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Dara Koenig writing about burnout, identity, faith and the pressure women feel to have it all figured out.

The Pressure to Have It All Figured Out

June 03, 20267 min read

The Quiet Exhaustion of High-Functioning Women

A few mornings ago I found myself thinking back to New Year's Day.

Mat and I were sitting together with coffee, talking about everything 2026 could hold. It was one of those slow mornings where conversation drifts naturally between excitement, logistics, dreams, worries, and hope. Honestly, hope was probably the thread holding all of it together. We talked about the church plant, about our youngest graduating high school with her Associate's Degree already completed, about what life looks like when all your children are adults. We talked about goals, opportunities, and the quiet awareness that life was shifting beneath our feet again.

Somewhere in that conversation we landed on what felt like the biggest professional opportunity of the year, unveiling the Burnout Prevention Framework following my Avoiding Burnout session at the upcoming Women In Automotive conference this summer. Sitting there in the quiet of that morning, everything felt possible in the way things only feel possible before the year actually begins, before the calendar fills in, before the hard weeks come, before you discover which of your beautiful intentions will require far more of you than you anticipated.

At the time, July felt forever away.

Now it is only weeks from launch.

Most of the work is done, thankfully, but lately I have been deep in refining the presentation itself, deciding what stays, what gets cut, and what conversations women are truly needing space to have right now. And maybe that is why one thought keeps surfacing as I work through the material.

So many women are quietly exhausted from feeling like they should already have life figured out by now.

Not just professionally, but personally too. The pressure to know exactly where they are headed, who they are becoming, how to balance leadership, marriage, motherhood, caregiving, faith, ambition, healing, and rest all at the same time. Even women who appear deeply confident externally often carry an internal fear that everyone else somehow understands life better than they do.

The strange thing is I understand that feeling more than I wish I did. There is something quietly humbling about building a framework around burnout prevention while simultaneously recognizing your own patterns still showing up in real time, not as past tense testimony, but as present tense reality. I am not writing this from the other side of having it figured out. I am writing it from the ever messy middle.

There are afternoons where my mental energy feels completely inaccessible, so I spend the day on laundry and low mental-load tasks, giving myself space to think. Then somewhere around dinnertime my brain catches fire. Ideas begin connecting, language becomes precise, and before I realize it I am sitting beside my ever-patient husband with my laptop open well into the evening chasing thoughts I do not want to lose.

When you are deeply passionate about your work, it is incredibly easy to justify pushing beyond your limits because the work itself feels meaningful.

This past weekend I ignored a migraine warning sign I should have listened to. I could feel it beginning at the end of Friday evening, but I convinced myself I could manage it. If I just got to sleep, drank plenty of water, and slowed down a little the next day, it would probably be fine.

It wasn't.

By Saturday afternoon the migraine had fully settled in, and not the kind you casually push through, but the kind where even your thoughts feel heavy. And how the day was spent reflected that feeling. Still, predictably, Sunday morning came. Mat and I had a promise to keep of visiting a friend's church before hosting our own gathering in our living room that afternoon. The house was clean. I smiled when people arrived, listened, participated, and from the outside I probably looked completely fine.

But internally I felt disconnected from myself in a way I have experienced more times than I would like to admit, almost like an outsider observing the day instead of the one living it.

And if I am honest, that feeling does not always require a migraine to arrive. Sometimes it shows up on an ordinary Tuesday, in the middle of a perfectly functional day, when you suddenly realize you cannot remember the last time you felt fully present inside your own life.

For me, one of the biggest contributors has always been what I jokingly call helpful self-sabotage. All it takes is sitting down to work on something important and suddenly a client texts asking for something “when you have a moment.” Instead of protecting the time I intentionally set aside for my own priorities, I shift immediately into helping mode. I answer their question, ask three more, check email while waiting for the response, and before I realize it the entire block of time is gone.

If I am being honest, I think there are moments where being helpful has less to do with serving others and more to do with avoiding the pressure attached to my own work. Because if the framework is not finished, there is always a reason. I was helping people. Being dependable. Being responsive. Being useful... and so on.

The reality is I was procrastinating, quietly building a cushion of excuses for the version of myself that might not be ready on time.

I think many women have built entire identities around being the reliable one, the capable one, the helper, the strong one. And while there is nothing wrong with being dependable, there is a difference between serving people and disappearing inside service to them. That realization has forced me to sit with things I have been avoiding, and most of them have nothing to do with business or frameworks at all.

I think every woman carries her own version of this. For some it is motherhood shifting. For others it is a marriage finding new footing, a friendship quietly outgrown, or a career chapter that no longer fits the person she is becoming. The shape is different, but the disorientation underneath it tends to feel remarkably similar.

Even the rhythms of our home have shifted recently. Most nights, if it is just Mat and me, dinner is a plate of meat, cheese, crackers, nuts, and fruit instead of a cooked meal. The quiet in the house feels different than it used to as the slow emptying begins of what stays, what goes to the dorm, and what gets donated. Lately we have found ourselves looking around asking whether this space still fits the life we are stepping into and, honestly, we are not entirely sure of the answer yet.

We spend so much time encouraging young people to explore, take chances, and figure out who they are, celebrating their process of becoming. But somewhere along the way adulthood gets quietly associated with certainty, as if maturity means having every answer mapped out and successful women have crossed some invisible threshold where self-questioning is no longer part of the process.

Yet some of the wisest women I know are still evolving. They are still healing. Still redefining what success means to them. Still learning to extend to themselves the same compassion they naturally give to everyone else.

I heard a question once that has stayed with me: does the butterfly, as it builds the cocoon, know how beautiful it will eventually become?

I have thought about it often while sitting with this framework, with the questions about motherhood, with the house that feels both familiar and somehow slightly too large for what our life is becoming now.

Most transformation happens long before we can see the outcome of it.

And maybe that is what faith looks like in seasons like this. Not perfect certainty, but trusting that the next step will hold when your foot lands.

Maybe God does some of His most significant work in us precisely during the seasons where we feel least certain about where we are headed. Not in spite of the disorientation, but through it.

You do not have to have it all figured out to move forward faithfully.



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