You’re Not Lazy. You’re Carrying Everything — and Therapy Can Help
There’s an unspoken rule many women live by — even if they’ve never said it out loud.
I’ll rest once everything else is handled.
Once the kids are okay.
Once the family settles down.
Once work calms down.
Once there’s a little more margin.
And if you’re honest, that moment rarely comes.
Instead, you keep going. You manage. You cope. You hold things together — even when you’re exhausted. Especially when you’re exhausted.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not failing. You’re responding exactly the way many capable, caring women do.
The Quiet Bind So Many Women Are In
Most of the women I work with aren’t falling apart.
They’re functioning. They’re responsible. They’re the ones people rely on.
And that’s exactly what makes it hard to seek support.
When you’re used to being the steady one, your own needs start to feel optional. You tell yourself you should be able to handle it. You remind yourself that others have it worse. You convince yourself that needing help would be an overreaction.
This isn’t a lack of insight or motivation.
It’s a values conflict.
You care deeply about your family. About doing the right thing. About being dependable and strong. And somewhere along the way, that care gets turned inward — against you.
I Lived Inside This Rule Too
For a long time, I believed I could tend to myself later.
I was a devoted, capable mother raising three young children — each with their own neuro-differences, personalities, and needs. I spent my days coordinating supports, anticipating challenges, and holding a lot of emotional and logistical complexity. At the same time, our extended family’s needs were increasing, and much of the day-to-day responsibility at home fell to me while my husband carried a demanding workload outside of it.
I didn’t think of myself as someone who “needed” therapy. I wasn’t in crisis. I was still functioning. Other people seemed to need help more than I did — and I believed I should be able to keep managing. That experience ultimately shaped why I started Rise Gently Therapy — to support women before they reach that point of depletion.
So I kept going.
What I understand now — and what I wish I had understood sooner — is that waiting until you’re depleted doesn’t make you stronger. It just makes everything harder.
By the time I finally paused, I was emotionally empty, physically unwell, and far more isolated than I realized. I hadn’t just postponed caring for myself — I had slowly disappeared from my own life.
Therapy Isn’t Indulgent — It’s Support for the System Holding Everything Else
Many women assume therapy is something you do after you fall apart.
But in reality, therapy is often most helpful long before that point.
When your nervous system is constantly stretched — managing stress, caregiving, decision-making, and emotional labor — something eventually gives. Not because you’re weak, but because no system can run at full capacity forever without support.
Therapy isn’t about fixing what’s broken.
It’s about strengthening what’s already carrying too much.
It’s a place to slow down, understand your stress responses, and rebuild capacity — so you’re not living in constant overdrive.
Who I Work With
I work with women who are doing their best — and quietly paying the price.
Women who are competent, caring, and dependable.
Women who don’t feel “allowed” to rest because so many people depend on them.
Women who are functioning on the outside, but exhausted on the inside.
You don’t need to justify your exhaustion.
You don’t need to wait until things are worse.
A Gentle Invitation
If any of this resonates, you’re not behind.
You don’t have to be in crisis to deserve support. You don’t need permission from anyone else to take care of yourself.
Therapy doesn’t have to be another thing to manage. It can be a place to put down what you’ve been carrying — gently. If you’re curious but unsure what therapy would actually look like, you might find it helpful to read about what to expect in a first therapy session.
When you’re ready, you can learn more about working together here.