Skip to content
Facebook Goodreads Instagram Bookbub
Chenelle Lee
Hitchcock
  • Home
  • Books
  • About
  • Blog
  • Coaching
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Books
  • About
  • Blog
  • Coaching
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Books
  • About
  • Blog
  • Coaching
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Books
  • About
  • Blog
  • Coaching
  • Contact

Burnout 🔍 Symptom-by-Symptom Breakdown and Supporting Strategies

  • July 9, 2025
  • How To Change Your Behavior, Relaxation, Stress Reduction Tips, Tips To Reduce Stress

Learning Goal: To help you understand what your symptoms are trying to tell you—and how to begin healing in a way that’s validating, simple, and sustainable.


🔍 Symptom-by-Symptom Breakdown

11. I Have a Decreased Tolerance for People

Reason:

If you find yourself feeling more irritable, overwhelmed, or emotionally drained around others—especially in situations that used to feel fine—you’re not alone. This is a common and deeply human symptom of burnout.

When your nervous system is in chronic survival mode, otherwise known as fight-or-flight, your ability to regulate emotions and connect with others starts to fade. Your brain shifts away from compassion and connection, and into threat detection and self-protection.


🔍 What’s Happening in Your Brain:

  • Your prefrontal cortex—the part of your brain responsible for patience, empathy, and rational thinking—becomes less active
  • Your amygdala becomes more dominant, scanning interactions for danger, criticism, or conflict—even if it’s not actually there
  • You feel more easily triggered, misunderstood, or emotionally on edge
  • Emotional resilience wears thin, leaving little capacity for healthy social engagement, boundary-setting, or empathy

You might:

  • Snap at others or feel reactive in everyday conversations
  • Withdraw from relationships or feel overwhelmed by social obligations
  • Feel guilty for not “being there” for others the way you used to

This is not a sign that you’re selfish, broken, or antisocial.

It’s a clear signal that your nervous system is overstimulated and depleted—and needs safety, rest, and recalibration.


💛 What Helps;

 

✅ Prioritise Quiet Time and Protective Boundaries

Give yourself permission to say no, cancel plans, or choose solitude without guilt.

✨ This creates space for your nervous system to settle, so you feel more grounded and less reactive.

✅ Spend Time with Safe, Non-Demanding People

Choose low-pressure social connections that feel calming rather than draining.

✨ Being around emotionally safe people helps restore trust in connection and recharges your energy instead of depleting it.

✅ Use Grounding Techniques Before and After Social Interactions

Try breathwork, or a grounding technique like ..session, or even a walk outside.

✨ This prepares your brain for connection and helps you recover afterwards—so you bounce back instead of crashing.

✅ Allow Yourself to Pull Back Without Shame

Sometimes healing requires space. Honour your need to retreat when needed.

✨ You’ll return to relationships feeling more whole, rather than depleted or resentful.

✅ Try HeartMath® Techniques to Calm Your Stress Response

HeartMath tools are powerful for helping you shift into the rest-digest-detox side of your autonomic nervous system.

✨ Backed by peer-reviewed research, HeartMath has been shown to calm the amygdala, improve emotional regulation, and restore balanced brain function. I highly recommend HeartMath tools and techniques.

 


2. I Feel Anxious, and Have Brain Fog

Reason:

Chronic stress, inflammation, and nutritional deficiencies can deeply affect brain function—disrupting memory, mood, and focus.

Here’s what’s happening beneath the surface:

  • Chronic stress depletes key neurotransmitters like serotonin, dopamine, and GABA—the brain chemicals responsible for mood, motivation, focus, and emotional regulation. When these are low, it becomes harder to feel joy, stay mentally clear, or bounce back from emotional setbacks.
  • Stress also impacts the amygdala (the brain’s threat detector), making you more sensitive to fear, worry, and irritability.
  • At the same time, it impairs the hippocampus, the area of the brain responsible for memory, learning, and perspective. This contributes to brain fog, forgetfulness, and that frustrating sense of disconnection or confusion.
  • Low blood pressure, which is common in Adrenal Fatigue, results in reduced blood flow to the brain. Reduced blood flow results in less oxygen and fewer nutrients reaching your brain, which increases fogginess, dizziness, and mental slowness.
  • In the later stages of Adrenal Fatigue, overall energy production drops—including in the brain. With less cellular energy available, cognitive function is compromised, making it harder to process information, recall details, or stay focused.

