The Capable & Overwhelmed Trap: When Looking Fine on the Outside Means Suffering Inside
From the outside, you look like you have it together. You are capable, reliable, and the one people count on. But inside, you are overwhelmed, exhausted, and quietly running on empty. This is what neurodivergent burnout can look like, especially for women who have learned to mask and carry more than their nervous system was ever meant to hold. If that sounds familiar, you are not alone, and you are not broken.
By Laura Zane, LMHC | Sage Synergy Counseling & Wellness | Online Therapy in Florida
From the outside? You look like you have it all together.
The kids are fed and at school on time (mostly on time, I see you my ADHDers). The house isn’t a total disaster; it’s good enough. You’re showing up to work. You’re keeping the marriage going. A lot of the time, you are the person other people call when things get hard, because honestly, you just seem like you’ve got it together.
This pattern is especially common in neurodivergent women and highly sensitive adults who have learned to mask their struggles while quietly carrying an overwhelming mental and emotional load.
But here’s what nobody sees: you are sinking.
Your meltdowns happen in the shower. They happen during your revenge procrastination bedtime. That sweet quiet time when the house is finally asleep. You KNOW you need to go to bed; instead, you stay up too late and maybe even fall apart. Your downtime is spent sleeping, hoping to recover from the sensory and emotional overload that just never stops. You fantasize about escaping on a solo vacation. Not because you don’t love your family, you absolutely do, but because you are running on empty and you know that a few days alone would mean coming back fuller. More present. More you.
Sound familiar? Welcome to what I call the Capable & Overwhelmed Trap. And yes, I have been there. More on that in a bit.
Neurodivergent Burnout: Why You Feel Fine on the Outside but Overwhelmed Inside
This is something I see all the time in neurodivergent women, especially those with ADHD, autism, or high sensitivity. Women who look like they are functioning well on the outside but are actually experiencing burnout and overwhelm internally.
And the hard part? The more capable you are, the easier it is for this to go unnoticed. By other people. And eventually, by you too.
What Is the Capable and Overwhelmed Trap?
A lot of neurodivergent people, whether that is ADHD, autism, sensory processing differences, anxiety, or some delightful grab bag of all of the above, get really good at masking. Masking is basically learning to perform “normal” in a world that was not designed for your brain. You learn young. You become a masking expert. And eventually it becomes so conditioned, so automatic, that even the people closest to you have no idea how much effort it takes just to get through a regular Tuesday. Hell, sometimes you don’t even realize you have put on the mask!
The Catch 22 is the better you are at masking, the more invisible your struggle becomes. To everyone around you. And sometimes to yourself.
When you look like you have it all together, people assume you can handle more. So more gets added. And because you’ve been doing it so well, it never occurs to most people to ask if you’re actually okay.
Why Women Mask More (Society, We Need to Talk)
Neurodivergent women mask at significantly higher rates than their male counterparts, and that is not an accident.
From the time we are little girls, we are taught to manage other people’s feelings. Be agreeable. Be helpful. Keep the peace. Smile through it. Take care of others. Was anyone else given that stupid JOY message? Jesus, Others, Yourself? Talk about a recipe for burn out! These messages become part of who we are, so much so that many of us do not even notice we are doing it. It just feels like being a good person. A good mom. A good partner. A good employee. And, society rewards us for it.
But what it actually looks like in practice is a neurodivergent woman who has become so skilled at managing everyone else’s experience that she has completely lost track of her own.
The world taught us to manage other people’s feelings. Nobody taught us to manage our own nervous system. And that gap? That’s where the overwhelm lives.
Layer on top of that a world that was not built for neurodivergent brains, and you have a very exhausted, very masked, very burnt out woman who looks, from the outside, like she is absolutely thriving.
The “What If” Gap: Why Neurotypicals Don’t See What You See
Here is something that might help you feel a little less alone in the resentment spiral: neurotypical people are generally not the ultra deep thinkers. They are not going seven layers deep when they ask you for something.
When they ask for help, they are not thinking: “If she says no, who will do this? She only asks when she really needs it so she must really need it. I can’t leave her without support. What if something goes wrong? What if she thinks I don’t care?”
They are thinking: “I need help. She’s good at this. I’ll ask.” That’s it. No seven-layer dip of consequences and contingencies.
