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.

Elizabeth Ainsworth Elizabeth Ainsworth

You Don’t Have to Be Grateful for Everything to Be Thankful

Gratitude doesn’t have to feel perfect. During busy seasons, it’s okay to be thankful and overwhelmed at the same time. This gentle reflection explores how to practice real gratitude without forcing positivity.

When Gratitude Starts to Feel Like Pressure

Real gratitude is grounding and spacious. Forced gratitude feels like guilt.

If you’ve ever tried to write a gratitude list while holding back tears or exhaustion, you know the difference. Many women tell me they feel like they’re “failing” if they can’t find something positive in every situation. That’s not gratitude — that’s emotional bypassing, and it’s especially common during the holidays when expectations skyrocket.

Signs you’re experiencing forced gratitude:

• Feeling guilty for having negative emotions

• Telling yourself, “I shouldn’t complain”

• Feeling pressure to “look on the bright side”

• Feeling disconnected from the gratitude you’re writing or saying

• Feeling like gratitude equals minimizing your own pain

If holidays tend to heighten stress or burnout for you, you might also find my post on setting boundaries during the holidays helpful.

The Truth: Gratitude Doesn’t Require Perfection

You don’t have to be grateful for the hard things to appreciate what’s good.

You don’t have to turn every struggle into a “lesson.”

You don’t have to spiritualize burnout or wrap your pain in a bow to make it more acceptable.

 

You get to be human.

You get to feel more than one thing at a time.

You get to choose the type of gratitude that feels nourishing — not forced.

Three Gentle Ways to Practice Gratitude (Without Pretending Everything Is Fine)

 

1. Name what feels supportive right now

Not your “blessings.” Not the big-picture stuff. Just what makes today feel 1% more bearable.

 

Examples:

• A quiet cup of coffee

• A moment of sunlight

• A kid who slept in

• A partner who took over a task

• Something that made you smile, even for a second

 

This kind of gratitude doesn’t deny your reality — it anchors you inside it.

2. Acknowledge what has been hard

Honest gratitude can only exist when we allow space for honesty.

 

Try this journal prompt:

“What has been hard lately… and what has helped me get through it?”

You’re not required to be grateful for the hard thing — only to recognize your resilience, support, or capacity around it.

3. Practice “gentle gratitude” — not “toxic positivity”

Gentle gratitude sounds like:

• “I’m grateful for this small moment of calm.”

• “I appreciate the people who helped me today.”

• “I’m thankful for the parts of myself that keep showing up.”

 

Toxic positivity sounds like:

• “It could be worse.”

• “At least…”

• “Just be grateful.”

• “Good vibes only.”

 

One honors your reality. One erases it.

If Gratitude Feels Complicated, You’re Normal

Many women carry an enormous emotional load — caregiving, holidays, expectations, grief, anxiety, and invisible labor. Feeling overwhelmed doesn’t mean you’re ungrateful. It means you’re human.

A Gentle Reminder for This Week

You don’t have to be grateful for everything.

You don’t have to find meaning in every hardship.

You don’t have to pretend this season is easier than it is.

 

You can be thankful and tired.

You can be appreciative and grieving.

You can be grateful and overwhelmed.

You can be hopeful and human.

If you’re craving a few simple practices to ground yourself during stressful moments, you can download my free “Gentle Reset Tools” here.

If the Holiday Season Feels Heavy, You’re Not Alone

If you’re craving space to breathe, reset, or untangle some of the overwhelm, therapy can help you create room for yourself again.

 

I support women in East Cobb/Marietta and across Georgia via telehealth who feel stretched thin and want a softer way to move through their days.

 

You deserve support too.

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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.

 
Book a Consultation Call


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Elizabeth Ainsworth Elizabeth Ainsworth

Tiny Moments of Joy

Burnout recovery doesn’t happen all at once — it begins with small, quiet moments of joy. Learn how noticing those tiny sparks can help you reconnect with yourself and start feeling alive again.

Finding Yourself Again After Burnout

When you’ve been running on empty for too long, joy can feel like a language you’ve forgotten how to speak. You see other people laughing, decorating for the holidays, or talking about “self-care” — and part of you wants to roll your eyes because honestly, who has the energy for joy when you’re just trying to make it through the day?

If you’ve ever felt that way, you’re not broken. You’re healing.

The quiet return

Burnout doesn’t vanish overnight. It unravels slowly, the same way it crept in — moment by moment, choice by choice. Healing starts quietly, in the spaces where you stop hustling and start noticing.

