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The Body That Cannot Stop: Why You Can’t Rest Even When You’re Exhausted and How to Break the Cycle

Rain drops on water surface
Rain drops on water surface

The Body That Cannot Stop: Why You Can’t Rest Even When You’re Exhausted and How to Break the Cycle

The Body That Cannot Stop: Why You Can’t Rest Even When You’re Exhausted and How to Break the Cycle — Annie Wright trauma therapy

The Body That Cannot Stop: Why You Can’t Rest Even When You’re Exhausted and How to Break the Cycle

SUMMARY

You can’t truly rest because your sympathetic nervous system is stuck in a chronic state of fight-or-flight, flooding your body with stress hormones like cortisol that keep you wired even when your mind is exhausted. Your workaholism isn’t just ambition or dedication—it’s a process addiction rooted in trauma, where relentless busyness became a survival strategy your nervous system learned to feel safe and worthy. Healing begins when you reframe productivity as a learned behavior, not your value, and begin practicing somatic tools that invite your body to feel safe enough to finally slow down and rest. You can’t rest even when you’re exhausted because your nervous system is stuck in a low-grade stress state, addicted to the cortisol rush that keeps your body locked in ‘fight or flight’ mode long after danger has passed. Your relentless drive to work isn’t just ambition — it’s often a trauma response wired deep into your nervous system, born from childhood experiences where your worth was tied to achievement and survival depended on constant performance.

Workaholism as a process addiction is a compulsive, uncontrollable need to work that harms other parts of your life, driven by behavior rather than substances. It is not simply being ambitious, hardworking, or dedicated—even if those are qualities you’ve been praised for. This matters to you because your relentless drive isn’t just about career success; it’s a survival strategy your nervous system developed to feel safe and worthy, often tied to early messages that your value depends on constant achievement. Recognizing workaholism as an addiction to busyness reframes it from a personal flaw into a learned, rewritable pattern. This clarity frees you from shame and self-blame, making space for real change that honors your complexity and your body’s need for rest.

The sympathetic nervous system is your body’s built-in alarm system that activates the ‘fight or flight’ response to stress or danger. It is not your enemy or something to be avoided at all costs, nor is it the same as simply feeling busy or tired. For you, it matters because trauma can trap this system in a state of constant alert, flooding your body with stress hormones like cortisol even when there’s no immediate threat. That’s why your body won’t let you rest—even when your mind screams for a break—because it’s stuck believing it still needs to be on guard. Understanding this helps you stop blaming yourself for feeling wired and start learning how to calm this system down, one step at a time.

  1. The Unseen Scars of Relational Trauma
  2. Clinical Translation: Your Brain on Overdrive
  3. Both/And Reframe: Strength and Sickness
  4. Literary Move: The Gospel of “Doing Nothing”
  5. Terra Firma Moment: The Story of Sarah
  6. Somatic Invitations: Befriending Your Body
  7. Frequently Asked Questions
  8. References

It’s 10 PM on a Tuesday, and you’ve finally shut your laptop. You should feel relieved, but instead, a familiar hum of anxiety buzzes beneath your skin. You think of the emails you could have answered, the project you could have pushed forward, the ever-present feeling that you are somehow, already, behind. You pour a glass of wine, sink into the couch, and try to force yourself to relax. But your mind is still at the office, churning through to-do lists and anticipating tomorrow’s demands. Rest, it seems, is just another task you’re failing at.

If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. For many high-achieving women, the drive to work isn’t just a professional asset; it’s a core part of their identity. But what if that relentless ambition, that inability to switch off, isn’t a sign of strength, but a symptom of something deeper? What if your workaholism is a trauma response, a coping mechanism your nervous system developed long ago to keep you safe?

This article will explore the surprising link between relational trauma and workaholism. We’ll delve into the neuroscience of why you feel guilty when you rest, and how your body can become addicted to the very stress that’s burning you out. Most importantly, we’ll offer a new way to think about your relationship with work, and practical, somatic tools to help you finally, truly, rest.

The Unseen Scars of Relational Trauma

DEFINITION SOMATIC

Somatic refers to the body-based dimension of psychological experience, recognizing that trauma, stress, and emotional patterns are not only stored in the mind but also encoded in the tissues, muscles, and nervous system. Somatic awareness acknowledges that the body keeps its own record of lived experience and often communicates what words cannot.

For many of us, our relationship with work is forged in the crucible of our earliest relationships. If you grew up in a home where love was conditional, where you were only praised for your achievements, you may have learned that your worth was directly tied to your productivity. As a child, this was a brilliant survival strategy. By being the “good,” “smart,” or “successful” one, you could secure a sense of safety and belonging in an unpredictable environment.

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But what happens when that child grows up? The old pattern of “performing for love” doesn’t just disappear. It gets encoded in your nervous system, becoming an unconscious and automatic way of moving through the world. You may find yourself in a constant state of striving, seeking validation from your boss, your clients, or even yourself. The problem is, the validation is fleeting. The goalposts are always moving. And so you work harder, pushing yourself to the brink of exhaustion, in a desperate attempt to finally feel “good enough.”

Clinical Translation: Your Brain on Overdrive

“Your relentless drive to work isn’t just ambition — it’s often a trauma response wired deep into your nervous system, born from childhood experiences where your worth was tied to achievement and survival depended on constant performance.”