But your brain? Your brain is already running all the scenerios before you can even answer. You are calculating their emotional reaction, your own guilt, the litany of what-ifs, and three different worst case possibilities, all at the same time. That is not a flaw. That is a highly empathic, pattern-seeking brain doing what it does. But it is also an enormous amount of invisible labor that neurotypicals simply do not carry, and often do not even know to account for.
They asked a simple question. You answered a 47-question internal exam. No wonder you’re exhausted.
And Then There’s Menopause (Nobody Warned Me About This Part)
Okay can we talk about this? Because I feel like it does not get said enough.
Before menopause, things were hard. During menopause? I was a walking train wreck that forgot even where the tracks were.
And I want you to know…if you are in perimenopause or menopause and everything has suddenly gotten louder, harder, more overwhelming, and somehow more intense all at once, you are not imagining it and you are not losing your mind!
Here is what is actually happening: estrogen does a lot of behind-the-scenes work for your brain. It supports executive function, helps regulate your nervous system, and plays a role in how you process sensory input and emotions. TADA! Enter peri-menopause: hormones starts going haywire, everything that was a little hard becomes impossible. The ADHD symptoms you had mostly figured out? Back like a bad fungus in the middle of a rain forest. The sensory sensitivities you had learned to work around? They amplify like an 80’s rock concert. Sleep falls apart. Anxiety spikes. The masking that you didn’t realize your were doing…becomes almost impossible.
A Confession (Or: The Day Three Clients All Showed Up for the Same Appointment Time and I Wanted to Disappear)
Okay. Storytime. And I am sharing this because I think it will make you feel better about literally any scheduling mistake you have ever made.
About a year into my private practice, I was an overbooked, overwhelmed, mom with an infant practice running on fumes, and doing that very thing I talk to clients about, taking on more than my nervous system could actually handle.
Client One was a regular. She called to schedule, we set her up for my 10 am appointment, and then I got distracted (hi, ADHD) and forgot to add it to my calendar. She showed up. I had completely forgotten, because typical ADHD, out of sight, out of mind.
Client Two was a new client. She called, I booked her for 10 am, same time as client One. Apparently, between booking the appointment and crying kids, I got pulled away before I could record it.
Day of, Client Three called in crisis. I had to get her in immediately. Cool, I love how Divine works things out…I have a 10 am open.(You see where this is going right?) I was like come on in.
The first one to show was my crisis client. As she is crying I hear the door open and close. Huh, that is weird, my office mate doesn’t usually work Thursdays. I go out and it was my regular. I was like oh no, I am so sorry, I double booked. Go back, work with the crisis client, in walks my new client. I check to see if she is there for my office mate, NO, I am here for you. I was mortified. I felt like a terrible therapist. Like I had failed people at the exact moments they needed reliability most. Enter self-criticism .
But here is the truth: I was not a bad therapist. I was an overwhelmed therapist who had taken on too much and had absolutely zero systems in place to compensate for my brain’s very predictable weak spots.
The fix was not to try harder or be more careful or give myself a stern lecture about being more organized. The fix was self-scheduling software, so the system does what my brain was never consistently going to do on its own. Simple. Practical. Genuinely life changing.
The “Just Say No” Problem (It Is Not That Simple)
“Just say no!” Oh, cool. Thanks. Super helpful. Why did none of us think of that? Insert eye roll here.
Here is what actually happens: someone asks you to do something. Your nervous system is already maxed out and you do not process that fast enough in the moment. (Remember you are not just processing the request, but those 47 internal questions) Panic and overwhelm set in. So you say yes. Then later, when you’ve had actual time process all the pieces, you realize: oh no, I have overcommited.
Then, you have to go back and say…well actually…I thought I could, but… (which, by the way, is a sign of self-awareness, not flakiness), you are often met with annoyance or frustration. Cue: people-pleasing, rejection sensitivity, self-doubt or trauma history triggers around disappointing people.
A lot of us also have the urge to over-explain. We think: If I just give them enough context, they will understand and they will not be upset. What actually happens is the more you explain, the more others who are used to you being there, begin to negotiate. Suddenly you are stuck in a conversation your nervous system did not sign up for, you cannot think fast enough to find the exit, and you say yes again. And then the spiral: resentment, self-criticism, shame. Why can I never just say no? What is wrong with me?
Nothing. Nothing is wrong with you, except that you may need some actual tools.
5 Ways to Say No (Plus a Maybe, Because Sometimes You Just Need a Minute)
Short. Warm. Firm. No novel-length explanation. Here is what works:
“While I’d love to help, I don’t have the energy for that right now.” Honest and human. Energy is a real resource. Yours is limited. That is a complete sentence.
