Written by Alicia Murray.
The term “self-care” has become a go-to prescription for nearly every mental health struggle — especially for burnout, anxiety, and emotional exhaustion. But if you’ve ever followed all the self-care advice, only to still feel overwhelmed, disconnected, or numb… you’re not broken. You’re human — and the problem isn’t you. It’s that “self-care” as we know it often doesn’t go deep enough.
The truth is: self-care isn’t working anymore — not because the concept is flawed, but because what passes for self-care has been diluted, oversimplified, and divorced from the deeper emotional needs it was supposed to serve.
The Problem with “Treat Yourself” Culture
So much of what’s labeled self-care is transactional and surface-level: spa days, face masks, digital detoxes. While those things can feel good in the moment, they don’t address what’s underneath the burnout or dysregulation.
Here’s what therapists often hear:
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“I took the day off, but I still feel empty.”
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“I went for a walk, but I still feel disconnected.”
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“I tried journaling, but the anxiety is still there.”
Why? Because real self-care is nervous system care, boundary care, relational care, and values-based living. And that’s much more complex than what most social media posts suggest.
When “Self-Care” Becomes a Distraction
Sometimes, traditional self-care routines become just another way to avoid — avoid hard conversations, unprocessed grief, or chronic stressors we don’t know how to change. The bubble bath becomes a bandaid on a deeper wound.
And for many, especially those with trauma or neurodivergence, surface-level self-care can actually feel disconnected from what they truly need — and even shame-inducing when it doesn’t “work.”
If you’ve been here, you’re not doing self-care wrong. You’re just ready for something deeper.
What Real Self-Care Looks Like (It’s Not Always Pretty)
Real self-care is often quiet, uncomfortable, and deeply personal. It might look like:
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Saying no and sitting with the guilt instead of overcommitting
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Ending a relationship that drains you — even if it’s familiar
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Setting boundaries with family, even when it causes conflict
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Going to therapy and facing emotions you’ve numbed for years
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Choosing rest even when productivity culture says you haven’t “earned it”
In short, real self-care is repair, not retreat. It’s about addressing the source of the pain — not just treating the symptoms.
How Therapy Can Support Sustainable Self-Care
A skilled therapist can help you figure out:
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What you actually need to feel safe, rested, and connected
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Why certain self-care efforts feel empty or ineffective
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How to identify burnout before it becomes immobilizing
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What beliefs are getting in the way of asking for help
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How to make self-care feel nourishing, not performative
Therapy helps connect the dots between your nervous system, your history, and your current overwhelm — so self-care becomes something you feel, not something you “do right.”
You Deserve More Than Bubble Baths
There’s nothing wrong with doing nice things for yourself. But when self-care becomes a checklist instead of a lifeline, it’s time to reevaluate. You deserve self-care that truly cares for the whole you — body, mind, and heart.
Begin Healing With Convenient Counseling Services
We specialize in trauma-informed, compassionate care for burnout, anxiety, and emotional regulation. Our therapists offer:
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Online and in-person options across NY
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A gentle, attuned approach at your pace
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Tools to build safety, connection, and self-trust
If you’re ready to get started, visit our therapy for anxiety page to learn more detailed information about our approach, or contact us to set up an appointment.


