In a world obsessed with productivity, optimization, and doing more, many women are finding themselves exhausted despite following all the advice they’ve been given.
They wake up early, exercise, drink the green juice, take the supplements, listen to the podcasts, and push through their endless to-do lists. Yet somehow, they still feel overwhelmed, disconnected, mentally exhausted, and stuck.
According to Dr. Melissa Sonners, chiropractor, nervous system expert, speaker, and author of The Connection Code, the problem isn’t a lack of effort.
It’s a nervous system that’s been running in survival mode for far too long.
During her conversation with Sam Tejada, CEO and Founder of Liquivida® on “A Healthy Point of View” podcast, Dr. Sonners shared a powerful perspective on burnout, stress, and why so many women feel like they’re constantly carrying the weight of the world on their shoulders.
The Truth About Self-Care, Burnout & Nervous System Regulation | Dr. Melissa Sonners | Ep. 148

The Hidden Cost of Living in Overdrive
Modern life rewards busyness.
Many people wear exhaustion like a badge of honor. The ability to juggle work, family, relationships, and countless responsibilities is often celebrated as a strength.
But Dr. Sonners believes this constant state of doing comes at a cost.
When the nervous system remains overloaded for extended periods of time, it begins to operate from a place of survival rather than balance. Everything starts to feel urgent. Small frustrations become overwhelming. Focus disappears. Patience wears thin.
The clutter on the kitchen counter suddenly feels unbearable.
A spouse’s chewing becomes irritating. Children’s normal requests feel like demands.
Women often find themselves snapping at loved ones, feeling guilty afterward, and wondering what is wrong with them.
The answer, Dr. Sonners says, is usually not a character flaw.
It’s physiology.
The nervous system is simply responding the way it was designed to respond under chronic stress.
When Burnout Becomes Impossible to Ignore
Dr. Sonners understands burnout not just professionally, but personally.
For years, she was doing everything she believed she was supposed to do. She was running a successful chiropractic practice, raising three young children, exercising, biohacking, fasting, optimizing, and pushing herself to keep going no matter how tired she felt.
Whenever exhaustion appeared, she responded the way many high achievers do.
She doubled down.
More caffeine. More effort. More productivity. More pushing through.
Then her body stopped cooperating.
What began as subtle signs of fatigue eventually turned into a devastating health crisis involving meningitis, encephalitis, mold toxicity, and a tick-borne illness.
At one point, she struggled to remember how to drive to an office she had visited nearly every day for fifteen years.
She had difficulty remembering her children’s names. The sounds of everyday life felt overwhelming.
Looking back, she realized her body had been whispering for years before it finally screamed.
That experience changed everything. Rather than searching for another productivity hack, she began asking a different question: What if self-care could happen in the moments when people actually need it most?
Why Traditional Self-Care Often Falls Short
The wellness industry frequently promotes self-care as something that requires extra time.
Book a massage. Schedule a facial. Take a yoga class. Spend an hour meditating.
While these practices can certainly be beneficial, Dr. Sonners believes they often miss an important reality.
Many women simply don’t have the time. And even when they do, those activities don’t always teach them how to regulate their nervous system in real life.
The challenge isn’t finding peace during a massage. The challenge is finding peace when you’re running late, your kids are crying, your phone won’t stop buzzing, and coffee just spilled all over your car.
That is where nervous system regulation becomes truly valuable.
The goal isn’t escaping life. It’s learning how to stay connected to yourself while living it.
Understanding the Three Gears of the Nervous System
One of the most practical concepts Dr. Sonners teaches is the idea that the nervous system operates much like a car.
Most people spend their entire day stuck in one gear.
The problem is that the human nervous system was never designed to work that way.
She describes three primary states.
- Gear One: Theta
Theta is the state of intuition, creativity, insight, and inner wisdom.
It’s where many of our best ideas originate.
According to Dr. Sonners, everyone naturally wakes up in theta each morning.
Unfortunately, most people leave it almost immediately by checking their phones, scrolling social media, reading emails, or turning on bright artificial lights.
Instead, she recommends spending the first few minutes of the day simply listening.
Not to a podcast. Not to the news. Not to social media. To yourself.
What thoughts are present? What do you need today? What emotions are asking for attention?
This quiet space creates an opportunity to reconnect with your own voice before the demands of the world take over.
- Gear Two: Alpha
Alpha is the state of presence, connection, and flow.
It’s the feeling many people experience after a great workout, during meaningful conversations, or while fully immersed in an activity they enjoy.
After spending a few moments in theta, Dr. Sonners encourages people to transition into alpha through reflection or journaling.
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s awareness.
Questions like:
- What feels overwhelming today?
- What support do I need?
- What would make today easier?
can help create clarity before the day begins.
- Gear Three: Beta
Beta is where work gets done.
It is the state of focus, productivity, planning, and execution.
Beta is not the enemy.
The problem occurs when people live there all day long without taking breaks.
When beta becomes chronic, it often leads to overstimulation, brain fog, fatigue, anxiety, and eventually burnout.
The Power of Two Minutes
One of the most surprising insights from Dr. Sonners’ work is how little time it actually takes to create meaningful change.
Instead of waiting until the end of the day to relax, she encourages people to take brief nervous system resets approximately every ninety minutes.
These are what she calls “regulation reps.”
Just as muscles become stronger through repeated training, the nervous system becomes more resilient through repeated moments of regulation.
The break doesn’t need to be complicated.
It could be:
- Taking a few deep breaths.
- Listening to a favorite song.
- Stepping outside into the sunlight.
- Sitting quietly for a moment.
- Simply noticing how you feel.
The purpose is to remind the nervous system that it is safe to slow down.
Over time, these small moments create profound change.
The Stories We Carry
Stress isn’t always about what’s happening in the present moment. Sometimes it’s about patterns developed years earlier.
Dr. Sonners explains that many of our reactions are rooted in the environments we grew up in.
Some people learned to withdraw when overwhelmed. Others learned to become reactive. Some learned to constantly perform in order to feel worthy.
These patterns often continue into adulthood without conscious awareness.
The good news is that awareness creates choice.
By learning to pause before reacting, people can begin creating new pathways instead of repeating old ones.
As Viktor Frankl famously wrote, between stimulus and response, there is a space.
Within that space lies our power.
Healing Isn’t Something Outside of You
Perhaps the most important message Dr. Sonners shared during the conversation is that healing isn’t found in a gadget, a supplement, a protocol, or even a practitioner.
Those tools can be valuable.
But true healing begins by reconnecting with ourselves.
Many women spend years searching for answers outside of themselves.
The next supplement. The next expert. The next wellness trend. Yet the wisdom they need is often already present within them.
The challenge is learning how to hear it again. That means slowing down enough to listen. Trusting what feels aligned. Paying attention to the body’s signals.
And recognizing that self-care doesn’t have to be elaborate to be effective.
Sometimes it can be as simple as taking a breath, listening to a favorite song, or spending five quiet minutes with your own thoughts.
Relearning How to Drive
At its core, Dr. Sonners’ message is remarkably hopeful.
Burnout isn’t proof that you’re broken. Overwhelm isn’t evidence that you’re failing. And exhaustion isn’t a personal weakness. They’re signals. Messages from a nervous system asking for support.
Instead of trying to fix every external circumstance, Dr. Sonners encourages people to focus on something more powerful: learning how to operate the internal system that influences every experience they have.
Because when the nervous system shifts, everything else begins to shift with it.
The goal isn’t to escape life. The goal is to become fully present for it.
And sometimes, the path back to ourselves begins with something as simple as a two-minute pause.