“I can’t prioritize that right now, so I’ll need to decline.” Clean. Professional. Nothing to argue with.
“My time is limited right now, and I can’t. Thank you for thinking of me.” A little warmth without opening the door for negotiation.
“Thank you for thinking of me. I’m not able to help with that.” The sentence ends at “though.” Do not add more. I know you want to. Do not.
“That doesn’t align with my goals right now, so I’m going to pass.” Great for professional settings. Decisive. Forward-looking. Very “I have my life together” energy even when you do not.
And the maybe, for when your brain genuinely needs time to process:
“I’d like some time to consider that. Can I get back to you in 24 to 48 hours?” This is not stalling. This is your brain doing what it needs to do, checking in with your actual capacity instead of defaulting to yes under pressure. Use this one freely and without guilt.
A few extras for the collection:
“I’m at capacity right now.”
“I’m not the right person for this right now.”
“I need to protect my bandwidth this season.”
The Capable & Overwhelmed Trap Is Real and It Is Exhausting
There is nothing small about carrying this much, even if your life looks “fine” from the outside.
When you are used to being the capable one, the reliable one, the one who figures it out, it can be really hard to even recognize how much you are holding, let alone give yourself permission to need support.
It’s okay to say, I need help. I can’t do this alone anymore.
That is often where things begin to shift.
Learning to protect your nervous system, say no without the guilt spiral, stop masking your way into burnout, and build a life that actually works with your brain rather than against it, these are all things you can genuinely work on. And when you do, the shift is real. Not just for you, but for everyone around you.
Because a you that is actually resourced is so much more present than a you that is white-knuckling through every single day. Your family does not need you to look fine. They need you to actually be okay.
If you are ready for support, we can work together in therapy to help you understand your capacity, reduce overwhelm, and build a life that actually works with your brain. I provide online therapy throughout Florida, including Miami, Naples, Tampa, Sarasota, Bradenton, Lakewood Ranch, Palm Beach, Boca Raton, and Orlando.
And if you are not quite ready for therapy, but you know something needs to change, you can start smaller. I have a boundaries course that walks you through how to protect your time, energy, and bandwidth in a way that actually sticks, without burning yourself out in the process.
FAQ’s
Questions I Hear All the Time (You Are Not Alone in These)
Is it normal to feel more overwhelmed than other people even when my life looks fine from the outside?
A: Yes—well, neurodivergent normal. Our brains process sensory input, emotional information, and everyday demands more intensely than neurotypical brains. What looks manageable from the outside can be genuinely exhausting from the inside. You are not being dramatic or too sensitive. You are not weak. You are running a very different operating system in a world that was designed for a different one.
Why do I always say yes and then immediately regret it?
A: So common, especially for people with ADHD or trauma histories. Many neurodivergences come with executive processing issues, which can cause delayed processing. That means your brain cannot always assess your real capacity when pressure is applied—you know, like when you feel people want an answer “NOW.”
Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria means the fear of disappointing someone can override logic instantly. You say yes before your nervous system has even been consulted. The regret shows up later, when the pressure is off and reality has a chance to land.
I think I might be in perimenopause. Could that be making my ADHD or anxiety worse?
A: Almost certainly yes. Estrogen supports executive function, emotional regulation, and how your brain manages sensory input. As it fluctuates during perimenopause, a lot of neurodivergent women see their symptoms ramp up significantly.
Many gifted women get what I call an “ultra late” diagnosis in their 40s or 50s because the hormone changes interfere with their coping skills and ability to mask. If things that used to feel manageable suddenly feel impossible, that is worth exploring with both a therapist and a knowledgeable medical provider. And no, you are not just “getting worse.” Your baseline changed. That matters.
I live in Miami, Naples, Tampa, or Palm Beach and cannot find a therapist who actually understands neurodivergence. What do I do?
A: This is exactly why I offer online therapy throughout Florida. You do not have to choose between finding someone who genuinely understands neurodivergence and finding someone who is available in your area.
We can work together from wherever you are, whether that is a quiet corner of your house in Boca Raton, your parked car on your lunch break in Naples (no judgment, we have all been there), or the one room in your house with a door that locks.
Like this topic and Want More? Check out these blogs.
Buy the precut Watermelon is about choosing less to reduce anxiety and overwhelm and get more out of life.
