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It's the Little Things

Lately I’ve been realizing how much healing happens in small moments instead of big breakthroughs.

For a long time, I thought that healing had to be instant. Like suddenly becoming a completely different person overnight or finally “fixing” every part of myself that felt heavy, anxious, overwhelmed, or broken.

But honestly, some of the moments that have helped me the most have been incredibly small.

Like making a cup of coffee in the morning when my mind hasn’t fully woken up.

Taking a long hot shower after feeling overstimulated all day. It helps relax all of the tension I have built up in my shoulders.

Lighting a few of my favorite scented candles and reading in a quiet space.

Morning or evening walks while listening to music to help clear my mind.

Just small little things like that make my life feel a little softer and more manageable. I think that healing is sometimes just learning how to create tiny pockets of safety and comfort for yourself again.

What’s been a small moment of healing for you lately?

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #Depression #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #mighty

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What’s your current comfort food obsession?

Mine is anything warm and comforting—pasta, soup, fresh bread, cozy coffee drinks… basically food that feels like a hug right now.

Does comfort food help you on days where you feel too emotionally heavy? Or do you turn to other things for comfort? I'd love to hear your thoughts.

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #ADHD #Depression #selfcare #Neurodiversity #MightyTogether #Food

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I Can’t Always Tell If I’m Resting or Avoiding Life

Resting is something that I do often. It helps me regulate my emotions, recharge my energy, and exist in quiet spaces alone. But there are times when part of me wonders if I’m actually just avoiding everything I’m supposed to be doing.

Rest is supposed to feel restorative, but sometimes it just feels like pausing without relief. Other times, it comes with guilt, shame, and a sense that I’m being lazy. And when I start feeling that way, it only increases my anxiety and makes rest feel almost impossible.

Avoidance can look almost identical on the outside. Staying in bed a little longer than planned. Letting messages from friends sit unanswered in my DMs. Watching the day move forward without me.

Most mornings, I wake up feeling emotionally heavy. I’ll make my coffee, wander back to bed, and sit there letting out a deep sigh I didn’t even realize I was holding. It often feels like every day is the same—same routine, same emotional weight, same quiet repetition of everything I didn’t manage to change yesterday.

It leaves me feeling stagnant, like I’m stuck in a loop of mundanity that I can’t quite step out of

And I don’t like that feeling—sitting idly by while life happens around me. I want change, spontaneity, creativity, and a life that feels full of possibility. Not one where I’m just waiting for something to happen.

Most of the time, whenever I go out, I become overwhelmed from being in public. I’ll go run errands—gas, medication pick-up, groceries—and feel exhausted afterward. So I tell myself that when I get home, I can lay down for a few minutes before picking back up on my day.

But those few minutes turn into hours of stillness.

I don’t get anything accomplished. I tell myself I’ll do it tomorrow, but that rarely happens because the task becomes too overwhelming. So when the day has ended, I don’t feel restored at all. I feel like I had just paused my life without stepping out of it.

It’s strange because rest and avoidance can look the same, but internally they feel completely different.

Real rest, when I can actually access it, feels like my nervous system is slowly unclenching. Like my shoulders drop. Like I can breathe deeper. It feels like I could re-enter life later without punishment.

Avoidance feels tighter. Like I’m frozen in place but still mentally running. Like I’m waiting for some invisible “right moment” to begin, but it never arrives.

And then there are moments where I realize that I’m not actually avoiding life—I’m just overloaded.

Like the times I run those three simple errands and end up sitting in my car in the parking lot for fifteen minutes before going in, just to mentally prepare for it. I have to wait for my anxiety to ease up before I know it’s okay to move forward.

That distinction has been important for me because sometimes what looks like avoidance is really overwhelm. And sometimes what looks like rest is actually disconnection.

I don’t always like admitting that, because it means I can’t rely on simple labels to understand myself. But it also makes things feel less “good” or “bad” because I notice that I tend to turn it into judgment.

If I’m resting, I’m allowed to be quiet. If I’m avoiding, I should do better. But my body doesn’t respond to judgment. It responds to safety.

So I’ve been trying to shift the question. Instead of asking, “Am I resting or avoiding?” I try to ask, “What am I actually asking for right now?”

Sometimes, the answer is real rest. The kind that doesn’t come with guilt attached to it. Sometimes, it’s one step instead of the whole list. Sitting up instead of standing up.

Either way, the answer usually isn’t shame. It’s adjustment.

I can’t always tell when I’m resting or avoiding life. But I’m learning that I don’t have to label it perfectly to respond to it with care.

What does real rest actually feel like in your body?

“My body is not a machine. I do not have to earn rest.” — Unknown

#MentalHealth #selfcare #Anxiety #Neurodiversity #MightyTogether

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Why Learning New Things Feels So Hard Sometimes

I’ve always admired the kind of people who wake up early, stay consistent, master new skills quickly, and somehow never seem to lose motivation halfway through the process. The people who seem naturally disciplined.

Personally, I’ve never really been that type of person.

For most of my life, learning new things has come with equal parts excitement and self-doubt. I always start out inspired and full of ideas and possibilities, only to hit a wall somewhere in the middle where everything feels harder than I expected.

And honestly, it’s usually the middle part where I quit.

I’d convince myself that I was never good at whatever it was I was trying to accomplish, so I’d give up. And the feelings afterward were always the same: guilt, shame, and embarrassment.

I remember so many times at work where I had to learn a new software program or something else unfamiliar. I’d always go into it with such gusto, ready to learn something new, but I also carried a lot of nerves about it too.

Often, in order to learn something new, I need visuals. I need someone to actually show me how to do it. Written instructions I can mostly handle, but auditory information? Forget it.

My ADHD limits my attention span, and when someone is talking, I’m trying so hard to process every word that I end up forgetting the actual information.

There were so many moments at work where I’d get so frustrated over not knowing what I was doing that I’d completely freeze up. Go numb. Lose all interest.

But it was work, so I couldn’t just give up.

I also hate asking people for help. It’s always uncomfortable for me to approach someone because I don’t want them to think I’m stupid or incapable of figuring things out on my own. Usually, I’ll sit there for what feels like hours trying to get the hang of something before finally going down the route of embarrassing myself and asking for help.

There was one program in particular that I just couldn’t understand, so I finally worked up the courage to ask my boss. She wasn’t thrilled, but she showed me how to do it.

Eventually, I got the hang of it and was able to do it with ease from then on.

But I still always doubt my abilities. That’s why I tend to psych myself out of so many situations before I even give myself a real chance.

I think a lot of us assume that if something doesn’t come naturally, then we just aren’t meant for it. But the older I get, the more I realize that learning is supposed to feel uncomfortable sometimes.

I’ve experienced this with writing, cooking, blogging, and even learning how to better care for my mental health.

When I first started writing more seriously, I constantly compared myself to other writers online. I’d read beautifully polished essays and immediately feel discouraged about my own work. I would spend more time criticizing myself than actually writing.

There were days I opened a blank document and instantly felt overwhelmed.

I didn’t feel creative enough. Smart enough. Interesting enough.

And when you already struggle with anxiety or overthinking, learning something new can feel emotionally exhausting because every mistake feels personal.

But eventually, I started noticing something important: the people who improve aren’t always the most talented people — they’re usually the ones who kept going long enough to grow.

That realization changed the way I approached motivation.

I Had to Stop Expecting Instant Progress

One of the biggest things that hurt my motivation was expecting myself to be good immediately. I wanted fast results, quick confidence, and proof that I was capable.

But learning doesn’t work like that.

I remember trying to build routines and structure around my blog, only to become frustrated when I couldn’t instantly create the kind of content I envisioned in my head. Things felt messy before they felt natural.

I still have moments where I read something that I wrote and think it isn’t good enough to publish. Sometimes I trash it completely. Other times, I revise it over and over before finally hitting that button.

But I’ve learned that perfectionism can destroy motivation because it makes progress feel invisible.

Small Progress Matters More Than Big Bursts of Motivation

One thing I’ve realized is that motivation is unreliable. Some days I feel deeply inspired and full of energy. Other days, everything feels extremely difficult.

For a long time, I thought consistency meant showing up at 100% every day.

Now I think consistency sometimes looks like:

writing one paragraph instead of a full article

reading a few pages instead of an entire chapter

trying again tomorrow instead of giving up completely

allowing slower progress without shaming yourself for it

There have been days where I only had enough energy to brainstorm blog titles or organize ideas in my notes app. But even those moments kept me connected to what I cared about.

Learning Feels Different When You Stop Punishing Yourself

Many of us unknowingly criticize ourselves, compare ourselves to people who are years ahead of us, and treat mistakes like proof that we’re failing.

If I wasn’t immediately productive, I felt guilty. If I struggled to focus, I assumed I was falling behind. But I’m starting to notice that I learn better when I’m less afraid of failure. When I feel calmer instead of anxious.

Now I try to do little things to help me stay motivated:

make a cup of coffee before writing

listen to soothing music to help me focus

go outside more to find a little inspiration

keep small snacks nearby to keep my energy up

I try to let the experience feel more comfortable instead of rigid. It might not seem like much, but it’s worked for me.

Motivation Comes in Waves

I think one of the most freeing things I’ve learned is that nobody feels motivated all the time.

We just don’t always see the quiet moments where others struggle too.

There are times when learning feels exciting and energizing. And then there are times where your brain feels too tired, distracted, overstimulated, or emotionally drained.

But some of the most meaningful growth happens through small attempts, messy beginnings, and the decision to keep trying even when confidence isn’t there yet.

I’m still learning how to be patient with myself when things don’t come naturally. I still get frustrated. I still doubt myself sometimes.

But I’m starting to realize that motivation isn’t about feeling inspired every single day. Sometimes it’s just about continuing anyway.

What’s something you’ve been wanting to learn lately, and what’s been the hardest part about staying motivated?

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” — Confucius

#MentalHealth #ADHD #selfcare #Neurodiversity #MightyTogether

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The thoughts we don’t always say out loud

One thing I’ve realized is how easy it is to believe thoughts like:

“I probably said something wrong.”

“They don’t actually like me.”

“I’m falling behind in life.”

Even when there’s no real evidence for it.

I’ve been learning these are often cognitive distortions — fear disguised as truth.

So I’m curious:

What’s a thought your mind has been repeating lately that you’re trying not to fully believe anymore?

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Anxiety #Depression #Autism #AutismSpectrumDisorder #ADHD #MightyTogether

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The Quiet Burnout No One Talks About

The kind of burnout that doesn’t look like burnout

Burnout doesn’t always look obvious. Sometimes it’s invisible. You can look completely fine on the outside, but inside you’re emotionally spiraling.

For me, it looks like functioning but quietly feeling less and less like myself. I think that’s why it took me so long to recognize it in my own life.

For a while, I kept telling myself that I was just tired, overwhelmed, or stuck in a rough patch. But deep down, I knew it was more than that because I could literally feel myself emotionally drifting away from everything around me. Even the things I normally loved started to feel like too much.

When even small things start feeling heavy

There were days where something as simple as taking my medication felt exhausting. The idea of having to reach into my drawer, take them out, grab water, then actually take them felt like too much effort. I’m not happy to admit that because it sounds like laziness at its finest, but when you’re that drained, it’s hard to do anything because your mind feels too overloaded to even get up and do it.

Even reading a book, sometimes I feel anxious and pressured to get through it. I’ll sit there with the book in hand, rereading every sentence because it just doesn’t stick. I have too many thoughts swirling around, and it’s difficult to focus. I don’t know where all the pressure to finish comes from, but it nearly makes me lose interest completely—and that makes me feel even worse.

When your mind is too full to take anything in

When I’m with people, sometimes I lose interest in conversations halfway through because my brain feels too crowded to process external noise. Just the other day, I was out with friends trying to be present and engaging, but inside I was jumping from thought to thought, internally criticizing myself and overthinking everything. I was burnt out from it all. In that moment, I wanted to retreat and be alone just so I wouldn’t feel like I was affecting other people’s experience.

I always want to be alone, but the thing with that is it creates loneliness. That strange contradiction is one of the hardest parts.

When you’re still functioning, but not okay

I think people imagine burnout as something obvious, but mine is quiet. I still function, show up, and complete responsibilities, but I feel emotionally flattened. Like I’ve been surviving for so long that my mind no longer knows how to really rest.

Sometimes when I’m sitting at my computer trying to write—something that normally brings me joy and comfort—I feel disconnected from my own thoughts. I’ll just stare at the screen with this overwhelming restlessness, waiting for inspiration to strike. I feel this utter emptiness. Like my brain has reached full capacity and nothing else can get in.

And honestly, that scares me more than a breakdown does, because it’s easier to recognize obvious pain. It’s harder to notice the slow emotional fading that happens when you’ve been carrying heaviness for too long.

The slow emotional fading you don’t notice at first

There are times when I’m sitting in complete silence and wonder when the last time I genuinely felt happy or excited about anything was. I feel like it’s rare for those emotions to surface lately. I’m always too mentally exhausted, and it’s hard to remember what joy feels like—the feeling of it, the shift in it. Not being able to feel that makes me feel so disconnected from my own life.

Neurodivergence, overstimulation, and invisible exhaustion

I think burnout can feel especially confusing for neurodivergent and sensitive people because many of us are already used to operating in a constant state of mental overstimulation. We become so accustomed to masking, overthinking, self-monitoring, and pushing through discomfort that exhaustion starts feeling normal.

For me, burnout looks like not being fully present. I’ll make coffee, clean around the house, go through my routine, but I never feel connected to any of it. It’s like living in survival mode without fully noticing you’re there.

The guilt of still functioning

There have been moments where I’ve felt guilty for being exhausted because technically, I was still functioning. I wasn’t falling apart publicly. I wasn’t incapable of doing things. So I convinced myself I had no reason to complain or feel burnt out.

I think that many of us forget that functioning doesn’t mean the same as being okay. Especially those of us who learned early on to push through discomfort instead of listening to ourselves.

The quietest form of burnout

I’m learning that burnout doesn’t need to become catastrophic before it deserves attention. I’ve realized that I don’t need to completely collapse to admit that I’m overwhelmed. I’m noticing that burnout settles into your life over time, slowly dimming the parts of you until one day you look around and barely recognize yourself inside your own routines.

I think healing begins the moment we stop treating our exhaustion like something we have to earn the right to feel.

Have you ever felt exhausted in a way that looked “fine” from the outside—but quietly disconnected you from yourself inside?

“Some of the deepest exhaustion is the kind no one else can see—where you are still functioning, but slowly disappearing inside yourself.

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #ADHD #Neurodiversity #Autism #Depression #MightyTogether

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The Mental Exhaustion of Overanalyzing Every Social Interaction

There’s an exhaustion that comes with constantly thinking about how you’re coming across that most people never see.

There are so many doubts, worries, and insecurities running through my mind. I become so much in my head that I completely forget how to be present. I’m too deep in thought about my facial expressions, my tone, my gestures, and wondering if I’m being engaging enough or if I’m being too much.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve sat in my car before going out to a social gathering, mentally preparing myself first. Thinking about who’s going to be there. What conversations might happen. Whether I’ll be talkative or quiet that day. Sometimes I’ll even rehearse little things in my head beforehand just so I don’t feel awkward once I’m actually there.

And even then, I still overthink everything once I walk in.

On the outside, I generally look like I’m fine. I can hold my own, but not with steady grace. I can falter at a moment’s notice if my mind takes over the situation too much and convinces me that I’m a problem.

One time I was sitting at dinner with a group of friends, trying so hard to stay engaged in the conversation. I was smiling, laughing, and contributing when I could. But mentally, I was analyzing myself. Thinking about whether I was making enough eye contact or wondering if I sounded interesting enough.

The worst part about it is that even while in deep conversation, I’m thinking about myself, not the other person. I was talking with one friend, trying to stay engaged in what they were saying, but internally I’m thinking about how I’m coming across. I lock in on their eyes, but even then I’m thinking about which eye to look at, or how long to hold it before breaking away. It’s not that I’m not paying attention, because I am—it’s just that I’m also focused heavily on how I’m coming across.

Most people don’t notice the internal observations I’m making. They don’t see the pain behind the smile or the restlessness behind the eyes. It’s so exhausting playing two people at once—one who is there, and one who is mentally checked out on their own accord.

During that conversation with my friend, I remember seeing their mouth and hearing what they were saying, but inside I was planning out the next thing I would say. And the more I thought about it, the more awkward I became. I could feel my chest tighten, my palms sweat, and that overwhelming numbing feeling that consumes my body. It’s like an immediate internal vibration—a genuine shock to the system where I’m all of a sudden hyper-alert and incredibly anxious.

Essentially, I froze. I always freeze up during moments of long silence or moments of drawing nothing but blanks.

I feel so much pressure to keep the conversation going. I’ve always put so much pressure on myself to perform well, to not be dull, to be someone everyone wants to be around. That’s my mindset all of the time. I can’t help but automatically think about it.

As always, I replay the situation over and over in my mind, thinking about how I was and how I should’ve been. I try to rewrite the narrative and think that I came across as strong, talkative, and social, but that’s rarely the case.

My brain turns tiny moments into evidence that I’m awkward, distant, strange, too emotional, or somehow failing socially without meaning to.

And I know logically most people are probably not analyzing me nearly as hard as I analyze myself. But in the moment, it feels real. My brain treats every small interaction like something I need to review.

If someone’s energy shifts slightly, I notice. If a text sounds different, I notice. And if I leave a conversation feeling even slightly off, my mind latches onto it immediately.

I think I became hyperaware of people at a very young age—very sensitive to moods, expressions, tones, and reactions. Somewhere along the way, I learned to constantly monitor myself in response to them.

I spent years thinking that if I could just perfectly manage how I came across, then maybe I’d finally feel comfortable around people. But honestly, all it did was make me exhausted. Because there’s no rest when you’re constantly observing yourself.

I think that’s why being alone can feel like relief for me. It’s not because I don’t love being around my selective group of people, it’s because my mind finally gets a break from being perceived.

Lately, I’ve been trying really hard not to assume that every silence means something about me. Trying not to immediately turn inward every time I feel awkward for half a second. It’s a difficult process, but I’m slowly letting go of my uncertainties little by little.

Those moments now feel bigger to me than they probably sound.

Because for too long, I didn’t know how to exist around people without feeling like I had to constantly manage who I was while doing it.

What parts of your personality feel shaped by how you think others see you?

“Care about what other people think and you will always be their prisoner.” — Lao Tzu

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Anxiety #ADHD #AutismSpectrumDisorder #SocialAnxiety #MightyTogether

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There but not really there

I didn’t realize how often I’m “on” socially until I notice how drained I feel afterward.

It's not because I didn't enjoy it. It's because of how much thinking I do while I'm in it.

Anyone else relate to that feeling of being physically present but mentally overanalyzing everything?

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #Anxiety #Depression #MightyTogether

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Some days feel heavier than others, even when nothing “big” is happening.

Today I’m curious—what has your mind felt like lately?

You don’t have to explain it perfectly. Just whatever words come to mind.

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Anxiety #Depression #ADHD #Autism #MightyTogether

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Learning to Comfort Myself Instead of Criticizing Myself

For most of my life, criticism has felt more natural to me than comfort. It’s felt like an automatic reaction rather than something thought out. Immediate. Intense. Familiar.

My inner critic attacks my every thought, my every word, my every move. I’ve followed this pattern of negativity and self-hatred for as long as I can remember.

I think it stems from never feeling comfortable in my own skin. I grew up thinking there was something wrong with me because I felt so different from my peers. It felt like I didn’t belong. Like I never quite fit into the picture. And that feeling of loneliness made me ashamed of myself.

I judged myself for being too sensitive, too quiet, too distant. From the beginning, I made myself invisible by choice because I thought I wasn’t likeable or acceptable for my personality.

When I’m in a group socializing, I feel extremely awkward. Like I’m standing there incessantly rubbing my sweaty palms together, my facial expressions can often indicate that I’m unwell, and I have trouble speaking at all. I never know when to jump into conversation because I’m mentally preparing for what to say, how to say it, and how to act while doing so. And then, everything faulters. I end up staying quiet the whole time, just consciously in my thoughts, hating myself for not being “normal.” Why do I have to constantly put myself down when I do anything? It’s a question that’s boggled my mind for years.

I believed I was dull, boring, and rather plain. I felt like I just wasn’t good at anything—whether it was a hobby like art or making new friends. I would retreat inward and treat myself cruelly because of it.

There are so many times that great opportunities passed me by because of the intense negativity towards myself. I’d psych myself out of these opportunities telling myself that I’m not good enough, smart enough, or capable enough to handle something bigger for me. There were a couple of moments that I had interviews for dream jobs. One of them being a career in hospitality public relations.

I’ve always had a passion for gastronomy and tourism, and it was a job I really wanted to vie for. After hours, heck days, of mentally trying to prepare, I’d put myself down with those thoughts. I showed up to the interview (gave myself a pat on the back for at least walking in) and got through each question. But when I answered, my voice shook, my demeanor was unsteady, and my mind drifted, automatically criticizing my every word. Afterward, I immediately started crying and yelling at myself for being so awkward and so obviously uncomfortable.

There are times when I shrink myself so small that I literally believe every negative thought about me. I’ll sit there dwelling in certain scenarios from the past or the present and make myself out to be the enemy regardless of the situation.

What’s been difficult to realize is how unfamiliar gentleness feels to me now. It’s not because I don’t need it, but because criticism became the language I learned to speak to myself in.

Comfort can feel foreign sometimes. Even uncomfortable. There are moments where I try to reassure myself and immediately feel resistance, like my mind doesn’t fully believe I deserve kindness.

In most situations I’m generally uncomfortable. Like if someone compliments me, I’ll try my best to steer away from the compliment and continue the conversation. I shy away. I’ve never known how to receive them well because I genuinely don’t believe what someone is telling me because deep down I feel unworthy. And then I realize just how harsh my inner critic is. It won’t even let me accept a simple compliment. I’m noticing just how harsh my self-talk sounds out loud. I practically cringe at the thought.

I’m realizing that when you spend years tearing yourself apart internally, compassion doesn’t come naturally overnight. It has to be practiced repeatedly.

I’m trying to unlearn the idea that I need to earn kindness from myself.

For so long, I believed comfort came from rest after constant productivity. But the truth is, I’ve spent years withholding compassion from myself during the moments when I needed it most.

I’m noticing how quickly my mind moves toward blame when something goes wrong. How instinctively I criticize myself for being emotional, overwhelmed, anxious, or withdrawn. It happens in an instant and I barely realize I’m doing it.

It feels unnatural for me to experience kindness towards myself. Because when criticism has been your default for years, compassion feels almost suspicious.

But I don’t want my inner voice to keep sounding like someone I’m afraid of. I want to learn how to speak to myself with softness instead of shame. With understanding instead of punishment.

I’m still unsure how to go about it, but I know that with practice, patience, and learning to really love myself, I’ll get there.

“Talk to yourself like someone you love.” — Brené Brown

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Depression #ADHD #Anxiety #GeneralizedAnxietyDisorder #Autism #MightyTogether

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