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Feeling Anxious and Exhausted: Understanding Anxiety Numbness

You’re Not Failing. You’re Just Fried.

A woman came up to me after one of my keynotes recently. She looked sharp, put together, confident. You’d never know anything was wrong—until she quietly said, “I haven’t really felt like myself in over a year. I’m anxious all the time. I’m exhausted. And honestly… I don’t feel much of anything anymore.”

And I’ve heard that sentence—or some version of it—more times than I can count.

She’s not alone. You’re not alone. And if you’ve been feeling this way, there’s nothing wrong with you. What’s wrong is the invisible pressure you’re carrying. The pace. The noise. The chronic stress.

We’ve normalized burnout. We’ve normalized mental overload. But what we haven’t normalized is stopping long enough to ask ourselves—is this how I want to feel?

The Hidden Mental Health Crisis No One Prepared You For

Let’s be honest. No one prepared us for this world.

We weren’t raised to manage 24/7 notifications, financial instability, career uncertainty, and a culture of comparison—all at once. We weren’t trained to process a global pandemic, economic upheaval, and nonstop change without pause. And yet, we’ve adapted. Kind of.

The truth is, most people today are running on empty—mentally, emotionally, physically. According to the American Psychological Association, over 70% of adults report feeling overwhelmed by stress at least once a week, and more than half say their mental health has worsened in the last few years.

That’s not just a data point. That’s millions of people showing up to work, taking care of families, pursuing goals, smiling for the camera—while quietly unraveling inside.

Anxiety is now the most common mental health issue in the U.S.
Burnout is no longer just a workplace buzzword—it’s an epidemic.
And numbness—the emotional flatlining that makes everything feel muted—is becoming a survival mechanism.

The Myth of “I Should Be Fine”

Here’s the trap I see over and over again:

People look at their life on paper—job, roof over their head, maybe even some wins—and they tell themselves, “I should be fine.” They downplay how overwhelmed they feel. They gaslight their own exhaustion.

But mental health doesn’t care about how things look. It cares about how things feel.

And when your brain is in a chronic state of stress, you don’t just feel tired—you lose access to joy. To clarity. To motivation. You can’t think straight. You can’t rest. You can’t dream big when you’re in survival mode.

This is what I want to say to you if you’ve been white-knuckling it through your day: just because you can function doesn’t mean you’re okay. You deserve better than just barely getting by.

The Science of Why You’re Drained

Let’s talk about your brain.

Your brain is an energy-hungry organ. It uses about 20% of your total energy, even though it only weighs about 2% of your body weight. And the more decisions you make, the more you multitask, the more stress you absorb—the more it drains your system.

You make around 35,000 decisions a day. Most of them feel small, but every one requires energy. And if you’re already overwhelmed, every new choice—what to wear, what to say, when to respond to that text—feels heavier. That’s called decision fatigue. And it leads straight to anxiety and mental fog.

Add to that the constant cortisol spike from news, work pressure, and your never-ending to-do list, and your nervous system doesn’t get a break. You’re in a state of what’s called sympathetic dominance—your body’s fight-or-flight mode stays switched on, even when there’s no immediate danger.

The result?

  • You’re easily overwhelmed.
  • You feel wired but tired.
  • You can’t focus.
  • You stop caring—not because you’re cold, but because your brain can’t keep processing.

That’s numbness. That’s burnout. That’s not weakness—it’s biology.

Numbness Isn’t Laziness. It’s Survival.

If you’ve been feeling disconnected—like you’re just going through the motions—you’re not broken. You’re exhausted. And your brain is protecting you the only way it knows how: by turning down the volume on everything.

This is why I always tell people: the absence of breakdown doesn’t mean the presence of mental health. You can look perfectly fine on the outside and still feel like you’re unraveling inside.

You don’t need to collapse to be allowed to rest. You don’t need a crisis to justify taking a break. And you don’t need to prove anything by pretending you’re okay when you’re not.

How the 6% Methodology Can Help You Reset

In The 6% Club, I talk about how only 6% of people actually follow through on their goals—and the main reason is because most people are too overwhelmed to move forward with clarity. They don’t know what to focus on, so they do everything… or nothing.

That’s where specificity becomes your best friend.

If you’re feeling anxious, exhausted, and numb, the worst thing you can do is try to overhaul your entire life. What works—what actually works—is narrowing your focus.

Set one goal: not five. Make it simple, measurable, and aligned with what would actually help you feel better. Not look better, not impress anyone—feel better.

That goal might be:

  • “I’ll walk outside for 20 minutes a day for the next week.”
  • “I’ll turn off notifications after 8 p.m.”
  • “I’ll schedule one therapy session by Friday.”

Small steps, clearly defined, practiced consistently—that’s how we rebuild. That’s how we climb out of the spiral.

We Weren’t Taught This. But We Can Learn It Now.

We weren’t raised to understand emotional health. Most of us were taught to be productive, not peaceful. To push through, not pause. And now we’re seeing the cost of that.

It’s time to change that narrative—not with guilt, not with hustle, but with compassion and clarity.

If you’re reading this and recognizing yourself—if you’ve been anxious, exhausted, or numb—I want you to know: you are not alone, and you are not stuck.

Your brain and body have been working overtime to protect you. Now it’s time to protect them. With rest. With boundaries. With specific, focused goals. With moments of joy that don’t need to be earned.

You don’t need to hit a wall to start healing. You just need to decide that you matter enough to start now.

Some Food for Thought

Mental health is not a side quest. It is the foundation of everything—your energy, your decisions, your relationships, your career, your dreams.

If you’ve been feeling anxious, exhausted, or numb, you are not failing. You are a human being, navigating a world that often asks too much and gives too little space to feel.

Give yourself that space now. Start small. Get specific. Reclaim your mind from the chaos and take back control—one choice, one clear goal, one day at a time.

That’s not weakness. That’s strength. That’s leadership. And that’s what being in the 6% is really about.

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