It’s in the way your morning coffee actually tastes good again.
It’s the sound of your kid laughing in the other room and realizing you smiled without forcing it.
It’s that one song that suddenly hits differently again — not because anything big changed, but because you’re finally present enough to feel it.

Those are tiny moments of joy. And they count. Every single one.

Tiny joy as proof of healing

Joy doesn’t mean life is fixed. It’s evidence that your nervous system is finally coming out of survival mode. Those fleeting sparks — the calm, the laughter, the lightness — are signs that your body and mind are remembering what safety feels like.

Every time you let yourself enjoy one of those moments, you’re practicing self-trust. You’re saying, “Maybe life can be gentle again. Maybe I can let this in.”

Finding yourself again

Finding yourself after burnout isn’t about going back to who you were. It’s about meeting the version of you who made it through — a little softer, a little slower, and maybe a little wiser about what actually matters.

  • Start with one small joy today.

  • Open the windows and breathe.

  • Light the candle.

  • Send the text to the friend who gets it.

  • Notice the sun on your face.

Tiny joy isn’t a luxury — it’s medicine. And every time you let yourself feel it, you’re finding your way home again.

If you’re ready to rediscover your joy after burnout...

Therapy can help you reconnect with the calm, capable, joyful version of you that’s still there — just buried under the exhaustion. At Rise Gently Therapy, I help women move through burnout, anxiety, and overwhelm with compassion and clarity.

This week, notice three moments — however small — that make you breathe a little easier. Write them down in your phone or a notebook. It doesn’t have to be fancy or profound.

The point isn’t to find more joy; it’s to remember it’s already around you. Over time, those tiny sparks add up, reminding you that your capacity for joy never disappeared — it’s just waiting for space to return.

Let’s start small — one gentle step at a time.

Schedule a free consultation
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Elizabeth Ainsworth Elizabeth Ainsworth

When Tired Becomes Something Deeper

If rest isn’t fixing your exhaustion, it may be something deeper. Here’s how to tell when tiredness becomes burnout and what gentle steps actually help.

Understanding Burnout Beyond Fatigue

Have you ever been so tired that even after a full night of sleep (on the rare chance that actually happens for moms!), you still wake up exhausted? Sometimes it's not just tired — it's a deeper exhaustion.

If rest isn’t fixing it, it may not be sleep you need. It may be burnout.

In this post, you'll learn how to tell the difference between exhaustion and true burnout, the signs of emotional exhaustion and nervous-system burnout in moms, and gentle, realistic steps that help you begin recovering without needing a major life overhaul.

So what is burnout, really?

Burnout isn’t the same as “being tired.”

It’s a state of emotional exhaustion, mental overload, and physical depletion caused by chronic stress and being “on” for too long without meaningful recovery.

Burnout in moms often looks like:

  • Feeling exhausted even after sleeping

  • Getting overwhelmed more easily than usual

  • Brain fog or feeling “mentally full” all the time

  • Feeling like you're moving through molasses or everything takes extra effort

  • Rest not making a difference

  • Losing interest in things you normally care about

  • Simple daily tasks feeling like climbing uphill

Burnout is your nervous system saying:

“You’ve been carrying too much for too long — you need support, not willpower.”

I see this in my clients — and I’ve lived it, too.

And you are far from alone — 65% of parents report burnout.
(Gawlik et al., 2025)

Why moms are uniquely vulnerable to burnout

Modern motherhood asks a lot — for many, it asks too much.

Today’s moms carry the invisible load: schedules, emotions, school needs, meals, holidays, appointments, family logistics, and being the “strong one” at all times.

And when you add caring for neurodivergent or special-needs kids, or supporting aging parents, the emotional and mental load increases exponentially. You're in constant processing + anticipating + protecting mode.

Research shows moms balancing childcare and other responsibilities are 81% more likely to experience burnout. (Motherly, 2023)

But burnout doesn’t only happen to working moms.

Stay-at-home moms are “on” around the clock with no mental shift, no built-in breaks, and often less external validation.

Different roles, same reality:

Motherhood is work — and it strains the nervous system whether or not there’s a paycheck attached.

Signs it’s more than being tired

Physical signs

  • Exhaustion that rest doesn't fix

  • Muscle tension and body aches

  • Headaches

  • GI issues

  • Sleep disruption

  • Feeling “on edge”

  • Immune changes

  • Appetite shifts

Emotional and mental signs

  • Irritability, mood swings, snapping at family

  • Feeling shut down or numb

  • Loss of interest + motivation

  • Hopelessness or cynicism

Behavioral changes

  • Withdrawing socially

  • Avoiding tasks or procrastinating

  • Self-soothing with food, alcohol, or screens

These are not character flaws — they are nervous-system burnout signals.

What's happening in your nervous system

We often hear “fight or flight,” but moms in burnout frequently drop into:

  • Freeze — stuck, numb, shut down

  • Fawn — people-pleasing to keep the peace

When you’ve been in chronic stress mode, your brain protects you by slowing you down, not speeding you up.

That can look like:

  • Zero motivation

  • Brain fog

  • Knowing what needs to happen… and feeling unable to move

This isn’t laziness — it’s survival mode.

To heal, we need rest-and-digest mode — where the body can repair, problem-solve, and reconnect.

Survival mode is reactive. Rest mode is restorative.

Real rest isn’t indulgence — it’s nervous-system care.

And rest isn’t about doing nothing — it’s about giving your body and mind a chance to feel safe again.

Gentle recovery strategies that actually help

Spa weekend? Amazing.

Real life? Kids, schedules, budgets, reality.

So we focus on micro-shifts that support your nervous system:

  • Micro-rest
    60 seconds of breath work, stepping outside, stretching. Tiny rests count.

  • Reduce the load
    Say no. Drop something. Rest isn’t earned — it’s required.

  • Name your needs
    Clarity lowers overwhelm and lets support come in.

  • Reach out early
    Don’t wait for collapse. Connection isn’t a crisis tool — it’s a healing one.

Small shifts = real healing.

Healing doesn’t always look big and dramatic. Sometimes it looks like 90-second pauses, saying “not today,” and letting one person care about you.

If you’re craving something simple to steady your nervous system, you can grab my Gentle Reset guide right here.

When support may be needed

If these steps feel impossible or you still feel stuck, that’s not failure — it’s a sign your nervous system needs more support.

Consider reaching out if:

  • Emotional numbness persists

  • Everyday life feels heavy for weeks

  • Rest doesn’t bring relief

  • You feel like you're losing yourself or disconnecting from who you were

Therapy can help you gently shift from survival mode back into connection, clarity, and self-trust. You don’t have to power through this — you deserve care too.

Key Takeaways

  • Burnout is emotional and nervous-system exhaustion, not just tired

  • It affects stay-at-home and working moms

  • It shows up in mood, body, and motivation

  • Small, doable steps support nervous-system recovery

  • You don’t have to wait until crisis to get help

  • Support isn’t weakness — it’s how the nervous system heals

You’re not failing — you’re overloaded.

Burnout among moms is common — even if it’s not shown on the highlight reels. You deserve support, rest, and space to breathe.

“Burnout shouldn’t be a problem that you have to deal with yourself on your own time.”
— Jennifer Moss

If you're ready for gentle, sustainable support to recover from burnout and reconnect with yourself, I invite you to book a free consultation call.

You don’t have to do this alone.

Book your consultation

Resources & References

  • Gawlik, K. S., et al. (2025). Burnout and mental health in working parents: Risk factors and practice implications. Journal of Pediatric Health Care.
    https://www.jpedhc.org/article/S0891-5245%2824%2900188-3/pdf

  • Motherly (2023). State of Motherhood Report — Burnout Findings.
    https://www.mother.ly/work/motherly-state-of-motherhood-report-burnout/

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Elizabeth Ainsworth Elizabeth Ainsworth

You Don’t Have to Earn Rest: When Burnout Becomes Paralysis

You’re not lazy—you’re burned out. When exhaustion turns into paralysis, your body is begging you to rest. Learn why rest isn’t something you earn, it’s something you reclaim.

You Don’t Have to Earn Rest

My house was a wreck. The dishes were piled up, the laundry was waiting to be folded, and I hadn’t even thought about what to make for dinner. The kids were at school, my husband was at work, and the house was quiet — but I was exhausted. Burned out.

So I sat down on the sofa for a few minutes, just to “catch my breath.”
I meant to scroll my phone for half an hour.
Next thing I knew, it was time to start the carpool caravan.

Cue the panic. Nothing was done. No dinner plan. The house looked exactly the same — maybe worse.
And then came the shame spiral: Why can’t I get anything done?

What I didn’t know at the time was that this wasn’t rest.

It was paralysis.

When Burnout Becomes Paralysis

Burnout doesn’t always look like crying or falling apart. Sometimes it looks like doing nothing — because you physically and mentally can’t do anything.

I remember reaching out to a therapist during that season, describing what I was feeling: the exhaustion, the fog, the stuckness. She listened quietly and then said, “Ahh… you’re paralyzed.”