 

🧠 What Helps;

 

  • Nourish your brain with whole unprocessed foods and healthy fats, and it’s important to take a high-quality omega-3s (fish oil), activated B-group vitamins, vitamin C, and magnesium (See Module on Not Negotiable Supplements that Will Make A Difference).
  • Gently reintroduce pleasure and play in small, manageable ways (laughter, creativity, knitting, sewing, painting, and connection with safe people triggers your rest-digest-detox mode).
  • Practice daily calming rituals like any breathwork, meditation, epson salt bath, or time in nature to signal safety to your brain.
  • Use HeartMathÂŽ Techniques to Calm Your Stress Response HeartMath tools are powerful for helping you shift into the rest-digest-detox side of your autonomic nervous system, and have peer reviewed research to support an improvement in brain function, and emotional regulation.


 

3. Loud Noises or Strong Smells Feel Overwhelming

Reason:
Many of my coaching clients tell me they’ve become sensitive to bright lights, loud noises, and strong smells. This is because their senses have become more reactive to everyday stimuli. It’s a form of sensory sensitivity, and it’s a common—but often overlooked—symptom of burnout and Adrenal Fatigue.

The good news? This heightened reactivity often improves as you begin to reduce your overall stress load, pace yourself more effectively, and prioritise sleep and nourishing meals. Many of my clients notice that as they rebalance their nervous system, the world no longer feels quite so loud, bright, or overwhelming.

Here’s why it happens:

  • Your amygdala, the brain’s fear and threat detector, becomes overactive under prolonged stress. This means your brain is constantly scanning for danger—even when none exists—and interpreting neutral stimuli (like background noise or a scent) as threats.
  • Free radicals, which are produced in greater numbers during stress, can damage sensory nerves. This can make you more reactive to smells, sounds, and even touch.
  • Your nervous system loses its ability to filter or “turn down the volume” on incoming sensory information, causing an exaggerated response to things like:
  • Loud noises (e.g. traffic, crowds, ringing phones)
  • Strong chemical smells (e.g. perfumes, cleaning products)
  • Bright lights or visual clutter
  • Even gentle touch can feel irritating or painful in some cases

This kind of sensitivity is your body’s way of saying: “I’m overloaded.”

🧘‍♀️ What Helps:

  • Creating a calming environment with soft lighting and minimal noise
  • Using natural, unscented products at home
  • Practicing nervous system regulation techniques like deep breathing, grounding, gentle movement, and meditation (you will learn how to in the last module)
  • Reducing exposure to synthetic chemicals and overstimulating environments whenever possible
  • Learning that you need to be able recognise when you are experiencing stress and have the skills to switch yourself into the rest-digest-detox side of your ANS, which you will learn!
  • Use HeartMathÂŽ Techniques to Calm Your Stress Response HeartMath tools are powerful for helping you shift into the rest-digest-detox side of your autonomic nervous system, where healing of your sensory nerves can take place.

 


4. I Crave Sugar, Caffeine, or Salty Foods to Get Through the Day

Reason:
Most of my coaching clients tend to be hardworking people who often overlook their own needs and push themselves over their limits regularly, forgetting to eat properly. When your energy is running on empty, your body will do whatever it can to keep you going—and that often means having cravings for quick fixes like sugar, caffeine, or salty snacks.

These cravings aren’t just about willpower or habit. They are biological signals that your system is under stress and in survival mode.


🍬 Sugar Cravings


Sugar cravings typically occur when your blood sugar drops too low, triggering symptoms like brain fog, lethargy, shakiness, or irritability. In response, your body craves a quick source of energy—usually high-glycemic foods that rapidly increase your blood glucose levels.

The problem? After eating those quick-hit carbs, your body releases a large amount of insulin to remove the excess glucose from your bloodstream and shuttle it into your cells. This can cause a blood sugar crash, which leads to the same unpleasant symptoms of brain fog, lethargy, shakiness, or irritability—and often another round of cravings. This rollercoaster places extra strain on your already exhausted adrenal system.

There is a very specific way to eat that supports adrenal recovery:
Consistently fuel your body with meals rich in protein, healthy fats, and low-glycemic, complex carbohydrates every 3–4 hours.


