When Your Body Keeps the Score of Doing Too Much: Burnout, the Nervous System, and the Multi-Passionate Life
You know how to hold a lot at once. There's the project you're finishing, the one you're starting, the collaboration you said yes to because it genuinely excites you. You are someone who lives wide. Someone who contains multitudes.
But your body might be trying to tell you something.
As a therapist in Los Angeles who is also an artist and entrepreneur, I know this terrain from the inside — including what it feels like to keep it all together through the installation, the deadline, the launch, and then finally get sick the moment it's over.
This is for you.
Leaving the Jehovah's Witnesses: What Happens to Your Nervous System After You Go
I was fifteen, sitting at the park with friends, when I understood, all at once, that my queerness would eventually cost me everyone at that park and more. What I didn't have words for then is what I've spent years understanding: this is exactly what happens to the nervous system when it encounters a threat too large to respond to openly. And it holds that weight for a very long time.
Why Talk Therapy Alone Isn't Working for High-Achieving Professionals — And What to Try Instead
You've done the work. You've named the patterns, traced the wounds, and built real insight into why you are the way you are. And yet — something still feels stuck. The anxiety still spikes. The disconnection is still there. The exhaustion doesn't lift no matter how well you understand it. If this sounds familiar, you're not failing at therapy. You may simply have hit the ceiling of what talking alone can reach.