It had a name. Which meant it wasn’t just me.

Burnout paralysis is real — it’s your nervous system’s version of an emergency brake. You’ve been pushing so hard for so long that your brain and body finally say, no more.
And you’re not alone: recent research shows that 57% of parents report feeling burned out (Talkspace, 2023).

The American Psychological Association defines burnout as “the mental and physical fallout from accumulated stress in any sphere of life, including parenting.”
In other words: it’s not weakness. It’s the result of too much, for too long.

We Were Trained Not to Rest

My mother-in-law grew up in rural Mississippi. Her father used to tell the kids when they stopped working in the garden, “You can pick weeds while you sit.”

That line has stuck with me.

We were raised by a generation that rarely rested — and when they did, it was usually while still doing something “useful.” Our culture rewards hustle and praises “busy.” Whether you’re a stay-at-home mom trying to live up to an impossible image of what a “good mom” should do, or a working mom surviving the Atlanta commute and juggling after-school and travel-sports chaos, we’ve been conditioned to equate rest with laziness.

And if you’re parenting a neurodiverse child or caring for aging parents, the mental load is constant — the list just resets each morning.

Before I Understood What Burnout Really Was

Before I ever understood what burnout really was, there were already plenty of days when I wasn’t “doing it all.” In fact, there were whole stretches when I did almost nothing — at least nothing that actually helped.

I’d sit on the couch, phone in hand, zoning out on social media or watching another forgettable Netflix show. I wasn’t resting; I was escaping. The kids would ask something, and I’d mumble a distracted “just a second.” My husband would come in, and I’d barely look up. The to-do list would be there in the corner along with the pile of unfolded laundry, silently mocking me.

That wasn’t laziness or indifference — it was burnout paralysis. I didn’t have the energy to engage, but I also couldn’t fully rest. My body was begging me to stop; my brain just didn’t know how.

When My Body Finally Forced Me to Stop

It wasn’t until my body quite literally made me rest that I finally understood how deep my burnout had gone.

In late 2018, I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease called IgA Nephropathy, and only a few months later, I learned I also had Stage 1 breast cancer. My body was waving every red flag it could find to get my attention.

During treatment, I started to rest in a way I never had before — by doing absolutely nothing. I’d lie down, close my eyes, and let myself simply be. No multitasking, no mental to-do list running in the background, no pressure to make the moment productive. For the first time in my adult life, I allowed myself to stop doing and start being.

That’s when I began to understand: rest isn’t weakness; it’s repair.

So many of the moms I work with — especially here in East Cobb and Roswell — live inside a constant race we never signed up for. The “suburban Olympics” of perfect schedules, perfect homes, perfect kids. Whether you’re a stay-at-home mom trying to keep up with the group-chat highlight reel, or a working mom surviving the Atlanta commute and juggling after-school and travel-sports chaos, it’s a nonstop cycle of motion with no true rest built in.

By the time burnout hits, you’re too tired to even want to do anything — and that’s when burnout paralysis creeps in. It’s not laziness. It’s your nervous system begging for relief.

I had to learn that rest didn’t mean failure; it meant recovery.

Learning to Rest on Purpose

As I healed, I gradually returned to doing more. But then one day I realized I’d fallen back into my old pattern — forgetting to rest.
That’s when I finally learned: rest doesn’t need to be earned. It’s how you sustain yourself.

I began using mindful tools: meditation, breathing exercises, getting outside, gentle movement, and micro-rest moments between tasks. I started listening for early signs of burnout.

I also learned to let go of control. When I got sick, my husband and boys stepped up around the house — and I learned to let them. I realized how often I’d chosen exhaustion over imperfection.

Those lessons changed me.

Rest as a Form of Healing

Now, as I navigate life as a working mom and therapist, I try to practice what I teach:

  • Taking mindful pauses during overwhelm.

  • Delegating instead of over-functioning.

  • Letting “good enough” be good enough.

And in my therapy practice, Rise Gently Therapy, I help other women do the same. I work with moms who are burned out, frozen, or on the edge — helping them see the patterns that got them there and gently rewrite their script.

Sometimes that looks like learning to set boundaries. Sometimes it’s rebuilding trust in your body. And sometimes, it’s simply sitting with someone who reminds you:

You don’t have to earn rest. You deserve it because you’re human — and you don’t have to do this alone.

If you’re ready to slow down, breathe, and start finding your way back to yourself, schedule a consultation call.

Want something gentle to start with? Download my Gentle Tools handouts — small, practical ways to care for yourself when you’re burned out and overwhelmed.

Schedule a consultation
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