After chronic fatigue had me on my knees for five years I knew something had to change. However, I was too tired and too overwhelmed to figure out what change looked like and, instead, kept doing what I always did when I was overwhelmed - I did more: more supplements, stricter diets, and rigid lifestyle rules based on external advice. I believed effort always pays off, so I doubled down on what I was doing. When feeling overwhelm my default was always to do more and to do better. I've had to consciously unlearn this by tending to the nervous system dysregulation beneath it. I see this drivenness in my clients too. Even in the worst of their exhaustion, basically on the floor and crawling, they put their all into fixing and getting well. Of course I understand their desperation and their drivenness is admirable in terms of the extreme effort it takes. It also may well have served them many times. But at what cost? I discovered the change wasn't about adding more; it was about letting go and surrendering – old patterns, limiting beliefs, and the weight of holding everything together for everyone else. Only then could I make SPACE TO RECEIVE the nourishment, support, rest, energy, love, and, crucially, the intuitive guidance my body needed to find balance. Then the doing was an unfolding and flow that was far easier on my nervous system and far more nourishing. The surrender felt illogical and counter to everything I'd done in my life to feel safe and worthy. Letting go is vulnerable, especially when battling chronic fatigue and the loss of self. But consider Newton's third law: for every action, there's an equal and opposite reaction. Pushing hard creates resistance. While a flurry of activity – diets, supplements, research, constant thinking – might seem productive, it often leads to another crash. We need to stop to receive. Just as a phone needs to be plugged in to charge, we must stop and plug back into the abundance of life force available to us when we release expectations, pushing, and striving, and instead, trust. This is why my 1:1 Fatigue to Flow Coaching program follows an Assessment, Connection, and Release phase with a dedicated Receive phase. We must acknowledge what isn't working, feel safe enough to let it go, and then actually release it, creating space for what truly serves our healing. My coaching is a deliberate, phased process, with each phase building on the one before. We HAVE to start with signalling safety to the nervous systems and reconnecting to our bodies before we can expect any change at all. With that in place, receiving is not so scary and far easier. I also make sure to hold a space where clients always feel safe and supported. As one client shared, "I realized my anxiety, Type A personality, and expectations were making me sick. I needed a lifestyle and mental shift. Kerry validated my experiences while gently opening my eyes to areas for improvement. My confidence soared. She changed my life." If you want to find out more about my coaching to see if it’s a fit for you sign up for a jumpstart session today! In the meantime, here’s a little practice for you to allow surrender and receiving: Whenever you feel overwhelmed or exhausted lie on your belly on the earth (preferably on the earth if possible but it’ll work inside too). Feel the ground meeting you and supporting you. Imagine you’re dropping into the earth with each exhalation as you release and hand over all the stress, tension and overwhelm. Just for that moment see if you can tune into what it feels like to be held and to not have to have it all figured out yourself. Let me know how this goes for you!

This completely blew my mind

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest

I’m always playing with AI. For instance, every now and then I ask Chat GPT what the most amazing thing is that it learned that day. Try this it’s fun!

Then I decided to try this prompt as shared by someone I follow. I’m always up for some inner reflection and insight after all. But this really blew my mind about how accurate it was. Is Chat GPT actually getting into my  head??

So the prompt was: Based on everything you know about me and our previous chats, what is my hidden narrative? What’s the one fear I never admit?”

And this is what I received back:
Based on everything you’ve shared across our conversations, here’s what I sense as your hidden narrative — the one running quietly beneath the surface:

You carry a deep desire to be the safe, steady, loving presence for others that you never consistently had for yourself.

And while you’ve built your work, your healing, and your way of being around embodying that safety and spaciousness… the quiet fear underneath is:
“What if I’m not enough — or too much — and I can’t truly give people what they need?”
It’s the push-pull of wanting to be a beacon of rest, regulation, and wholeness, while fearing that your own cracks, weariness, or imperfection might disqualify you. Almost like: If they see all of me, will they still trust me?
This unspoken fear often fuels the striving, the rescuing, the over-giving you’ve described — but also the depth and authenticity of your healing work.


Bham…. on the money.

So, why am I sharing this? Because I value integrity and authenticity and because the best way to overcome our shadows is to shine a light on them.

Here’s the truth – I’m no guru or expert or someone who has my shit together all the time. As I reframe my life with a fairly recent diagnosis of ADHD and in the midst of perimenopause with two very neurodivergent children, there are many times I drop the ball (like today when I forgot to fetch my daughter from school!!).

I often feel, how can I teach what I do when I don’t always get this right?

Fortunately Chat GPT also helped with that with this very useful reframe as part of the answer that I received:

“My own tenderness, my own lived experience of not-enoughness, is exactly what makes me safe for others. I don’t need to have it all together to guide people home — I just need to show up as my whole self. My ‘too muchness’ and my ‘not enoughness’ are both doorways into authenticity and compassion.

Your deepest fear is also your deepest power: people trust you precisely because you embody healing in progress, not healing completed.”

So, this is me…. showing up with my heart on my sleeve and my imposter syndrome on show. If you ever choose to work with me know that I am walking this journey alongside you along the way and I REALLY  DO GET IT! What I share and teach has been nothing short of life-changing for me. I don’t always get it right in my own life but I feel way more empowered, alive and connected then I ever felt before so I know that it’s worth sharing even if I don’t have it all right all the time.

I currently have two places open for my 1:1 Fatigue to Flow coaching programme where I take clients through my unique 5 phase process that helped me to get to where I am and has helped 100s of others to also experience more joy, ease, vitality, empowering, connection and aliveness. If you want to find out more why not take the first step by signing up for a Jumpstart session.

