Are you experiencing burnout?
Regain your energy and fulfillment in work and relationships
Emotional Burnout
Are ongoing stressors like relationship difficulties, financial strain, health concerns, caregiving, parenting, lack of support, or a combination of these taking a toll?
Do you feel mentally, emotionally, or physically drained?
Are you noticing that you are more irritable than usual?
Is it hard to find the motivation to do anything?
Do you experience a sense of emptiness or feeling lost?
Emotional burnout can lead us to withdraw from life and relationships, feel irritable, hopeless, and anxious. It can also lead to physical symptoms such as fatigue and headaches.
Burnout at Work
Do you find that where you used to feel successful, driven, and competent, you are now feeling exhausted, behind, and defeated? At times, burnout can lead to difficulty focusing, self-doubt, and feelings of worthlessness.
There are a number of reasons why we experience burnout at work including:
A toxic work culture, a difficult boss, long hours, the expectation that you are always available, perfectionism, lack of support, being chronically undervalued
The demands of work can make it easy to overlook the signals our mind and body are sending, and to keep pushing despite the cost to our well-being. A healthy work-life balance can feel out of reach.
Burnout at this level isn't just about work, it's about identity. When you've defined yourself by your productivity and your role and suddenly, you can't sustain either, it raises serious and difficult questions.
Questions like:
Who am I if I'm not performing?
What do I actually want?
Is this sustainable?
Do I even want it to be?
In therapy, we don't just treat the symptoms like exhaustion and focus. We get curious about what got you here and what you actually want your life to look and feel like.
"Burnout is the body's way of saying, ‘The way you've been living isn't working.’ Therapy is how we figure out what will."
-Ruth
What we work on together:
Understanding the deeper patterns driving what is wearing you down.
Rebuilding your relationship with rest and limits.
Reconnecting to what actually matters to you, not what you 'should' want.
Creating a sustainable way of being in your work and life.
Frequently Asked Questions
-
Therapy can treat burnout, especially when rest alone hasn't helped. Ruth Weinberg, a Denver therapist, notes that burnout is often a crisis of identity, not just exhaustion. For example, when high-functioning people have defined themselves by their productivity and suddenly can't sustain it, it can lead to a crisis. Ruth's therapy addresses the circumstances and patterns that led you to burn out and helps you figure out what you actually want and how to make it happen.
-
Ruth uses the phrase to describe what happens when your sense of self is built around performance and role and then those things collapse. The questions that surface (Who am I if I'm not producing? Is this sustainable?) aren't questions that rest answers. They are what Ruth's approach is built for, helping clients in Denver and across Colorado and South Carolina reconnect with what actually matters.
-
There is no fixed timeline for burnout therapy. It depends on your current situation, how long underlying patterns have been in place and what goals feel meaningful to you. Some clients find real relief within a few months; others do longer work to rebuild from the ground up. The free 30-minute consultation is a good place to discuss what makes sense for your situation.
-
Sometimes, yes, leaving a toxic job or a harmful relationship can genuinely help.
For a lot of people however, the burnout follows them. Burnout isn't always just about where you are. It's also about the patterns you bring to every situation. You might have difficulty saying no, or carry the belief that your value is tied to how much you produce. Or possibly you feel that if you don't stay on top of everything, something will fall apart.
If those patterns are doing the driving, a new job or a new relationship tends to recreate the same exhaustion eventually. Leaving buys space, but it doesn't change what's underneath.
If your situation is harmful, changing it matters, but therapy can hold both at once: what's happening in your environment and what's happening inside you. You don't have to choose between the two.
Ruth Weinberg specializes in burnout therapy in Denver, across Colorado, and South Carolina via telehealth.
-
Emotional burnout is more than exhaustion.
When emotional burnout sets in, your confidence starts to erode, you second-guess decisions, or your memory might get fuzzy. Things you used to care about feel flat or out of reach. Often the whole thing starts to feel like a personal failing rather than a response to a situation that's been too much for too long.
It looks different depending on the person. Numbness, irritability, or a persistent low-grade sense that something is wrong are all possible ways burnout could look. It's especially common in high-performers, caregivers, and anyone who's been holding a lot while still looking completely fine on the outside.
The work starts with understanding what's underneath it, not just how to manage symptoms.
Ruth Weinberg works with people experiencing burnout in Denver and via telehealth in Colorado and South Carolina.