Burnout In Highly Sensitive women is about being a neurodivergent woman while homeschooling.
When the World Feels Heavy: A Mother and Therapist Reflects on Grief, Compassion, and Choosing Love
Grief Trigger Warning
Sometimes the world feels very heavy.
This is what was on my heart this morning.
Many people, especially highly sensitive and compassionate people, feel deeply affected by suffering in the world. When violence, war, or tragedy appear in the news, it can leave us feeling overwhelmed, heartbroken, or powerless.
Before anything else, I am a mother.
Yes, I am Laura.
Grief Trigger Warning
Sometimes the world feels very heavy.
This is what was on my heart this morning.
Many people, especially highly sensitive and compassionate people, feel deeply affected by suffering in the world. When violence, war, or tragedy appear in the news, it can leave us feeling overwhelmed, heartbroken, or powerless.
Before anything else, I am a mother.
Yes, I am Laura.
I am a therapist.
I am a wife and partner, a sister, a daughter. I am many things in this life. But when my children were born, something shifted in me in a way that is hard to explain to anyone who has not experienced it.
No matter what other roles I hold in this world, I am always a mother first.
And this morning I woke up heavy.
The Grief Mothers Carry Across the World
There are little girls who left for school and never came home. An occurrence that should never happen, yet is repeated. There are mothers waiting for sons and daughters who may never return from war. There are children who will grow up without the parents who once held them. Every life lost is someone’s child.
Across oceans and across languages I can imagine the sound a mother makes when she realizes her child is gone. I can imagine that same sound from mothers here at home who fear for their children’s safety.
Grief like that needs no translation.
I struggle to understand how humans reach a place where violence becomes acceptable. Even the smallest forms of harm make me pause, so the loss of human life, any human life, feels unbearable to me.
When the World Feels Heavy and We Feel Powerless
I hear people say thoughts and prayers, and I know that is often a reaction to feeling powerless.
I feel powerless too.
And if I am honest, I am angry.
I feel anger toward the leaders and systems that move the world closer to violence instead of healing. I feel anger when human life begins to feel expendable in public conversations.
Part of me wants to shout that the people making these decisions should have to face the consequences themselves.
And another part of me remembers that every soldier, every child, every person caught in conflict is still someone’s child. Still innocent. Still loved by a mother somewhere.
Holding those two truths at the same time is painful.
The Connection Between Love, Anger, and Compassion
The anger I feel is real, but underneath it is something deeper.
Because hate is not the opposite of love.
Hate is the shadow side of love.
You only feel that kind of anger when something you love deeply feels threatened.
And what I love is life.
Children.
Families.
The fragile miracle that any of us are here at all.
Choosing Compassion in a World That Feels Heavy
Feeling grief for the world does not mean something is wrong with you; often it means your compassion is still very much alive. So I refuse to add more hatred to a world that already has too much of it.
Instead, I will do what I can.
I will do my best to help heal the people who sit across from me in my therapy room. I will raise my children to be compassionate humans. I will keep choosing love even on the days when anger would be easier.
I cannot change the entire world.
But I can care deeply for the small corner of it that is mine.
Today I grieve for mothers everywhere. The mothers across the ocean whose language I will never speak. The mothers here at home worried about their own children. The mothers who will wake up tomorrow and ask themselves what they did wrong.
Grief needs no translation.
Because when you are a mother, every child feels a little bit like your own.
The grief I feel today is the shadow of my compassion. It is what compassion looks like when it runs into a world that still chooses violence.
If I did not care so deeply about life, about children, about families, I would not feel this pain.
So I will not try to silence it.
I will let it remind me why compassion matters.
Maybe my small voice will not change the world.
But maybe it adds one small kernel of compassion to it.
And maybe, just maybe, that still matters.
I will honor that my vulnerability, my compassion, and my love are my strength.
If This Resonates With You
This reflection may resonate with you if:
• You feel overwhelmed or heartbroken when you hear about suffering in the world
• You are a highly sensitive or deeply compassionate person
• World events sometimes leave you feeling powerless or heavy
• You care deeply about humanity but struggle with how to hold that compassion without becoming overwhelmed
• You are trying to raise children with empathy and kindness in a complicated world
Feeling deeply is not a weakness. Often, it is a reflection of your capacity for compassion.
Questions People Often Ask When the World Feels Heavy
Why do world events affect me so strongly?
