EP55 When Survival Mode Becomes Your Default

EP55 When Survival Mode Becomes Your Default

You don’t have to crash to realize you’ve been living in survival mode. Sometimes, it’s the quiet unraveling — the exhaustion, the tears that come out of nowhere, the numbness that replaces joy — that whispers,“You can’t live like this anymore.” This episode is for the moms who are ready to stop surviving and start feeling safe again.

For a long time, I thought exhaustion was just part of life.

I’d wake up tired, rush through the day, hold it all together for everyone else, collapse at night — and call that normal.

I told myself,

“I’m just busy. I’m just tired. This is motherhood.”

But beneath that, my body was running on adrenaline — constantly scanning, planning, anticipating.

And the scariest part?

It started to feel normal.

Chaos felt familiar.

Calm felt foreign.

Stillness felt unsafe.

That’s how survival mode works — it convinces you that constant motion is the only way to stay safe.

For me, it showed up as exhaustion I couldn’t push through anymore.

Tears that came out of nowhere.

A heaviness I couldn’t name.

I was grateful, but numb.

That was my wake-up call.

Not a dramatic breakdown — but a slow unraveling that whispered,

“You can’t live like this anymore.”

At first, I tried to fix it the only way I knew how — by doing more.

But what I really needed was less.

So I started small.

One slow breath before opening my laptop.

A pause before saying yes.

Sitting in my car after drop-off with no agenda — just breathing.

These moments seemed insignificant, but they were teaching my body a new language: safety.

Over time, calm stopped feeling threatening.

Stillness stopped feeling wrong.

And my body — the same one that had lived in hypervigilance — finally started to exhale.

Healing didn’t look like a glow-up.

It looked like making coffee without rushing.

Laughing with my kids without thinking about what’s next.

Enjoying silence without needing to fill it.

Because healing isn’t about doing more — it’s about learning how to be.

To let peace become familiar again.

If you’ve been living in survival mode for so long that you’ve forgotten what calm feels like — please know, you’re not failing.

You’re recalibrating.

And it starts with one gentle breath at a time.