What to Do When Pushing Through the Pain Stops Working

 
Leaf floating on still water, symbolizing physical and emotional exhaustion after burnout or chronic pain flare-ups — and the need for nervous system recovery.
 

You’ve Been Holding It Together for a Long Time—Until Now

You’ve powered through a lot — deadlines, caregiving, flare-ups, early mornings after sleepless nights. You’ve found workarounds, gritted your teeth, and kept showing up. Maybe people even say, “I don’t know how you do it.

But lately, something’s shifted.

You’re crashing harder. Recovery takes longer. The usual strategies don’t seem to be working. Even your high-effort days leave you feeling behind. And while you’re used to holding it all together, now… it’s holding you back.

Hear this:

You’re not doing anything wrong. But your body — and your nervous system — might be asking for something different.

 
Cat resting on a stack of papers, representing mental exhaustion, high-functioning burnout, and the fatigue that follows chronic stress or overproductivity.
 

Why Pushing Through Stops Working (Even for the Most Resilient People)

Here’s what I know from years of working with chronic pain clients:

Pushing through works — until it doesn’t.

At first, it feels like resilience. Discipline. Maybe even pride.

“I can power through.”
“Other people have it worse.”
“I just need to push a little harder.”

But over time, that constant override of your body’s signals takes a toll, especially when pain is part of the picture.

When you push through pain, your nervous system ramps up. Your body kicks into stress-response mode, flooding you with energy in the short term — but depleting your reserves in the long term. This cycle increases pain sensitivity, delays recovery, and can even cause flare-ups or fatigue crashes after high-output days.

This is what many people call the “boom and bust cycle” — where you push hard on a good day, then crash hard afterward. And while it can feel like a motivation problem, it’s often a nervous system regulation issue. (Read more about how pain can affect focus and energy.)

You're not weak — your body is just trying to protect you.

 
Silhouette of a plant against a sunset sky, symbolizing the body's natural protective response and the importance of nervous system regulation during stress and burnout recovery.​

You’re not weak.

Your body is just trying to protect you.

 

Signs It Might Be Time for a Different Kind of Support

High-functioning people are often the last to notice they’re overextended — or the first to blame themselves when things stop working. But there are patterns that show up again and again in people who’ve been powering through pain for too long.

Here are a few signs it might be time to change your approach:

  • You’re crashing harder after high-output days — physically, mentally, or both  

  • You can’t count on your energy anymore; it feels unpredictable or fragile  

  • Pain or fatigue is interfering with your work, caregiving, or relationships  

  • You’re starting to feel resentful toward your body — or like it’s holding you back  

  • You’ve done all the medical things… and you’re still stuck  

  • You’re tired of managing this alone, but you’re not sure what kind of support would actually help


What Effective Support Really Looks Like

 
Woman wearing a yellow knit cap standing on a forest trail, symbolizing the strength of pausing, reevaluating, and seeking nervous system-informed support for burnout or chronic pain.
 

If pushing through hasn’t been working, you don’t need more grit — you need support that helps your nervous system settle, your energy stabilize, and your body stop operating in crisis mode.

Here’s what that kind of support can look like:

  • Science-backed therapy tailored to pain and fatigue — not just talk therapy, but structured care that integrates tools from cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and nervous system regulation techniques  

  • Collaborative goal-setting — we’ll identify what matters most to you (energy, function, sleep, movement, etc.) and work toward it together  

  • Brief, targeted options available — like the Empowered Relief class (a one-session pain management workshop developed at Stanford) or short-term therapy focused on functional outcomes  

  • Support that respects your time and your strengths — no fluff, no pressure to open up more than you want to, no dragging things out

This isn’t about “fixing” you — it’s about giving your system a new playbook. And it works best when you don’t wait for a full crash to ask for help.

Learn more about therapy for chronic pain

Explore the Empowered Relief class


You Don’t Have to Do This the Hard Way Anymore

If you’re here, you’ve probably already done the hard part — showing up, staying strong, doing everything you’re supposed to. But pushing through doesn’t have to be your only option anymore.

Support exists that’s practical, personalized, and designed for people like you — people who function well until they suddenly can’t. People who are ready to feel better, not just tougher.

Whether you’re burned out, stuck in a flare-up cycle, or just tired of doing this alone — you don’t have to figure it out by yourself.

Explore More of What I Have to Offer

Take the Empowered Relief Class

Schedule a Free Consultation

 
Long-coated black dog resting in a wooded area, symbolizing grounded strength, nervous system safety, and the healing power of stillness.

You don’t have to crash first to course-correct.

Your body isn’t failing. It’s simply asking for something different.

 
 
 

P.S. Want to Nerd Out?

If you're curious about how pain, pacing, and nervous system regulation actually work, here are a few research-backed reads:

  • Nijs et al. (2012)How to explain central sensitization to patients with ‘unexplained’ chronic musculoskeletal pain. Read it here.

    • (Great for understanding why the boom-bust cycle happens physiologically.)

  • Andrews et al. (2012)A pilot study of a pain self-management group using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for persistent pain in primary care. Read it here.

    • (Shows how brief, skills-based interventions can improve pain-related function.)

  • Kindler et al. (2011)Central Sensitization and Abnormal Pain Modulation in Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain. Read it here.

    • (Overview of nervous system dysregulation and its impact on chronic pain and recovery.)

 

Whether you’re burned out from trying “everything” or just starting to explore what’s possible — I’m glad you landed here.


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