Many highly sensitive or empathetic people feel the suffering of others deeply. Hearing about tragedy, violence, or injustice can activate grief, fear, and compassion all at once.
Is it normal to feel both anger and compassion at the same time?
Yes. Anger often emerges when something we deeply love feels threatened. It is possible to hold anger and compassion together without letting anger turn into hatred.
How can I care about the world without becoming overwhelmed?
One way is to focus on the areas where you do have influence—your family, your community, your relationships. Compassion becomes sustainable when we channel it into meaningful action within our own sphere.
Can therapy help if the world feels emotionally overwhelming?
Yes. Therapy can help highly sensitive and compassionate people learn how to hold grief, anger, and empathy without becoming emotionally depleted.
Covid-19 Anxiety-Trying to find the balance between More and Less
As a highly sensitive person and ambivert, my life has been a constant balance of trying to balance my desire to be conscientious and my need to have a lot of down time. Both great HSP qualities, but also ones that can cause stress. My pre-COVID-19 life felt stressed, anxious, and constantly on the go. While I recognize I had designed my life with less time commitments than most, the time commitments I did have, often left me exhausted and overwhelmed. I felt constantly “on the go”.
The time obligations that non-HSP’s make all the time can feel stressful, anxiety producing and overwhelming for those of us that are highly sensitive. For me, the time related deadlines of everyday life, like running the kids to the bus stop, getting to meetings on time, or having to be constantly aware of the family schedule…birthday parties, holiday cards, organizing house affairs, setting up house appointments: bug people, water people, home repairs, felt like balls that I was constantly dropping, watch as they roll down hill and splash into a pond…all while I am still trying to figure out if I should keep juggling or chase the ones I dropped.
In all fairness to my HSP side, some of this is probably because my family frequently ran late when I was a kid. We showed up late almost daily to school my entire childhood. The shame of walking in late, embarrassed with teacher comments of “Again” probably do not help with this issue. There is no one to blame for this, my young mother had 3, eventually 4 kids and although married, mostly functioned as a single parent, until she eventually became one. With little help, I am surprised we only ran 15 minutes to a half hour late…I get it, especially as a mother in my adult years. However, running late has been a trigger my entire life, well not so much the running late, as the comments and judgements made when one is running late. Somehow, running late generalized into not just late with places, but also those day to day commitments we all experience. GOD FORBID, I don’t get a card out in time. I beat myself up, and don’t bother sending it. I literally have Easter cards sitting here from two years ago…somewhere at least….
Image by @aronvisuals, running out of time
Then comes COVID-19. It forces me to take a step back and relax. My kids are no longer in school, the deadline then becomes moving from the bed to the couch and making sure they are online “on time”, if they can make it. If not, that is okay, you can watch the recording. When you show, even if you are not on time to a “Zoom” meeting, people are patient. Technical difficulties, internet issues, electronics acting up are all things we experience. Now, many of us working from home are juggling kids, animals, our jobs, and a multitude of other things that we have been juggling all along. However, suddenly, people are more patient. Pre COVID-19, if your kid popped into a meeting, it made the headlines. Now, your kid pops into a “zoom” meeting, it is kind of expected, people laugh and we move on. Here we are, all in the same storm, being more tolerant of what is happening in each other’s boat.
In some ways, COVID-19 has helped me be more patient with myself. In some ways if feels better. While I am having less physical interaction with the stay at home, I feel I am having more peaceful interactions. I am less stressed overall. Deadlines don’t feel so overwhelming. I am not in trauma reaction mode worried about getting places and doing things “right and on time.” I am still conscientious and working with ethics, but without the day to stresses and deadlines, I feel more relaxed. Without starting my day off with the bus time stress, the hustle and bustle of where I need to be, my world feels more relaxed. My time with others feels like more.
My state is in phase 2 of opening up. I am not ready yet. It’s not that I don’t want people to get back to work, I feel for my fellow people. I get the economic impact has been huge. It’s just, I AM NOT READY YET. I don’t want to go back to the hustle and bustle. I don’t want to start my morning off with deadlines and stress, balls being dropped and rolling down the hill. So there-in lies the problem, I have not quite figured out how to have my kids go back to school, begin to see people in person, and not put myself back in that stress. I know there are things that will need to shift, I just don’t know what that is yet. It is becoming clearer, but it is not there…and I am not ready yet. I don’t want to go back to the way things were. I don’t know if I can, not without having a visceral reaction. So, I sit here and try to figure out my next steps.