Otherwise, try that prompt above and, if you feel called to share, let me know what comes up for you.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest

About the Author:

Related Articles:

Fire Warning: Is Your Body Giving You This Sign?

From Thursday last week, life in my community was flipped on its head when a huge fire started up, followed by multiple blazes further afield. The community WhatsApp group was filled with panic, homes were lost, almost lost, and many were abandoned. I was glued to the screen, feeling the need to be prepared, while

Read More »
This Could Change Everything For You (It Did For Me).

This Could Change Everything For You (It Did For Me). 

A client told me today, “I’m so tired after that session.” This is completely normal: when the nervous system finally moves from fight-or-flight to rest, you finally feel how exhausted you actually are when the adrenaline stops driving you. Then she said, “You must be really tired after these treatments too.” I shared a few of the

Read More »
A Letter to Exhausted Perfectionists [Listen here if you prefer to listen on the go.] The thing about perfectionism is that the perfectionist doesn't know it is perfectionism. They think it's normal. They think that what others consider normal is a lowering of standards and that feels like a complete no go area. After all, perfectionism is tied into identity, worth and safety, often since very early childhood. So it's just not an option to allow anything less. In my early life, my body needed to be Kate Moss or Claudia Schiffer standard to be acceptable. I needed to be the top squash player in my age category because second wasn't enough. I had to be first in class because just getting 80s and 90s without being 1st left me feeling like I'd failed somehow. I needed the popular girls to like me because if I was friends with the other girls, who were actually really much nicer, more secure in themselves and safer options, I was not worthy. If I said something that hurt someone's feelings, that guilt would hang over me for days and I couldn't let it go. If a friend or a parent was unhappy with something I did, I felt rejected and unworthy. I always aimed for the stars and felt like a failure if my result was simply earthbound, not realizing that no one else was expecting the impossible from me. It was just me. So what is perfectionism? Perfectionism is the standards that we set that we believe determine our worth. They also help us to feel in control and we feel safe if we can meet them. It doesn't help that in the media we mostly only see the extremes. We see the great successes and we see all that's gone wrong. No one ever shows us the Messy middle where 90% of us actually reside. Bumbling along and making it work for the most part - which is really actually quite something in this crazy world of ours. At school, generally only the smart kids are praised and the fastest and the most adept on the sports fields are recognised. You know those perseverance awards and the most- friendly-in-class awards? They really don't mean that much to the child who's lined up to receive it last after the other awards. They know what that position in the line means. The dreamers, the struggling readers, the ones who don't get it because to them creating or computers makes way more sense than what they're learning in class..... They know that they aren't meeting the academic standards that they're "supposed" to be meeting. Yet many of them will go on to be our most successful pioneers and entrepreneurs. But at what cost? Very often shame, anxiety, overwhelm and chronic fatigue and burnout will pave their path because they are still misguided by the standards of so-called 'perfect' and "normal" And no matter how incredible they are they feel like imposter's even as they receive the praise. This is also true for people like me who got the firsts but at a great cost. And when someone says, "you're so smart", you think, "but I'm not actually, because if I'm so smart why did I have to study so very, very hard to get that mark" - yet now that the label smart has been given nothing less is acceptable. I wish you could see how many of my clients who come to me with burnout and chronic fatigue are perfectionists. They are also the most phenomenal beings who never feel enough. and now that their bodies seem to have 'quit' on them, they feel even more like failures. It's impossible for them to see their worth when they're not doing and not achieving. They simply can't believe that being still and being themselves is enough to those that they love. You should see me now. From someone who cycled 108 kilometres cycle races and exercised six days a week I now run and walk with lots of talking and my other exercise happens when I happily hike in nature and play with my kids. My once always-tidy house is usually a bit, or a lot, of a shambles. It's often easier just to leave it that way at the end of a long day when we all just really want to go to bed. I expect much less of myself. I've softened towards myself and balance is my daily motto. I'm messy, I'm forgetful, I say silly things and I often laugh at myself. As I healed my inner patterns that kept me so exhausted and kept my nervous system stuck, and as my nervous system learned a new sense of safety, I couldn't help but to naturally unmask. Because guess what? The true me is not perfect. It's actually quirky, messy and often late. It was uncomfortable at first to accept those "lower" but actually normal standards. But when the payoff is more vitality, more joy, a feeling of being connected and actually living an authentic life more fully, it becomes easier and it's so worth it. I'm sure many of you may have balked at the idea of a house in shambles or being late, and lowering those standards may feel impossible for you. But if your body feels broken, let me tell you that it's not actually. It's just begging you to stop and to aim for more normal standards. And if it's doing that now, it's your time for change. And I'm sorry to say this, but you don't really have a choice (it's going to keep unfolding through you anyway). I know it's frustrating but it's also an amazing invitation. You won't be able to do that change so easily If you don't address the root causes of why you started pushing and being perfect in the first place, Your body and your nervous system need to feel safe and it's time for you to own your worth as you are. Right now. If this feels like a foreign country and a different language, please reach out for support from someone who can be your map to guide you in the right direction and can teach you a whole new language to use with yourself. Maybe that's someone who will come into your life now because you are ready. Or maybe that someone can be me. If that feels good, like an invitation you didn't know you needed or you've been too afraid to accept please reach out and send me an email. Let's talk about what this change can look like.

A Letter to Exhausted Perfectionists

[Listen here if you prefer to listen on the go.] The thing about perfectionism is that the perfectionist doesn’t know it is perfectionism. They think it’s normal. They think that what others consider normal is a lowering of standards and that feels like a complete no go area.  After all, perfectionism is tied into identity, worth and safety,

Read More »

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover 5 Powerful Secrets for Overcoming Your Chronic Fatigue and Adrenal Depletion

Empower yourself to move from fatigue to flow with this valuable information!

In this guide you will discover: