A gentle guide to stress, emotional overload and finding support.
Many women carry a quiet load of stress, hurt and responsibility — often while supporting others. Trauma, chronic stress and burnout can show up as emotional exhaustion, shutdown, irritability, anxiety, or feeling “numb” and disconnected. This page is here to offer language, validation and practical tools, especially for neurodivergent women and women in caring roles.
Trauma can come from one big event or many smaller, ongoing experiences that left you unsafe, unheard or unsupported. Burnout is a state of deep emotional, physical and mental exhaustion, often after giving more than you have for a long time. Overwhelm is that flooded feeling where everything feels “too much” and your brain can’t keep up.
These aren’t personality flaws or “not coping”. They are your nervous system saying, “This is too much, for too long.”
If you recognise yourself in these signs, you are not alone — and nothing about this makes you weak or broken.
Many women carry invisible responsibilities: emotional labour, household planning, caregiving, advocacy, and keeping relationships running. Add in gendered expectations (“be nice”, “hold everything together”), and it’s easy to ignore your own limits until you crash.
Your worth is not measured by how much you can endure.
Autistic, ADHD and other neurodivergent women often reach burnout faster because they are processing more input, masking to fit expectations, and juggling systems that aren’t designed for them.
If you’re ND, your nervous system may need more frequent rest, quieter spaces, and gentler expectations than the people around you realise.
Recovery from burnout and trauma is not about “pushing through”. It’s about giving your nervous system time, space and safety.
You deserve support that honours both your story and your limits. Depending on what feels safe and accessible, this might include:
Reaching out is not “making a fuss”. It’s taking your nervous system seriously.
Take a slow breath in… and out. You’re allowed to feel tired, fed up, angry, sad, hopeful or nothing at all. All of it makes sense.
You are not “too much” or “too sensitive”. You are a human being whose nervous system has carried a lot.
Words can either minimise or honour what you’ve been through. Phrases like “Everyone’s stressed, just get on with it” can feel dismissive.
Gentler alternatives might be:
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