I have this thing in my practice, where I try and look at the gifts of all negative events or traumas. For me, the gift of COVID-19 has been to see how life can be, if I slow it down and make some shifts. My fear of making those shifts is dissolving the longer I am spending time at home. I, like many other mothers, have needed more balance in my life for a long time, and maybe we have as a planet. I can’t go back to who I was before COVID-19…and I feel like I am saying this not just for myself, but for many. I feel like I have been a caterpillar crawling around, doing my thing. COVID-19 came and I created my cocoon, started my change, my transformation. I am beginning to come out of it, but I am not quite through it yet. I will re-emerge, the same but different. More beautiful in many ways, seemingly more fragile in others. As I am pondering my emergence, I have not figured out what flowers I want to fly to first. I am still needing time for my wings to dry and learn how to use them.
Riding the Tides: How to Navigate Life's Peaks and Valleys
We all have peaks and valleys. That part is normal.
We all have them. Those seasons of life when things feel heavy, slow, or stuck. Whether it is a dip in finances, a rough patch in a relationship, or just a quiet erosion of the energy and enthusiasm you usually carry, highs and lows are woven into every human experience. And yet, when we find ourselves deep in a valley, it can feel profoundly isolating. Like something has gone fundamentally wrong. Like we have somehow failed at the business of living.
But what if you have not failed at all? What if you are simply experiencing low tide?
When life pulls back, it's not the end. It's low tide. Here's how to find peace and even some hidden treasures in the lull.
Hi, I'm Laura Zane, a holistic online counselor serving highly sensitive, neurodivergent, and empathic women throughout Florida. Whether you are in Sarasota, Bradenton, Lakewood Ranch, Tampa, or anywhere else in the state, I work with you virtually so that getting support actually fits into your life. A big part of what I do is help women understand the natural rhythms of their emotional world, especially when those rhythms start to feel anything but natural. That is what this post is all about.
We all have peaks and valleys. That part is normal.
We all have them. Those seasons of life when things feel heavy, slow, or stuck. Whether it is a dip in finances, a rough patch in a relationship, or just a quiet erosion of the energy and enthusiasm you usually carry, highs and lows are woven into every human experience. And yet, when we find ourselves deep in a valley, it can feel profoundly isolating. Like something has gone fundamentally wrong. Like we have somehow failed at the business of living.
But what if you have not failed at all? What if you are simply experiencing low tide?
When valleys become anxiety, depression, or burnout
For highly sensitive women, empaths, and neurodivergent folks, including those with ADHD or who identify as HSPs, valleys do not always feel like a gentle dip. They can feel like a crash. When your nervous system is already working overtime to process the world around you, a low period can tip quickly into anxiety, depression, or full-on burnout. The overwhelm becomes paralyzing. The to-do list that was manageable last month suddenly feels impossible. You might find yourself withdrawing, snapping at the people you love, or lying awake at 3am running through everything you have not done.
If that sounds familiar, I want you to know that it is not a character flaw. It is not weakness. It is what happens when a sensitive, high-functioning system gets overloaded without enough rest, grounding, or support. The valley is real. And so is the way through it.
"What if instead of seeing it as a time when everything is spiraling out of control, you thought of it as low tide?"
Think about the ocean. The tide comes in, high and full and powerful, and then it rolls back out. It does not stay at high tide forever, and it does not stay at low tide forever either. That rhythm is constant, reliable, and completely natural. Our lives work the same way. The tide is always moving, even when it does not feel like it.
The stories we tell ourselves matter more than we think
One of the most important things to pay attention to during a low period is the narrative running through your mind. When money feels tight, are you telling yourself, "I am never going to have enough"? When a relationship is struggling, are you spiraling into "This is never going to get better" or "I am never going to find the right person"?
Those "never" thoughts are worth examining. Not because they are silly or wrong to have, but because of what they signal to the world around us. The energy we put out has a powerful effect on what we attract back. If we are constantly broadcasting a frequency of scarcity or hopelessness, we reinforce the very patterns we are desperate to escape. We are essentially telling the universe: do not bother.
This is not about toxic positivity or pretending everything is fine when it is not. Mindfulness teaches us to sit with what is present without immediately trying to fix or flee it. From that grounded place, we can begin to ask: is this thought actually true? Or is this a story my nervous system is telling me because it is exhausted and scared? That is a very different question, and it opens a very different door.
