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.
Burnout vs Depression in Moms: How to Tell the Difference (and Why It Matters)
If rest hasn’t helped and something still feels off, it might not just be burnout. This post helps you understand the difference between burnout and depression—and what your mind and body might be trying to tell you.
If you’ve been feeling exhausted, overwhelmed, and not quite like yourself…
you might be asking:
“Is this burnout… or is this depression?”
It’s a really common question—especially for moms and caregivers.
And an important one.
Because while burnout and depression can look similar on the surface,
they’re not the same thing.
And understanding the difference can help you get the kind of support you actually need.
What Burnout Can Feel Like
Burnout usually builds over time.
It often comes from chronic stress, emotional overload, and carrying too much for too long—without enough support or recovery.
You might notice:
Constant exhaustion (even after rest)
Feeling overwhelmed or stretched too thin
Irritability or emotional reactivity
Difficulty focusing or making decisions
A sense of “I just can’t keep up”
Many women—especially moms—are used to pushing through.
Taking care of everyone else. Holding everything together.
Until eventually, their nervous system just can’t keep up anymore.
👉 You might recognize this pattern in
High Functioning Burnout
What Is “Depleted Mother Syndrome”?
You may have heard the term “depleted mother syndrome”—sometimes described as mom burnout.
It’s not a formal diagnosis—but it does describe a very real experience.
It’s often what burnout looks like in mothers and caregivers who have been:
giving constantly
carrying the mental and emotional load for others
putting their own needs last for a long time
It can feel like:
running on empty
snapping more easily than you used to
feeling touched out, overwhelmed, or disconnected
wondering, “What’s wrong with me? I didn’t used to feel this way.”
In many cases, what’s being labeled as “depression” is actually
deep depletion from prolonged stress and responsibility.
👉 If that resonates, you might also connect with
Emotional Labor: The Invisible Weight You Were Never Meant to Carry Alone
What Depression Can Feel Like
Depression can overlap with burnout—but often feels different at its core.
It’s typically more pervasive and less tied to a specific situation or stressor.
You might notice:
Persistent low mood or heaviness
Loss of interest in things you used to enjoy
Low energy that doesn’t improve with rest
Feelings of hopelessness or worthlessness
Changes in sleep or appetite
Instead of “too much,”
depression can feel like “not enough”—not enough energy, motivation, or connection.
Why It’s So Hard to Tell the Difference
Here’s the honest truth:
Burnout, depletion, and depression often overlap.
You can experience:
Burnout that leads into depression
Depression that worsens burnout
Or both at the same time
That’s why so many women find themselves thinking:
“I don’t know what’s wrong with me… I just know I’m not okay.”
If that’s where you are—
you’re not alone, and you’re not broken.
👉 You might also feel seen in
You’re Not Lazy; You’re Carrying Everything—And Therapy Can Help
A Simple Way to Start Noticing the Difference
While it’s not always clear-cut, here’s a helpful lens:
Burnout / depletion → often connected to external demands and chronic stress
Depression → often more internal, persistent, and less situational
But this isn’t a test you have to pass.
It’s just a starting point for understanding what your mind and body might be trying to tell you.
What Actually Helps
If you’re dealing with burnout or depletion, support often focuses on:
reducing overload
creating space for rest and recovery
rebuilding capacity slowly (not pushing harder)
👉 You might also explore
Why Rest Feels So Hard (Even When You’re Exhausted)
If you’re dealing with depression, support may include:
emotional processing
addressing underlying patterns
reconnecting with meaning, support, and regulation
And in many cases—
it’s not either/or.
It’s both.
You Don’t Have to Figure This Out Alone
If you’re stuck in that place of wondering
“what is this and why can’t I just snap out of it?”—
that’s often the moment support can make the biggest difference.
You don’t have to label it perfectly.
You don’t have to push through it.
👉 If this resonated, you don’t have to figure it out alone.
If you’re ready, you can reach out here.
A Gentle Reminder
If you’re feeling this way,
it doesn’t mean something is wrong with you.
It might mean you’ve been carrying too much, for too long,
without enough support.
And that’s something we can work with—together.
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.