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How to Recover from Burnout: A Gentle Reset Guide
When exhaustion becomes your new normal, it's time for compassionate change
📌 Save this burnout recovery guide on Pinterest for when you need gentle reminders
Burnout isn't just being tired. It's when your body and mind start sending loud signals that something has to change—like you've been running on empty for far too long.
For many of the women and moms I work with, burnout shows up as more than exhaustion. It's the Sunday night dread before another week. It's snapping at your partner even when you don't want to. It's feeling numb instead of joyful when your child reaches for you.
"Burnout is not a personal failing. It's your nervous system raising a red flag that says: enough."
If you've recognized that what you're experiencing is burnout and not "just tired," the next question is: How do I begin to heal?
The answer isn't a quick fix. But recovery is possible—through small, steady steps that help you restore energy and reconnect with yourself.
Real Story: Sarah's Wake-Up Call
Sarah, a mom of two under five, came to therapy after realizing she'd been crying in the Target parking lot every Tuesday for a month.
"I thought I was just tired," she told me. "But when I started forgetting my kids' doctor appointments and losing my patience over spilled juice—I knew this was different."
The turning point? Writing down every symptom she'd been ignoring: the insomnia, the brain fog, the constant irritability, the loss of joy in activities she used to love. Seeing it on paper made it real.
Acknowledge What's Really Happening
The first step is simply naming it: "I'm burned out."
That recognition itself is powerful. Many women blame themselves—"I should be able to handle this"—but burnout is not a personal failing. It's your nervous system raising a red flag.
✓ Burnout Signs You Might Be Ignoring
Physical Signs
- Chronic fatigue no matter how much you sleep
- Frequent headaches or muscle tension
- Changes in appetite or sleep patterns
- Getting sick more often than usual
Emotional Signs
- Feeling numb or detached from loved ones
- Losing joy in things you used to love
- Constant irritability or short fuse
- Overwhelming sense of dread
Cognitive Signs
- Brain fog or difficulty concentrating
- Forgetting important appointments or tasks
- Indecisiveness about simple choices
- Negative or cynical thoughts about your life
🌿 Try This: The Burnout Inventory
Take 10 minutes with a journal or notes app. Write down every symptom you've noticed in the past month—physical, emotional, behavioral.
Why it works: Seeing the list on paper helps you realize this isn't weakness or "not trying hard enough"—it's your body saying enough.
Client: "But everyone else seems to handle it fine. Why can't I?"
Therapist: "What you're seeing is everyone's highlight reel, not their reality. And even if they are managing, their capacity isn't yours to compare against. Your body is telling you it needs something different right now."
Client: "So it's not that I'm failing?"
Therapist: "Not even close. You're paying attention. That's the first step to healing."
💜 Pin this recovery guide to your Self-Care board for gentle reminders when you need them most
Give Yourself Permission to Rest
Recovery requires real rest—not the "collapse on the couch while still answering emails" kind of rest.
Your body needs signals that it's safe to come down from survival mode. Rest is how you send that signal.
"Rest is not earned. It's a basic need, like water or oxygen. You don't have to prove you deserve it."
Micro-Rest Ideas That Actually Work
Morning Mindful Coffee
Drink your first cup outside or by a window. No phone, no planning. Just taste, warmth, quiet.
Time needed: 10 minutes
The Phone-Free Walk
Walk around your block without earbuds or podcasts. Notice trees, sounds, the feeling of air on your skin.
Time needed: 10-15 minutes
The Sacred Lie-Down
Actually lie down. Not just sit slouched. Let your body be horizontal instead of powering through fatigue.
Time needed: 15-20 minutes
The Breath Reset
Before opening your inbox, take 5 deep breaths. Inhale for 4, hold for 4, exhale for 6. Let your shoulders drop.
Time needed: 2 minutes
The Digital Sunset
Turn off work notifications at 7pm. Let your brain know the workday is actually over.
Time needed: Ongoing boundary
The Joy Song
Play one song you absolutely love while folding laundry or making dinner. Let yourself feel it.
Time needed: 3-4 minutes
Real Story: Jessica's Rest Revolution
Jessica felt guilty every time she sat down during the day. "If I'm awake, I should be productive," was her rule.
We started with one small experiment: lying down for 15 minutes every afternoon while her toddler napped, instead of tackling her to-do list.
What happened: "I was shocked at how much that one pause changed my evenings. I stopped snapping at my husband. I actually had energy to play with my daughter at bedtime. It felt like I'd discovered a secret."
