Returning to Work
Rebuild confidence — not just productivity.
We’ll focus on easing the transition, managing the mental load, and finding a rhythm that works for your life now.
Progress happens when work fits who you are today.
about you
You’re ready to go back — but it feels harder than you expected.
Maybe you’re worried about whether you’ll be able to keep up, remember everything, or balance work with everything else in your life now. The routines you once relied on are gone, your priorities have shifted, and what used to feel manageable suddenly feels overwhelming.
You might question your confidence, your focus, or whether you still fit in the role you left. Even small decisions can feel heavier when you’re carrying the pressure to “get it right.”
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Many women are surprised by how emotionally and mentally demanding returning to work can be — especially after time away for caregiving, health, burnout, or major life changes.
why it feels heavy
It makes sense that you’re overwhelmed.
Returning to work isn’t just about going back to a job — it often comes with a mental load that doesn’t shut off. The transition may look straightforward from the outside, but its impact is very real. It can show up as:
Worry about whether you’ll be able to keep up or remember everything
Pressure to perform while still adjusting to new routines
Feeling pulled between work demands and responsibilities at home
Difficulty concentrating or settling into a rhythm
Second-guessing decisions or interactions throughout the day
Exhaustion from trying to hold everything together
You might tell yourself, “Other people do this all the time — I should be able to handle it,” or “I just need to get back in the groove.”
But struggling during a major transition isn’t a sign that you’re failing. It’s often a sign that your responsibilities, expectations, and energy haven’t had time to realign yet — and that you need support, not more pressure.
tools for you
Imagine returning to work with systems that support you
After time away, many women try to jump back into their old routines, only to realize their life, energy, and priorities have changed. What used to work may no longer fit — and forcing it often leads to more stress, self-doubt, and exhaustion.
Therapy offers space to slow down, reassess, and build a new foundation that reflects where you are now.
Together, we can help you:
Rebuild confidence and trust in your abilities
Create routines and structures that fit your current life
Navigate competing demands at work and at home
Manage anxiety, perfectionism, or fear of making mistakes
Set boundaries that protect your energy without guilt
Develop practical strategies for focus, organization, and decision-making
Move forward with greater steadiness, clarity, and self-assurance
Returning to work isn’t just about getting through the day — it’s about creating a way of working that is sustainable long term.
Whether you’re coming back after caregiving, burnout, health challenges, or a major life transition, therapy can help you rebuild your footing and establish a rhythm that supports both your responsibilities and your well-being.
Career & Personality Assessments
Insight can ease the uncertainty.
Returning to work can feel overwhelming on its own. If you’re also unsure what kind of work fits your life now — or how to get there — that uncertainty can amplify anxiety, self-doubt, and pressure to make the “right” choice quickly.
Career and personality assessments can help bring clarity to that fog.
Tools like the MBTI® and WOWI® don’t tell you what you should do. Instead, they help you understand how you’re wired, what environments support your strengths, how you naturally make decisions, and what kind of work is most likely to feel sustainable — not just manageable.
When used alongside therapy, these assessments can be especially helpful during transitions. They provide a structured way to evaluate options, rebuild confidence, and make decisions based on self-understanding rather than fear or urgency.
Many women experience a sense of relief when they see their results — a feeling of “Oh… this is why going back to the way things were doesn’t feel right.” Instead of guessing or pushing yourself to fit into roles that no longer work, you gain a clearer map for moving forward in a way that aligns with both your responsibilities and your well-being.
These tools aren’t about boxing you in. They’re about helping you return to work with intention — so the next step you take supports the life you’re trying to build, not just the pressure to get back on track.
my expertise
You might be wondering...
Do I need a diagnosis to start therapy?
No. Whether you’re diagnosed, self-identified, or just curious, we can explore your experience together and see what support makes sense.
Is this coaching or therapy?
My practice is rooted in therapy, with a blend of practical tools and skills you might find in coaching. We’ll tailor it to your needs—whether that’s emotional processing, executive functioning support, or both.
Can I use insurance?
I don’t bill insurance directly, but I do give clients the option to pay session fees Thrizer to help clients get reimbursed through their out-of-network benefits. Clients receive detailed information on how to use this service.