understand and move through—without judgment, and without pressure.
If you’re feeling stuck in that cycle of “better → worse → doubt,”
you’re not alone in it.
And you don’t have to sort it out by yourself.
If reaching out feels like too much right now, that’s okay.
But if you’re curious what support could look like, you can learn more or connect here:
What Therapy Actually Is (And What It Isn’t)
Many people wonder what therapy actually looks like. This post gently explains what therapy is, what it isn’t, and how it can help when life feels overwhelming.
Many people think about starting therapy long before they ever reach out.
But along the way, a lot of misconceptions can grow — about what therapy is supposed to look like, how it works, and what you’re expected to do.
If you’ve ever wondered “What actually happens in therapy?” you’re not alone.
Let’s clear up a few common myths.
Myth #1: Therapy is just talking about your problems
Truth:
Therapy is a space where you can slow down and understand what’s happening beneath the surface.
Yes, you talk about your life — but the goal isn’t just venting.
Together we might explore:
• patterns in how stress shows up
• why certain situations feel overwhelming
• how your nervous system responds to pressure
• new ways to care for yourself when life feels heavy
Over time, therapy helps you make sense of your experiences and develop tools that actually support you.
Myth #2: Therapy means something is wrong with you
Truth:
Many people seek therapy not because something is “wrong,” but because they’ve been carrying too much for too long.
Burnout, emotional exhaustion, and overwhelm are often the result of prolonged stress — not personal failure.
Therapy can be a place to:
• rest your nervous system
• process what you’ve been holding
• reconnect with yourself
Myth #3: Therapy is about getting advice
Truth:
Therapists don’t tell you how to live your life.
Instead, therapy helps you:
• gain clarity about what you need
• understand your patterns
• make decisions that align with your values
The goal isn’t for someone else to direct your life — it’s for you to feel more grounded in your own.
What therapy actually looks like
Every therapist works a little differently, but many sessions include:
• conversation about what’s been coming up for you
• noticing patterns in thoughts or emotions
• learning tools for managing stress and overwhelm
• building awareness of your nervous system and emotional needs
Sometimes sessions feel reflective.
Sometimes they feel practical.
Often they’re a mix of both.
If you're considering therapy
If you’ve been thinking about therapy but weren’t quite sure what to expect, that uncertainty is completely normal.
Starting therapy doesn’t mean you have everything figured out.
It simply means you’re ready to have support while you sort through what life has been asking of you.
If you’re curious about working together, you can learn more about the process here: