Therapy for Burnout
In-person and online therapy for burnout, based in Brentwood, Los Angeles
How We Work with Burnout
You've been running on empty for so long, you've forgotten what full feels like. Maybe it started as dedication. Staying late, saying yes, pushing through. But somewhere along the way, the fuel ran out and you kept driving anyway.
Now even the things that used to light you up feel like obligations. Rest doesn't restore you. Weekends disappear into recovery mode. And beneath the exhaustion, there's a quiet question you might not want to look at: How did I get here?
Burnout isn't laziness, and it isn't weakness. It's what happens when the demands on your system exceed your resources for too long. Understanding how you got here is the first step toward building something different.
At Brentwood Therapy Collective, we offer therapy for burnout to adults in Los Angeles, CA, who are ready to move through exhaustion with greater awareness and self-compassion, and build a life that doesn't require you to abandon yourself to sustain.
Signs & Patterns of Burnout
You're exhausted in a way that sleep doesn't fix, and caffeine barely touches
You've lost connection to work that used to feel meaningful, or to people who used to energize you
You're functioning (showing up, performing, delivering) but inside you feel hollow or numb
Small tasks feel monumental, and your patience has worn thin in ways that surprise you
You've started to wonder if something is fundamentally wrong with you, rather than your circumstances
Physical symptoms have emerged: insomnia, headaches, digestive issues, frequent illness
You feel cynical, detached, or like you're just going through the motions
Understanding Burnout
How Burnout Shows Up in Daily Life
For some, it looks like the entrepreneur who built something meaningful but now dreads Monday mornings. For others, it's the caregiver who has given so much to others that there's nothing left for themselves. This is often called caregiver burnout.
High achievers and perfectionists are particularly vulnerable. The same drive that fuels success can make it almost impossible to recognize when you've crossed from productive intensity into high-functioning burnout. You keep performing, but the cost keeps rising.
Sometimes burnout overlaps with other patterns. ADHD burnout involves the particular exhaustion that comes from constantly compensating, masking, and managing a brain that works differently. And functional freeze (that state of being too depleted to act but too anxious to rest) can look like burnout from the outside while involving different underlying dynamics.
Why Burnout Takes Hold
Burnout isn't a personal failure. It emerges from the interaction between who you are, what you're carrying, and the systems you're operating within.
Several factors contribute: workplaces that reward overwork and punish boundaries, family systems that taught you your worth comes from productivity, perfectionism that makes "good enough" feel impossible, difficulty saying no, unclear boundaries between work and life, and sometimes simply being in a role that doesn't fit who you actually are.
Understanding your particular pathway into burnout is essential for building a way out that lasts. We'll explore the patterns, the narratives, the old stories running underneath.
Who We Work With
We work with high-achieving adults, entrepreneurs, caregivers, and professionals who excel outwardly while struggling inwardly. We support clients whose high standards and coaching have served them well, but who are ready for a more flexible and humane way of being.
For some clients, especially women working in demanding careers or managing both work and family responsibilities, we also explore the intersection of ADHD and burnout when relevant.
What to Expect
In your first meeting, we'll discuss what's bringing you to therapy now. We will listen beyond the symptoms of perfectionism to understand your procrastination and self-sabotage. We focus on understanding your patterns, building capacity for rest and recovery, and establishing the therapeutic relationship as a foundation for deeper exploration.
The process is yours to pace. You set the tempo and decide what to share and when.
How Therapy Helps You Recover
Burnout therapy isn't about learning to tolerate an unsustainable situation. It's about understanding how you got here and making different choices possible.
In our work, you will learn to:
Set boundaries at work without the guilt that usually follows
Understand the beliefs and narratives driving your patterns of overwork
Build capacity for rest that actually restores you
Grieve what burnout has taken: time, relationships, health, opportunities
Confront questions about whether the life you're living is the life you want
The goal isn't just symptom relief. It's building a life that has room for you in it.
What Makes Our Approach Different
Many approaches to burnout focus on stress management techniques or productivity optimization. These can help, but they often miss the point. If the underlying patterns don't shift, you'll find yourself back in the same place, or you'll manage the symptoms while the disconnection deepens.
I'm interested in the whole picture: the family and cultural messages about work you absorbed, the relational patterns that make boundary-setting feel dangerous, the ways burnout might be protecting you from something even more uncomfortable to face. We work with curiosity and compassion, not judgment.
Frequently Asked Questions
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This is one of the most common questions I hear. The reality is that sometimes the job itself is the problem, and sometimes it's how you're relating to the job. Often it's both. In therapy, we'll sort through what's changeable (boundaries, expectations, the stories you tell yourself about what's required) and what might need more significant shifts. Many people find ways to stay in their roles while fundamentally changing their relationship to work.
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It depends on how depleted you are and how deep the underlying patterns run. Burnout that's primarily situational often improves relatively quickly once circumstances change. Burnout rooted in lifelong patterns of overwork, perfectionism, or difficulty with boundaries takes longer to fully address. What I can say is that most people start feeling some relief within the first month or two, even as deeper work continues.
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They can look similar and often overlap, but they're not identical. Burnout is specifically tied to chronic stress and depletion, usually in a work or caregiving context. Depression can occur without external stressors and involves a broader constellation of symptoms. That said, prolonged burnout frequently leads to depression. We don't need to have this perfectly sorted before starting. Part of our early work is understanding exactly what's happening for you.
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High-functioning burnout is real and common, especially among perfectionists and high achievers. You can be excelling externally while being completely depleted internally. In fact, the ability to keep performing despite exhaustion often delays getting help until the crash is more severe. If you're functioning but feeling hollow, disconnected, or like you're running on fumes, that's worth paying attention to.
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Coaching typically focuses on goals, performance, and moving forward. Therapy for burnout goes deeper: we explore the underlying patterns, beliefs, and relational dynamics that created the conditions for burnout in the first place. This isn't about optimizing your productivity. It's about understanding yourself well enough to live differently.
Let’s Get Started
A vibrant life is doable. Let's build yours together.