To understand why it’s so hard to stop working, we need to look at the nervous system. When we experience trauma, our sympathetic nervous system, the body’s “fight or flight” response, can get stuck in the “on” position. This means we’re living in a constant state of low-grade stress, with elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol. Over time, our bodies can become dependent on this cortisol rush, creating a cycle of perpetual busyness. We feel most alive, most ourselves, when we’re working, because that’s when our bodies are getting the chemical hit they’ve come to crave.

This is the insidious nature of workaholism as a process addiction. It’s not a moral failing or a lack of willpower. It’s a physiological and psychological dependency, a deeply ingrained coping mechanism for unresolved trauma. And like any addiction, it comes with a host of negative consequences: burnout, anxiety, depression, and a profound sense of disconnection from ourselves and others.

Both/And Reframe: Strength and Sickness

It’s important to acknowledge that your work ethic is also a source of strength. It’s what has allowed you to achieve, to succeed, to build a life for yourself. But we can hold both truths at once: what was once a survival strategy may now be causing you harm. The goal, then, is not to stop working, but to work with more intention and rest with more ease. It’s about learning to uncouple your self-worth from your productivity, and to find a sense of safety and belonging within yourself, rather than in the endless pursuit of external validation.

Literary Move: The Gospel of “Doing Nothing”

In her book, “How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy,” Jenny Odell makes a powerful case for reclaiming our time and attention from the forces that seek to monetize it. She argues that in a world that is constantly demanding our engagement, the act of “doing nothing” can be a radical act of resistance. For those of us who have been conditioned to believe that our value lies in our productivity, this is a revolutionary idea. What if we could find meaning and purpose not in what we produce, but in our capacity for connection, for contemplation, for simply being?

Terra Firma Moment: The Story of Sarah

Sarah, a successful lawyer in her late 30s, came to me because she was feeling burnt out and disconnected from her life. She was working 80-hour weeks, and while she was proud of her professional achievements, she felt a gnawing emptiness inside. During our work together, Sarah began to see the connection between her workaholism and her childhood. She had grown up with a critical and demanding father, and had learned early on that the only way to win his approval was to be perfect. As an adult, she had transferred this dynamic onto her work, constantly striving for an impossible standard of excellence.

Through our sessions, Sarah began to grieve the little girl who had never felt good enough. She started to practice self-compassion, to celebrate her accomplishments without immediately moving on to the next goal. She also began to experiment with “doing nothing.” She would take short walks in the middle of the day, without her phone. She would sit on her porch and watch the sunset. At first, it was excruciating. She felt lazy, unproductive, and wracked with guilt. But slowly, something began to shift. She started to notice the beauty of the world around her. She started to feel more connected to her own body, to her own needs. She was, for the first time in her life, learning to rest.

Somatic Invitations: Befriending Your Body

Healing from workaholism is not just a mental exercise; it’s a somatic one. We need to teach our bodies, on a cellular level, that it is safe to rest. Here are a few practices to get you started:

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Q: Who is this article for?

A: This article is for high-achieving women who are navigating the intersection of professional success and emotional wellbeing. If you’re a driven woman who sometimes wonders why success doesn’t feel like enough, this is for you.


Q: How can I work with Annie Wright?

A: Annie offers trauma-informed therapy and executive coaching for high-achieving women. You can learn more and apply to work with her at anniewright.com/work-with-annie.

RESOURCES & REFERENCES
  1. PM on a Tuesday, and you’ve finally shut your laptop. You should feel relieved, but instead, a familiar hum of anxiety buzzes beneath your skin. You think of the emails you could have answered, the project you could have pushed forward, the ever-present feeling that you are somehow, already, behind. You pour a glass of wine, sink into the couch, and try to force yourself to relax. But your mind is still at the office, churning through to-do lists and anticipating tomorrow’s demands. Rest, it seems, is just another task you’re failing at.
    If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. For many high-achieving women, the drive to work isn’t just a professional asset; it’s a core part of their identity. But what if that relentless ambition, that inability to switch off, isn’t a sign of strength, but a symptom of something deeper? What if your workaholism is a trauma response, a coping mechanism your nervous system developed long ago to keep you safe?
    This article will explore the surprising link between relational trauma and workaholism. We’ll delve into the neuroscience of why you feel guilty when you rest, and how your body can become addicted to the very stress that’s burning you out. Most importantly, we’ll offer a new way to think about your relationship with work, and practical, somatic tools to help you finally, truly, rest.
Annie Wright, LMFT
About the Author

Annie Wright

LMFT  ·  Relational Trauma Specialist  ·  W.W. Norton Author

Helping ambitious women finally feel as good as their résumé looks.

As a licensed psychotherapist, trauma-informed executive coach, and relational trauma specialist with over 15,000 clinical hours, she guides ambitious women — including Silicon Valley leaders, physicians, and entrepreneurs — in repairing the psychological foundations beneath their impressive lives. Annie is the founder and former CEO of Evergreen Counseling, a multimillion-dollar trauma-informed therapy center she built, scaled, and successfully exited. A regular contributor to Psychology Today, her expert commentary has appeared in Forbes, Business Insider, Inc., NBC, and The Information. She is currently writing her first book with W.W. Norton.

Work With Annie
Medical Disclaimer

What's Running Your Life?

The invisible patterns you can’t outwork…

Your LinkedIn profile tells one story. Your 3 AM thoughts tell another. If vacation makes you anxious, if praise feels hollow, if you’re planning your next move before finishing the current one—you’re not alone. And you’re *not* broken.

This quiz reveals the invisible patterns from childhood that keep you running. Why enough is never enough. Why success doesn’t equal satisfaction. Why rest feels like risk.

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