What Helps:

  • Eat regular meals with protein, low glycemic index carbs and healthy fats to stabilize blood sugar.
  • Consider magnesium and Activated B vitamins to support energy and reduce cravings. See how to in the module Vital Supplements That Are Not Negotiable.

 


☕️ Caffeine Cravings

Caffeine stimulates your adrenal glands to release cortisol and adrenaline—those “get up and go” stress hormones that can give you a quick hit of energy or focus. But when your system is already running on empty, this artificial push can backfire.

Over time, relying on caffeine can worsen adrenal fatigue by putting additional strain on your already-exhausted stress response system. That daily coffee boost becomes a cycle: you feel tired, you reach for caffeine, it spikes your stress hormones, then drops you even lower later on. Cue more coffee… and deeper burnout.

But let’s be real—quitting caffeine entirely isn’t sustainable for most people. And the truth is, you don’t have to give it up completely to heal.

What Helps;

  • Avoid caffeine on an empty stomach
    Coffee first thing in the morning can spike cortisol too fast. Try having it after breakfast or with a protein-rich snack to buffer the impact.
  • Cut back gradually
    If you’re drinking multiple cups a day, reduce slowly—start by swapping your second or third cup for a decaf or herbal option.
  • Experiment with lower-caffeine alternatives
    Try green tea, matcha, dandelion coffee, or even half-caf blends. These can give you a gentle lift without the harsh crash.
  • Support your energy in other ways
    The more you prioritise blood sugar balance, hydration, and quality sleep, the less you’ll need caffeine to function.

Burnout recovery isn’t about giving up what you love—it’s about creating rhythms that support your healing without adding more pressure. If you enjoy your morning coffee, keep it—but enjoy it in a way that’s kinder to your body.


🧂 Salt Cravings


Salt cravings are especially telling. They are a well-recognised hallmark of Adrenal Fatigue, because your adrenal glands play a key role in regulating sodium levels and blood pressure.

When adrenal hormones like aldosterone and cortisol are low, your body loses more sodium through urine. As a result, you may crave salty foods as a way to maintain electrolyte balance—a built-in survival mechanism.


🔹 Pro Tip:
If your blood pressure is not high, try adding a pinch of Celtic Sea Salt or Himalayan salt to a glass of water with fresh lemon in the morning. This simple tonic can help:

  • Support adrenal function
  • Improve hydration
  • Reduce light-headedness and early-morning fatigue

Most of my coaching clients begin to feel significantly improved once they learn how to stabilise their blood sugar, so it’s not swinging from high to low like a rollercoaster by eating properly.

 


5. I Get Sick More Often and Take Longer to Recover

🧠 What’s Going On:

If you’re catching every bug that’s going around—or it takes you forever to bounce back—it’s a strong signal that your immune system is under serious strain. And in most cases, chronic stress and cortisol imbalance are at the root.

Cortisol, your primary stress hormone, plays a crucial role in managing your immune response. But when cortisol levels are either too high for too long or have become chronically depleted, your immune system becomes either suppressed or sluggish.

Here’s what happens under chronic stress:

  • 🧯 In the early stages, high cortisol suppresses immune function, leaving you more vulnerable to infections and viruses.
  • 🔻 Later, when cortisol drops too low (as often happens in adrenal fatigue), your body struggles to mount a proper immune response, making it harder to recover.
  • 🛡️ Stress also weakens immune cells like natural killer cells and lymphocytes, which are essential to fight infections, heal tissues, and manage inflammation.

You may notice:

  • Getting sick more often than usual
  • Lingering symptoms after minor illnesses
  • Chronic fatigue following even small infections
  • Increased allergies or flare-ups of inflammation

🛡️ What Helps;

Your body can absolutely bounce back—but it needs the right environment. Here’s how to support your immune system through burnout recovery:

✅ Nervous System & Recovery Routines:
  • Prioritise rest and nervous system regulation (you’ll learn how in the final module)
  • Aim to spend at least 70% of your day in a rest-digest-detox state using breathing, pacing, grounding, meditation, any activity like knitting, sewing, crochet, painting, and gentle movement.
  • HeartMath tools are especially helpful in ensuring you are in the rest-digest-detox side of your autonomic nervous system.
🥗 Eat to Fuel Immunity & Calm Inflammation:
  • Eat consistently throughout the day to keep blood sugar balanced and energy stable (learn how in the How to Eat to Recover module)
  • Focus on immune-supportive foods: citrus fruits, berries, leafy greens, pumpkin seeds, oysters, garlic, and bone broth
  • Stay hydrated to help your cells flush toxins and function optimally
🦠 Support Gut Health (The Core of Your Immune System):
  • Include prebiotic and probiotic-rich foods like kefir, sauerkraut, plain yoghurt, and fibre-rich vegetables
  • Avoid skipping meals or relying heavily on sugar or caffeine—they disrupt your gut microbiome
  • Consider adding zinc, glutamine, and vitamin C (check with your practitioner)
🧽 Support Liver Function (Your Internal Detox Hero):
  • Start your morning with warm water and lemon to gently stimulate liver function
  • Reduce your intake of processed foods, alcohol, and high-sugar snacks
  • Add cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, cauliflower, kale, and rocket—these help your liver process toxins more efficiently
  • Include herbs like dandelion root, milk thistle, and turmeric (teas or supplements, with practitioner guidance)



6. I Feel Exhausted After Exercise Instead of Energised

Reason:
This one can feel so frustrating—and I hear it all the time from my coaching clients. You know exercise is meant to be good for you… so why do you feel worse afterward instead of better?

Here’s the truth: If you’re not feeling more energised after movement, then it’s simply too much for your body right now. And pushing through is likely depleting your already low cortisol reserves, leaving you feeling wiped out, dizzy, or like you need hours (or even days) to recover.

In the later stages of Adrenal Fatigue, intense or prolonged exercise can actually make symptoms worse. That’s because:

  • Your adrenal glands can’t keep up with the cortisol and adrenaline your body needs during and after exertion
  • Your mitochondria (the energy factories in your cells) may not be functioning optimally, so your brain and muscles aren’t getting the fuel they need
  • Overexertion can trigger a crash in blood sugar—compounding fatigue and leaving you feeling shaky or flat

For those in burnout recovery, the goal is not to “train harder”—it’s to support your body gently so it can heal.


💡 What Helps:

You don’t need to give up exercise forever—you just need to move in a way that honours your current energy level and supports healing.

✅ Choose Nervous-System-Friendly Movement

Swap high-intensity workouts for gentle options like:

  • Walking in nature
  • Restorative yoga or slow stretching
  • Tai chi or qigong
  • Gentle dancing to music you love
    ✨ These forms of movement support blood flow, improve mood, and help your body shift into the healing parasympathetic state—without draining your energy.
✅ Shorter Is Smarter

Aim for 10–15 minutes of movement to start.
✨ This allows you to feel the benefit—without triggering a crash.

✅ Eat Before

Have a small snack with protein and healthy fat and some low glycemic index or slow burning carbs before movement (e.g., a boiled egg, handful of nuts, or small smoothie).
✨ This helps stabilise your blood sugar, preventing post-exercise fatigue and shakiness.

✅ Hydrate with Electrolytes

Support your adrenal system by sipping water with a pinch of Celtic sea salt or an electrolyte powder before movement.
✨ This supports healthy blood pressure, especially if you feel light-headed after walking or standing.

✅ Rest Afterwards (Guilt-Free!)

Schedule a quiet rest break post-movement. You’re not being lazy—you’re supporting recovery.
✨ This helps your nervous system reset and signals safety to your body.


✨ If you’re in a later stage of Adrenal Fatigue and mostly bed-bound, don’t worry—you can still benefit from small movements like stretching your feet, deep breathing, or gentle joint circles while lying down. Every small action supports circulation, lymph flow, and hope.

 


7. I Often Feel Tired But Resist Going to Bed

Reason:

This paradox—feeling exhausted but wired—is incredibly common in burnout and Adrenal Fatigue. It’s often caused by dysregulated cortisol rhythms.

In a healthy cortisol cycle, levels are higher in the morning to help you wake up and gradually taper off throughout the day, reaching their lowest point at bedtime. However, chronic stress can disrupt this natural rhythm, causing a cortisol spike in the evening—right when your body should be winding down.

This late-night cortisol surge creates what many describe as a “second wind”: you feel mentally alert, physically restless, and find it hard to relax, even though you were dragging just an hour earlier. As a result, you may delay going to bed, stay up scrolling, working, or overthinking—and miss the ideal sleep window.

