Categories: In Print / Parenting Our Children
Burnout: A Women’s Epidemic?

“What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
Do you ever end (or start) the day feeling completely overwhelmed and exhausted by everything you have to do? Do you still worry that whatever you are doing – which is A LOT – is not enough?
Chances are, if you are a woman, you answered “yes!”
Sisters Emily and Amelia Nagoski explore the concept of burnout and its specific links to women’s health in their recent book, Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle. They write, “You’ve heard the usual advice over and over: exercise, green smoothies, self-compassion, coloring books, mindfulness, bubble baths, gratitude… You’ve probably tried a lot of it. So have we. And sometimes it helps, at least for a while. But then the kids are struggling in school or our partner needs support through a difficulty or a new work project lands in our laps, and we think, I’ll do the self-care thing as soon as I finish this.”
The sisters go on to describe how one of them ended up in the hospital, actually crippled by stress. While she believed she was having a heart attack, in reality her body was shutting down because of the intense amount of stress she was feeling, had felt, and likely was going to continue to feel. If stress was turning into a medical issue, she decided to look to science to understand how to solve, or at the very least, reduce the problem.
What they discovered is that most women try very hard to reduce their stress and take care of themselves. In fact, they try so hard they end up feeling stressed that they are not taking care of themselves enough!
They explain, “The problem is not that we aren’t trying. The problem isn’t that we don’t know how. The problem is the world has turned ‘wellness’ into yet another goal everyone ‘should’ strive for, but only people with time and money and nannies and yachts and Oprah’s phone number can actually achieve… this book is different from anything else you’ll read about burnout. We’ll figure out what wellness can look like in your real life, and we’ll confront the barriers that stand between you and your own well-being. We’ll put those barriers in context, like landmarks on a map, so we can find paths around and over and through them – or sometimes just blow them to smithereens.”
Burnout is a term that has three layers:
- emotional exhaustion – the fatigue that comes with caring too much, for too long.
- depersonalization – the depletion of empathy, caring, and compassion.
- decreased sense of accomplishment – an unconquerable sense of futility: feeling that nothing you do makes any difference.


June 26, 2026 