💜 Try This: The Rest Experiment
Choose ONE micro-rest from the list above. Commit to trying it for three days in a row. Notice what changes—in your body, your mood, your patience.
Pro tip: Set a phone reminder with the title "Permission to Rest" so you don't talk yourself out of it.
Practice Boundaries Without Guilt
One of the hardest parts of healing burnout is saying no.
But boundaries are what allow your energy to rebuild. That might mean turning down one extra volunteer request at your child's school, delaying a big home project, or letting a friend know you can't text back immediately.
"Saying no isn't selfish—it's the oxygen mask rule. Protecting your energy allows you to show up more fully in the places that matter most."
Scripts for Setting Boundaries (Without the Guilt)
When Asked to Volunteer
"I appreciate you thinking of me! I'm at capacity right now, but I'd love to help next semester when things settle."
With Friends or Family
"I'm in recovery mode from burnout right now. I need to keep my weekends low-key, but let's plan something in a few weeks."
At Work (If Applicable)
"I want to give this the attention it deserves. Can we look at my current workload and see what can shift to make room?"
With Your Partner
"I'm running on empty. I need you to take the kids Saturday morning so I can sleep in and reset. It's not optional—it's survival."
To Yourself (Internal Boundary)
"The dishes can wait. My body is telling me to rest, and I'm going to listen. Everything else will still be here tomorrow."
With Extended Family
"We're keeping this season simple. We won't be able to make it to every gathering, but we'll see you at [specific event]."
Why Boundaries Feel So Hard (And Why You Still Need Them)
If you grew up being praised for being "helpful," "selfless," or "always there for others," saying no can feel like betrayal.
Many women were socialized to equate their worth with how much they give. But here's the truth: your value is not determined by your availability.
Boundaries aren't walls—they're gates. They let the right things in and keep depletion out. They're how you protect the energy you need to be present for what truly matters.
Client: "But what if people get upset when I say no?"
Therapist: "They might. And that's okay. Their discomfort with your boundary is not your responsibility to fix. People who truly care about you will respect your need to recover."
Client: "What if I feel guilty?"
Therapist: "Guilt is a feeling, not a fact. You can feel guilty and still know you're making the right choice for your wellbeing."
❤️ Try This: The One Boundary Challenge
This week, set ONE boundary you've been avoiding. Use a script from above if it helps. Notice what happens when you protect your energy instead of giving it all away.
Remember: Discomfort doesn't mean you're doing it wrong. It means you're doing something new.
🌿 Save these boundary scripts to Pinterest so you always have them when you need to say no
Add Back What Brings You Alive
Burnout strips away joy. Recovery means intentionally adding it back in.
Think of small, restorative practices that reconnect you to yourself—not just as a parent, partner, or professional, but as a person with needs, interests, and a spark worth tending.
"Joy isn't a luxury you add after everything else is done. It's medicine. It's how your nervous system remembers safety."
Small Joys That Rebuild Your Energy
Music You Actually Love
Create a "Joy Playlist" of songs that make you feel alive. Play it while cooking, driving, or getting ready in the morning.
Morning Coffee Outside
Take your first cup outside. Even 5 minutes of fresh air and natural light signals your brain that the day can be different.
Standing Walk with a Friend
Schedule a weekly walk with someone who fills your cup. Movement + connection = powerful reset.
Hands in the Earth
Even a small potted plant or herb garden gives you something living to tend. The act of caring for growth is deeply grounding.
Reading for Pleasure
Not self-help books or parenting guides—fiction, poetry, memoirs. Stories that transport you somewhere else for 20 minutes.
Creative Play (No Skill Required)
Doodle, paint with your kids, rearrange furniture, cook something new. Creativity is a nervous system reset button.
Real Story: Maria's Garden Revelation
"I used to love gardening before I had kids," Maria told me. "But I thought I didn't have time for hobbies anymore."
We started small: one potted herb on her kitchen windowsill. Just rosemary. She'd water it each morning while her coffee brewed.
What changed: "Putting my hands in that soil—even for 30 seconds—reminded me I'm not just a mom or employee. I'm still Maria. That tiny act of caring for something living gave me more peace than I expected. Now I have a whole window garden."
🌿 The Key Insight
You don't need permission to enjoy your life. Joy isn't earned after you've checked everything off the list. It's part of your recovery plan.
Ask yourself: What made me feel alive before I got so tired? What would I do if I had 20 guilt-free minutes? Start there.