Over time, this pattern can lead to:

  • Poor sleep quality
  • Difficulty falling asleep
  • Waking up feeling unrefreshed

What Helps;

  • Minimize screen time and stimulation in the evening.
    Blue light from phones, laptops, and TVs can suppress melatonin production and confuse your body’s natural sleep signals. Wind down with soft lighting and low-stimulation activities like reading or listening to calming music.
  • Eat regular, blood-sugar-balancing meals.
    A balanced dinner with protein, healthy fats, and slow-digesting carbs can help regulate your cortisol and insulin production, helping you to feel calm.
  • Practice calming rituals at night.
    Gentle stretching, meditation, or soaking in a warm bath with magnesium can help activate your parasympathetic nervous system and prepare your body for rest.
  • Create a consistent wind-down routine.
    Going to bed and waking up at the same time each day helps train your circadian rhythm and signals safety to your nervous system.
  • Aim for a consistent bedtime—ideally before 10 PM.
    This allows your body to align with its natural cortisol and melatonin cycle, which peaks and dips at predictable times.
  • Train your nervous system to spend 70% of your day in the ‘rest-digest-detox’ state.
  • When You Use the HeartMth tools you can tell if you are in rest-digest-detox.
  • Morning sunlight exposure helps reset your body clock and increase your natural production of both cortisol and melatonin.

 


8. I Feel Worse If I Skip a Meal

Reason:

If you’re dealing with Adrenal Fatigue, your body struggles to regulate blood sugar effectively—especially when meals are skipped or delayed.

Under normal circumstances when your blood sugar drops because you have not eaten, your adrenal glands release cortisol to increase your blood sugar (that’s one of cortisols main jobs). But when you’re in Adrenal Fatigue, your cortisol levels may be too low—or erratic—to do this job properly.

As a result, skipping a meal can quickly lead to:

  • Hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar), which may cause symptoms like shakiness, brain fog, anxiety, irritability, and fatigue
  • Increased stress on the body, triggering a further cortisol response and compounding adrenal exhaustion
  • Cravings for sugar or stimulants as your body scrambles to bring your energy levels back up

When your adrenal system is under strain, your blood sugar rollercoaster becomes harder to manage. That’s why regular, balanced meals are so important—they help maintain stable energy, reduce cortisol spikes, and prevent unnecessary stress on the body.

🕒 Tip for Recovery:
Aim to eat every 3–4 hours, including a mix of protein (aim for 90 grams per day), healthy fats, and complex (low glycemic index) carbohydrates. This helps keep your blood sugar steady and supports your adrenal glands in restoring hormonal balance. This is an entire module called What To Eat To Recover From Adrenal Fatigue.

What Helps:

  • Eat within an hour of waking.
  • Carry protein-rich snacks (boiled eggs, nuts, hummus).
  • Avoid intermittent fasting during burnout recovery, instead focus on nourishing your body and healing.


9. I Overwork with Little Time for Recreation

Reason:
Most of my coaching clients are kind, caring people who go the extra mile, help everyone around them, and struggle to say no. Sound familiar?

If you’ve experienced early life trauma, there’s a strong chance you may have developed workaholic, people-pleasing, or perfectionist tendencies—or perhaps even all three. What a trifecta! These patterns often lead to overcommitting, overachieving, and working through exhaustion, even when your body is crying out for rest.

The problem isn’t just physical—it’s emotional, behavioural, and often subconscious.
Here’s what may be driving this:

  • You may have learned that your worth is tied to productivity, or that slowing down means you’re lazy, selfish, or at risk of being criticised or rejected.
  • You might feel an inner pressure to stay busy or be “useful” at all times, which makes resting feel unsafe or undeserved.
  • These deeply ingrained beliefs create chronic stress, leading to adrenal exhaustion and nervous system dysregulation over time.

📝 Journal Prompt: Reclaiming Rest Without Guilt

Many of us learned—consciously or not—that we had to earn rest, be productive to feel worthy, or meet others’ expectations to feel loved.

