We rarely talk about the human cost of holding it all together.
We talk about duty, hustle, providing. We even talk about burnout — every now and then — as if exhaustion is the ultimate price tag of life. But there’s something even quieter, more corrosive, and harder to measure than fatigue.
What follows is hard for me to write, because I’ve allowed this to happen to me over and over again. There’s also a big, hard qualification to all of this. I believe in being a provider. I believe in showing up for my wife and kids (and others) in the way they need and even expect.
But, the hard thing is what gets left behind when you allow your whole identity to become provider. It’s the part of you that, if not safeguarded, withers and dies when every decision filters through financial pressure, family responsibility, and the (un)spoken belief that your worth is defined by what you can carry without complaint.
Spoiler alert: your worth is NOT defined by what you carry without complaint.
This isn’t a story about regret, though. It’s a field report, of sorts, from down in the trenches, from a guy who has said yes way too many times, who’s damaged friendships by being too quick to jump in, who’s made a habit of hiding panic behind performance, and who’s finally starting to see the damage not just in dramatic, crash-and-burn episodes but also in the quiet erosion of joy, health, and self.
The Symptoms
First, let’s draw a distinction. Some people carry a permanent scowl ; that kind of baseline bitterness immune to joy and dad jokes. I work with someone like that. She’s angry all the time. She’s even angry when her granddaughter doesn’t visit, and somehow angrier when she stays too long. That’s not what I’m talking about here.
I’m talking about people who are usually even-keeled — maybe even leaning toward optimistic — but start showing signs that something’s off: irritability, emotional distance, micro-guilt, quiet resentment, restless nights, decision fatigue, and a kind of phantom joylessness in moments that should bring calm and peace.
I’ve been there. Done that.
That’s why I list them all. I’ve been living them. I wasn’t burned out. I was still “getting the job done.” Still cracking jokes, still sharp on Teams calls. But inside? Empty. Running on fumes.
What’s worse? There wasn’t like this moment where everything just broke. That’s the sadistic trick of it. The damage over decades isn’t loud. It creeps in. One too many late nights. One too many problems to solve for someone — everyone — else. One too few mornings waking up and actually feeling like yourself.
It’s slow and quiet. Death by a thousand paper cuts, and it doesn’t even look like a breakdown. What it looks like is doing the dishes while your chest caves in, or donning your workout clothes then sitting on the couch and doom-scrolling social media for an hour. It’s like a half-laugh when something used to make you cry from laughing so hard.
It looks like distance.
The Slide
Big events often knock us off our moorings in one, fell swoop, and somehow feel different. The slide, though, is more insidious.
It always starts small.
- You skip one run, then another, and another, always telling yourself you’ll go tomorrow.
- You stop texting friends back, and not because you’re upset, just because the idea of holding something else, even a conversation, feels too heavy.
- You say no to something you used to enjoy and feel a strange sense of relief.
- You start sleeping a little later, or even worse, you sleep less and spend more time on your phone.
- You eat standing up.
- Have I mentioned doom-scroll yet? It’s no longer about connecting, laughing, or learning, just numbing.
You’re short with your spouse for wanting to connect or your kids for asking to play, and it’s not because you don’t love them, but because even joy itself feels like effort. Then, later, you hate yourself for snapping.
- Work still gets done.
- Smiles still happen.
- People still think you’re doing fine.
But you know what’s going on. You’re not spiraling; at least not yet. You’re just sliding, slowly and quietly away from the parts of yourself that once upon a time you valued, maybe even promised yourself to protect.
The Fork
I woke up a few weeks ago, panic gripping my chest. It was 1:38 am. Sometimes the moments are fleeting when we see ourselves slipping. Sometimes, it’s a panic attack that jerks you out of precious sleep and makes you sit on the floor until after 3:00 am to get a grip.
You either go numb and disappear beneath the weight. . .
Or you claw your way toward the surface without knowing if the air up there will be any better.
How I wish this was the part where everything gets better.
It isn’t.
This is the part where you decide to fight for the part of yourself that remembers how to feel.
The Choice to Return
There’s no clean path back to feeling.
Like the slide, there’s not much fanfare that accompanies the process and often no major breakthroughs or epiphanies that make the weight disappear. Mostly, it starts the way the slide does: quietly.
When the inner child starts calling, you can either suppress it or embrace it. It might happen when you hear yourself laugh, like really laugh, for the first time in weeks (or months). You might look in the mirror and admit how much you miss yourself.
And that’s the moment; one of them anyway.
For most regular folk, the choice isn’t quitting a job, vanishing into the woods (or a monastery), or taking two weeks to just read at a quiet retreat in the mountains. (Bill Gates, I’m looking at you.)
It’s smaller. It’s deciding that showing up for yourself is of greater value than enduring exhaustion, disappointment, and even fear.
It’s taking time to step away from the endless list of things you think you owe others, and realizing that in the pursuit of balancing the books, you’ve written yourself and your wellbeing completely out of the equation.
This is where you start to reclaim tiny bits of space.
- Go for a walk without headphones.
- Say no to something that doesn’t fit, and don’t apologize. (This one is so hard for me.)
- Text a friend at random just because you want to.
- Remember that joy is what makes life livable, not some kind of reward for “finishing your work.”
The return to yourself will, at times (maybe most of the time), feel almost imperceptible.
The self you return to might not be the version others were expecting, or maybe you show up exactly as the person they’ve been missing. You might be surprised by the expectations you meet — not out of obligation — but because they finally line up with who you are.
Field Notes: Survival Tactics from the Trenches
I’m not writing this from the Guru Mountaintop. Honestly, I’m still somewhere in the canyon, testing footholds, and trying not to trip over my own pride. I do, however, have a few survival tactics that I’m just starting to put into practice as I stumble up the hill.
- Choose presence over productivity (sometimes). I took my youngest and his friend to the zoo when I had every reason to keep working. My kids joke that my spirit animal must be the three-toed sloth to offset my “always on” approach to life. A the zoo, the two-toed sloth was slothing. The baby colobus monkey clung to its mother but made a great show for the zoo patrons. For just over two short hours, I remembered who I am outside of deadlines and deliverables. That reset time is valuable time.
- Declare emotional bankruptcy when you need to. If the ledger’s full of overdrawn accounts (frustration, fatigue, and guilt are a few of my favorites), say it out loud. Literally. You should say it out loud to someone: a spouse, a friend, a therapist, or even a rubber duck. Hiding it hasn’t and won’t make you stronger. It might have made you quieter or angrier. Either way, the emotional overdraft is killing you.
- Build tiny habits that reconnect you to yourself. Tiny habits are never grand, sweeping gestures. They look like five quiet minutes in the morning without a screen. One of my favorite things to do when I’m feeling like I’m on the slide again is to listen to a favorite piece of music with my eyes closed. If you’ve got a few more minutes, maybe it’s a walk around the block where the only goal is to see the sky and feel the air. These things won’t fix everything, but they will remind you that you are still in there.
- Give yourself credit for climbing with no map. You’re not lazy or weak. You’re exhausted from carrying the real and perceived expectations of other people, the pressure, and unspoken fears.
Before you burn yourself alive just to keep other people warm, ask: Have I given myself even a fraction of what I gave away today?
For me, the answer to that question on most days is no. I haven’t. And when the answer is no, you have to stop waiting for permission.
Start smaller than you think, but return faster than you feel comfortable. Otherwise, comfort becomes complacency, and complacency is right back on the slide.
You’re not here to disappear beneath the weight of providing.
You’re here to live, so go do it.
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