💜 Try This: The Joy Inventory
Make a list of 10 things that used to bring you joy before burnout. Circle the 3 that feel most doable right now. Schedule one of them this week—even if it's just for 15 minutes.
Bonus: Tell someone your plan so you're more likely to follow through.
Build Sustainable Habits Over Time
Once the fog begins to lift, focus on the basics that protect against slipping back into burnout.
These aren't about perfection—they're about creating a foundation that keeps you steady even when life gets chaotic.
"Recovery isn't about adding more to your plate. It's about building a few key habits that anchor you when everything else feels unstable."
The 4 Pillars of Burnout Prevention
Consistent Sleep
Your brain can't heal without rest. Aim for a consistent bedtime routine, even if your kids don't cooperate every night.
Start here:
- Same bedtime ±30 minutes
- No screens 30 min before bed
- Temperature drop (cooler room)
- White noise or fan for consistency
Balanced Nutrition
Steady energy comes from steady fuel—not caffeine and crackers grabbed between tasks.
Start here:
- Protein with breakfast (eggs, yogurt, nuts)
- Water bottle you actually refill
- Snacks prepped for busy afternoons
- One vegetable with dinner
Joyful Movement
Movement you actually enjoy—not punishment disguised as exercise. This is about feeling alive in your body.
Start here:
- 15-minute stroller walks
- Dancing while cooking dinner
- Gentle yoga or stretching
- Anything that doesn't feel like a chore
Mindful Practices
Practices that help you stay grounded and connected to what matters—not just surviving each day.
Start here:
- 3 things you're grateful for (morning or night)
- 5 minutes of journaling or prayer
- One deep breath before transitions
- Weekly reflection: What went well?
Progress, Not Perfection
You won't do all four pillars perfectly every day. That's not the goal.
The goal is to have anchors—a few reliable practices that bring you back to center when life gets chaotic.
Maybe this week you nail sleep but nutrition is spotty. Next week you get movement in but skip journaling. That's still progress. You're building a foundation, not a perfect routine.
🌿 Try This: Pick Your Starting Pillar
Look at the four pillars above. Which one feels most doable right now? Start there. Build that habit for two weeks before adding another.
Example: If sleep feels impossible with young kids, start with nutrition. Pack protein-rich snacks each Sunday. Small wins build momentum.
❤️ Save the 4 Pillars of Burnout Prevention to your Wellness board for when you need a reset
A Gentle Reminder
Recovery from burnout takes weeks or even months, not days.
Remember, it took you a long time to get to this place. It will take some time to feel better. You don't need to overhaul your life overnight.
"Think of it as planting seeds—one boundary, one pause, one joyful ritual at a time. Slowly, your nervous system relearns safety and your energy begins to return."
If you're in this season right now, please know: burnout is not the end of your story.
With compassion, support, and a few gentle resets, you can feel like yourself again.
What to Expect: A Recovery Timeline
Week 1-2: Awareness & Acknowledgment
You're naming what's happening. You might feel relief mixed with grief. That's normal. You're not "getting worse"—you're finally paying attention.
Week 3-6: Baby Steps & Resistance
You're trying micro-rests and boundaries. Some days feel better. Other days you slip back into old patterns. This is part of the process—not failure.
Week 6-12: Momentum & Clarity
You notice you have more patience. Your fuse isn't as short. You're starting to feel glimmers of yourself again. Joy is coming back.
3+ Months: Sustainable Rhythm
Recovery isn't linear, but you have tools now. You know your red flags. You protect your energy before it runs out. You've built a foundation that can weather stress without breaking you.
When to Seek Professional Support
You don't have to do this alone. Consider reaching out for therapy if:
- You've been trying to recover on your own for weeks with no improvement
- Burnout is affecting your ability to care for yourself or your family
- You're experiencing thoughts of hopelessness or self-harm
- You need someone to help you create a personalized recovery plan
- You want accountability and support from someone who gets it
Ready to Begin Your Reset?
If you're feeling burned out and don't know where to start, therapy can help. At Bloom Psychology, we specialize in supporting moms and families through seasons of overwhelm.
Together, we'll create a personalized plan for recovery and resilience—one gentle step at a time.
Reach Out to Begin Your RecoveryYou deserve support. Let's start your journey back to yourself.
📌 Save this complete burnout recovery guide on Pinterest
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Jana Rundle
Licensed Clinical Psychologist




