7 Days Back From Burnout

A free video series.

7 Days Back From Burnout

A free video series to help you understand burnout, recover from it, and stop ending up back there again.

 Burnout isn’t just exhaustion.

 It changes your nervous system, your confidence and the way you see yourself. It can leave you feeling overwhelmed, emotionally flat, unable to think clearly and wondering why you can’t cope with things that used to feel easy. 

 Burnout is a sign that something about the way you’ve been living has stopped being sustainable.

 This free seven-day video series will help you understand what’s happening, take the first steps towards recovery, and begin building a life you don’t keep needing to recover from.

* You’re exhausted, even after resting.

* Your brain feels foggy, overwhelmed or permanently switched on.

* You don’t feel like yourself anymore.

* You keep pushing through, even though your body is asking you to stop.

* You’re worried you’re heading towards burnout – or trying to find your way back from it.

* You’re ready to stop surviving and start building a life that feels sustainable.

JOIN 7 DAYS BACK FROM BURNOUT HERE

Are you ready to make a change?

Burnout isn’t just about stress

Most burnout advice focuses on reducing your workload or taking a break. And sometimes that’s exactly what’s needed but burnout recovery is often about much more than that.

It’s about the patterns that lead us there.

People pleasing.

 Perfectionism.

 Overthinking.

 Feeling responsible for everyone else.

 Ignoring what your body has been trying to tell you for months – or years.

 Recovering from burnout isn’t just about resting. It’s about understanding why you ended up here in the first place.

Over the seven days you’ll discover…

* Why burnout changes the way you see yourself – and how to stop letting it define you.

* How your nervous system responds to chronic stress, and simple ways to help it recover.

* The habits and hidden beliefs that quietly contribute to burnout.

* Why tying your self-worth to productivity makes burnout far more likely.

* Why joy isn’t a luxury during recovery – it’s part of the treatment.

* The patterns you’ve been overriding, so you can stop repeating them.

* How to create your own burnout prevention plan.

Each video is short, practical and designed to give you something you can use immediately.

JOIN 7 DAYS BACK FROM BURNOUT TODAY

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the early signs of burnout?

Burnout often creeps up gradually.

Some of the earliest signs include feeling constantly tired, becoming more reactive, struggling to switch off, losing motivation, feeling emotionally detached, finding it harder to concentrate, or noticing that things which once felt easy now feel overwhelming.

Many people also begin ignoring their own needs, overcommitting, people pleasing or feeling guilty whenever they rest.

The earlier you recognise these patterns, the easier they are to change.

How long does it take to recover from burnout?

There’s no single timeline because burnout affects everyone differently.

Recovery depends on how long you’ve been under stress, what contributed to the burnout, how supported you are and whether you’re simply resting or also changing the patterns that led you there.

For many people, recovery isn’t about getting back to who they were before burnout. It’s about creating a way of living that no longer requires them to constantly override themselves.

What's the difference between stress and burnout?

Stress usually feels like too much.

Too much to do.
Too much pressure.
Too much responsibility.

Burnout often feels like not enough.

Not enough energy.
Not enough motivation.
Not enough capacity to keep going.

Stress tends to feel like your foot is stuck on the accelerator.

Burnout is often what happens when your nervous system eventually pulls the handbrake.

Can burnout affect your nervous system?

Yes.

Burnout isn’t just something that happens in your mind. Chronic stress changes the way your nervous system responds.

Many people find themselves stuck in survival mode, becoming anxious, reactive or unable to relax. Others move into shutdown, where everything feels flat, heavy or overwhelming.

Learning how to regulate your nervous system is an important part of recovering from burnout because it helps your brain and body feel safe enough to begin functioning differently again.

Can burnout affect the way I see myself?

Absolutely.

One of the least talked about parts of burnout is how quickly it changes your self-perception.

Many people begin believing they’re weak, lazy or incapable, when in reality they’re experiencing the effects of prolonged stress.

I often call this the burnout identity – the story you begin telling yourself about who you are because of what you’re going through.

The good news is that burnout is something you’re experiencing. It isn’t who you are.

Can resilience coaching help with burnout?

Resilience coaching isn’t about teaching you to cope with more.

It’s about helping you understand why burnout happened, identifying the patterns that have been keeping you stuck, supporting your nervous system, and helping you build a life that feels sustainable rather than constantly exhausting.

The aim isn’t simply to recover from burnout.

It’s to stop needing burnout to tell you that something has to change.

How long does it take to recover from burnout?

There’s no single timeline because burnout affects everyone differently.

Recovery depends on how long you’ve been under stress, what contributed to the burnout, how supported you are and whether you’re simply resting or also changing the patterns that led you there.

For many people, recovery isn’t about getting back to who they were before burnout. It’s about creating a way of living that no longer requires them to constantly override themselves.