
Stress Isn’t the Problem. Getting Stuck in It Is.
High-stress professionals are often told some version of the same message:
Manage your stress better.
Build resilience.
Take care of yourself.
Build resilience.
Take care of yourself.
It’s well-intentioned advice — and mostly beside the point.
Because stress, by itself, is not the problem.
Stress is a normal, adaptive response. It’s how humans mobilize attention, energy, and focus in demanding situations. Surgeons, physicians, pilots, attorneys, executives, first responders — entire professions depend on the ability to tolerate and move through high levels of stress.
The problem begins when stress doesn’t resolve.
Stress is supposed to move
In a healthy nervous system, stress follows a predictable arc:
Activation → response → completion → return to baseline
Your body gears up, you do the hard thing, and then — crucially — your system settles.
But many high-stakes environments no longer allow that final step.
There’s no pause.
No recovery.
No completion.
No recovery.
No completion.
Just the next case.
The next decision.
The next inbox alert.
The next decision.
The next inbox alert.
Over time, stress stops being a wave and starts becoming the water you’re swimming in.
“Pushing through” works — until it doesn’t
High performers are exceptionally good at pushing through.
It’s a skill that gets rewarded early:
- Training programs select for it
- Systems depend on it
- Cultures quietly glorify it
And for a long time, it works.
Until clarity starts to fade.
Until decisions feel heavier.
Until presence — at work or at home — becomes harder to access.
Until decisions feel heavier.
Until presence — at work or at home — becomes harder to access.
This isn’t a failure of resilience.
It’s physiology.
It’s physiology.
A nervous system that never gets to complete stress responses will eventually stay activated — not because something is wrong with you, but because something is unfinished.
Being “stuck” looks normal from the outside
One of the hardest parts is that getting stuck in stress doesn’t always look dramatic.
From the outside, you may still be:
- Showing up
- Performing well
- Carrying responsibility
- Being relied upon
From the inside, it can feel like:
- Constant vigilance
- Irritability or emotional flattening
- Difficulty resting even when time allows
- A sense that you’re operating at 70–80% of yourself
Many professionals assume this is just the cost of the job.
It isn’t.
It’s the cost of unresolved stress.
Why insight alone doesn’t fix it
Understanding this intellectually helps — but it’s rarely sufficient.
That’s because stress isn’t stored as a thought problem.
It’s stored as a physiological pattern.
You don’t talk your nervous system out of being stuck any more than you talk a muscle out of a spasm.
Change happens when the system is given the conditions it needs to complete what never finished.
What helps stress move again
Effective interventions don’t ask you to become less capable, less driven, or less committed.
They work by:
- restoring nervous system flexibility
- allowing incomplete stress responses to resolve
- returning access to clarity, presence, and decision-making
This is why approaches like EMDR intensives can be so effective for high-stress professionals, including physicians. They don’t require weekly appointments, endless processing, or reliving experiences for months on end.
They work at the level where stress actually lives.
The goal isn’t less stress — it’s more flow
High-stakes work will always involve stress.
The goal isn’t to eliminate it.
The goal is to not get stuck in it.
The goal is to not get stuck in it.
When stress can move:
- clarity returns
- sleep improves
- presence expands
- work starts to feel more like the work you trained to do
That’s not burnout recovery.
That’s nervous system completion.
That’s nervous system completion.
And for many professionals, it’s the missing piece.
If this resonates
If you’re a high-stress professional — physician or otherwise — and you recognize the experience of pushing through while feeling increasingly stuck, there are efficient, confidential, brain-based ways to reset your system without stepping away from your career.
That’s the work I do.
Stress isn’t the problem.
Getting stuck in it is.
Getting stuck in it is.
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