What low tide reveals
Here is something worth sitting with. When you walk along the beach at low tide, you find things that are completely invisible when the water is high. Starfish. Shells. Tide pools full of tiny, intricate life. The low water does not just expose the sand. It reveals what has been there all along, hidden beneath the surface.
Your life's low tide works the same way. When the busyness, the noise, and the rushing current of high-tide living pull back, what gets revealed? Maybe it is a creative longing you have been too busy to tend to. Maybe it is a friendship that deserves more of your time. Maybe it is a quieter version of yourself who has something important to say, if only you would slow down enough to listen.
Low tide is an invitation. Not a punishment.
4 mindful ways to navigate your low tide with intention
Practical tools
Keep a gratefulness journal. Write down even the smallest wins. A smile from a stranger. A moment of sunshine. A cup of coffee that tasted exactly right. Gratitude is not about denying difficulty. It is about training your attention toward what is still working. Over time, what you focus on tends to grow. The universe tends to give you more of what you are already acknowledging.
Reground yourself. Remember that you are standing on the beach watching the tide. You are not the tide itself. When things feel overwhelming, take a breath. Feel your feet on the floor. Notice five things you can see right now. Remind yourself that this moment is not your whole story. Low tide is something happening in your life right now. It is not who you are.
Look for the starfish. Ask yourself: what is available to me right now, in this slower season, that I would not have time or space for at high tide? Maybe it is rest. Maybe it is reconnecting with something you love. The low tide moments in life often hold quiet gifts, if you are willing to look for them instead of just waiting for the water to rise.
Practice meditation or mindful movement. Even five minutes of intentional stillness can shift your nervous system out of fight-or-flight. A walk outside, a breathing exercise, or a simple body scan can help you move from "everything is falling apart" to "I am okay, and I am moving forward." Ask yourself: is my life generally okay? And am I taking steps, even small ones, in the right direction?
You are not alone in the valley
One of the quietest burdens of going through a hard season is the feeling that everyone else seems to be doing fine. That you are the only one struggling while the rest of the world rides a permanent high tide. That simply is not true. Every person you pass on the street has their own low tides, their own valleys, their own moments of wondering when things will turn around.
For highly sensitive and neurodivergent women especially, valleys can carry extra weight because you feel everything more deeply. That is not a bug. That is actually a feature of who you are. But it does mean you need and deserve support that understands how your system works.
When you are in a high tide right now, enjoy it. Celebrate it. Take care of yourself so you have reserves for when the water pulls back. And if you are in a low tide, be patient and gentle with yourself. Tend to your inner landscape. Trust the rhythm. The tide is always moving, and it will come back in.
And when it does, you will have found a few starfish along the way.
Frequently asked questions
Why do highly sensitive people and HSPs struggle more during emotional lows?
Highly sensitive people (HSPs) process emotional and sensory information more deeply than others. That means that during a low period, the feelings are not just louder. They are more layered. A valley that a non-sensitive person might ride out in a week can feel much more consuming for an HSP. This is not a weakness. It is just how your nervous system is wired, and it means you need a different kind of support.
How do I know if my low period is normal or if it has become clinical depression?
Normal emotional valleys tend to lift with time, rest, and self-care. Clinical depression is more persistent. It often includes things like losing interest in activities you used to love, changes in sleep or appetite, difficulty concentrating, and a heaviness that does not seem to move regardless of what is going on around you. If your low has lasted more than two weeks and is interfering with your daily life, it is worth talking to a professional. You do not have to white-knuckle your way through it.
Can ADHD or neurodivergence make emotional valleys harder to manage?
Absolutely. Neurodivergent brains, including those with ADHD, often experience something called emotional dysregulation, which means feelings can swing more intensely and be harder to bring back to baseline. Add in rejection sensitivity, a tendency toward all-or-nothing thinking, and a nervous system that is frequently overstimulated, and a valley can feel really destabilizing. Working with a therapist who understands neurodivergence makes a significant difference
What is the difference between burnout and depression?
Burnout typically comes from chronic, unrelenting stress and overextension, often without enough recovery time built in. It tends to show up as exhaustion, cynicism, and a sense of ineffectiveness. Depression is a clinical condition that can look similar on the surface but has different roots and often requires different treatment. Many highly sensitive women come to me thinking they are just burned out, only to discover there is a depressive layer underneath that needs attention too. Both are real. Both are treatable.
Does online therapy actually work for anxiety and depression?
Yes. Research consistently shows that online therapy is just as effective as in-person therapy for treating anxiety and depression. For many of my clients in Florida, it is actually more effective because it removes the barriers of commuting, scheduling, and the anxiety that sometimes comes with walking into a new office. You can show up from your couch, your car, or wherever you feel most comfortable. And we still do real, deep work together.
How does mindfulness help during an emotional low?
Mindfulness does not make the low go away. What it does is help you stop fighting it so hard, which actually frees up a lot of energy. When you can observe your experience without being completely consumed by it, you create a little space between the feeling and the story you are telling about the feeling. That space is where choice lives. Mindfulness practices like grounding, body scans, and breath work are things I weave into my work with clients regularly.
Ready to stop white-knuckling your way through the low tide?
I work with highly sensitive, neurodivergent, and empathic women throughout Florida through online counseling that fits your real life. If you are dealing with anxiety, depression, or burnout and you are ready to do some real work, I would love to connect. Bring a willing heart. I will bring the a listening ear.
5 Great Ways To Get Centered when you are feeling Anxious
It’s important to keep yourself grounded in the midst of the chaos. I wanted to share with you today about how to get centered when you're feeling chaotic.
All of us have experienced those times where we feel like our head is spinning. Sometimes it feels like nothing is going as planned and life is just testing you left and right. It’s important to keep yourself grounded in the midst of the chaos. I wanted to share with you today about how to get centered when you're feeling chaotic. There are five ways that I tell my clients that you can get quick, fast relief from a little bit of the stress.
The first way to get some relief from chaos is to do some controlled breathing. It is often recommended breathing in through your nose and out through your mouth to help calm you down. Take a second to do it with me. So you're going to breathe in, hold it for as long as you can, and breathe out through your mouth and repeat this as many times as you need to. Another way to do this is to block off one nostril, breathe in through that nostril, switch to blocking off the other nostril, and then breathe out through that nostril. That's a quick strategy to get yourself centered. The alternate nostril breathing technique gets both sides of your brain talking and calms you down pretty quickly.
The second thing you can do to get yourself centered is visualize. Visualize yourself in a calmer state of mind. Visualize not only when you're in the midst of chaos, but also while you're in a relaxed state. While you're in a relaxed state of mind, you can touch a part of your body and that will teach you that when you touch this spot, it will trick your brain into thinking you're calming down. There's an acupuncture point that I recommend using as your grounding point. You go straight up from your hand, on your wrist, there's a little divot there. If you squeeze that when you're not feeling calm you will trick your body into thinking that you're supposed to feel relaxation during that time. The other thing is to visualize a peaceful place, whatever that peaceful place is for you. For some people, it's the beach or a mountain stream. But take just about 15 seconds and visualize yourself there. It will help your body recognize that you are moving to become this.
The third thing you can do is let go and trust your higher power. Now not everyone believes in a higher power. And that's perfectly okay! If you do, or if you don’t, realizing things are out of your control is a way to bring some calm to your chaos. Sometimes when we're feeling chaotic, it's because of internal feelings. So reminding yourself that chaos is sometimes about things falling into place, not falling apart. When we clean out a closet, our closet is completely empty and our bedroom is chaos. But when we start putting stuff back together, we're actually cleaning some of the chaos is the beginning of putting things back together. So always remind yourself of that.
Another strategy to seek calm throughout chaos is to get outside for just a few minutes. If you can sit in the grass for 15 minutes, studies show that your anxiety levels and your depression levels decrease. This is a great thing to do, especially if you have kids. Take them outside, sit in the grass, make sure your feet or your hands are touching the Earth. If you're sitting on concrete, it doesn't have the same effect. So get your body grounded, get outside, make sure that you're getting fresh air every day.
The fifth thing is if you have a pet, put your hands on them and pet them. Most pet owners know about the immediate joys that come with sharing their lives with companion animals. This actually helps calm you down and fills the basic human need for touch. Petting, hugging, or otherwise touching a loving animal can rapidly calm and soothe you when you’re stressed or anxious. It's a quick way to help you get calm by taking a few minutes and petting an animal.
Those are the five quick strategies I tell my clients to help get grounded when things are feeling hectic. If there is more you'd like to know about, or if you want me to go into more details with a couple of these strategies, please leave let me know! That would be super helpful so I can give you guys more of what you're looking for. I can even do a meditation for you all if you think that's something you'd like. I look forward to talking to you!