Take a few quiet moments to reflect on the following:

  1. What messages did I receive growing up about work, rest, and achievement?
    (e.g. “Hard work is everything,” “Rest is lazy,” “You have to be useful to be loved”)
  2. In what ways have these beliefs shaped how I treat myself today?
  3. What would it feel like to rest without guilt?
    (Describe what that might look like, sound like, feel like in your body.)
  4. What small shift could I make this week to honour my need for rest or play—without apology?
    (e.g. Blocking off one hour for a hobby, saying no to one non-essential task, going to bed earlier)

✨ You deserve rest not because you’ve earned it—but because you’re human. Let this be the start of honouring that truth.


10. I’ve Taken Long-term Steroid Therapy

Reason:

If you’ve been on long-term corticosteroid medication (like prednisone, cortisone, or hydrocortisone), your body may have reduced its natural production of cortisol—a condition known as adrenal suppression or secondary adrenal insufficiency.

Here’s why this happens:

  • Your body likes balance. When it senses that cortisol is being supplied externally (via medication), the adrenal glands reduce their own production to avoid overload.
  • Over time, especially with high doses or extended use, this feedback loop becomes downregulated, and the adrenal glands may stop producing enough cortisol on their own.
  • When the medication is reduced or stopped suddenly, your body may not be able to ramp up cortisol production quickly enough, leading to symptoms like extreme fatigue, low blood pressure, dizziness, weakness, and mood changes.

💡 What Helps:

  • Tapering steroid use very gradually (under medical supervision) to allow adrenal function to rebound
  • Supporting adrenal health with rest, blood sugar balance, hydration, and stress-reduction techniques that help you to get into the rest-digest-detox side of your ANS.
  • In some cases, temporary hormone support may be needed as the adrenals slowly regain function
  • You must consult your doctor in these circumstances.


11. I Have Multiple Chemical Sensitivities

Reason:
If perfumes, cleaning products, exhaust fumes, or synthetic chemicals leave you feeling unwell—you’re not imagining it. This reaction is known as Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS), and it’s often a sign that your detoxification pathways, gut, and immune system are under chronic stress.

People with burnout or adrenal fatigue are often more sensitive to chemicals due to a few key factors:

  • A sluggish liver can struggle to break down and eliminate everyday environmental toxins. When overburdened, even small exposures may trigger symptoms like headaches, nausea, dizziness, fatigue, or brain fog.
  • A leaky gut can allow partially digested food particles and toxins to pass into the bloodstream, activating the immune system and increasing overall reactivity—including to chemicals.
  • A dysregulated immune system, common in chronic stress and Adrenal Fatigue, may cause your body to overreact to harmless substances as if they’re threats.
  • Chronic stress generates free radicals that damage nerve and sensory tissue, increasing sensitivity to smells, pollutants, and synthetic chemicals.
  • Over time, this leads to a lower tolerance threshold—making everyday environments like shopping centres, hair salons, or public restrooms feel physically overwhelming.

🌱 What Helps;

✅ Choose Natural, Fragrance-Free and Chemical Free Products at Home

Minimising your chemical exposure gives your system space to heal.
✨ This often results in fewer headaches, clearer thinking, and improved energy.

✅ Support Your Liver with Daily Detox Practices

Hydrate consistently, enjoy gentle movement or saunas to encourage sweating, and eat leafy greens—especially bitter varieties like rocket, dandelion, and kale. Ensure you are not constipated, as this contributes to a build up of toxins and dysbiosis (overgrowth of bad bacteria in your gut).
✨ This supports natural detox pathways and boosts vitality.
Consider adding Milk Thistle as a gentle liver support (check with your practitioner if you’re taking medications).

✅ Reduce Stress to Lower Inflammation and Reactivity

Using calming techniques to get out of fight-or-flight mode helps regulate your immune response and reduce the internal “alarm system” that contributes to MCS.
✨ This can lead to fewer flare-ups, better sleep, and a calmer mind.
You’ll learn powerful stress-reset techniques in later modules.

✅ Consider Functional Testing

If sensitivities are persistent, functional gut and liver tests can reveal underlying imbalances.
✨ With the right information, you can personalise your recovery plan and move forward with confidence.
See the module Medical Tests That May Be Needed for details.

 


✨ As you begin to support your detox pathways, calm your nervous system, and create a safer environment, you’ll notice your tolerance slowly improve. Places that once felt overwhelming will become more manageable—and you’ll feel more in control of your wellbeing.

 

PrevPreviousExhausted? Take This 2-Minute Burnout Self Assessment

Share this page

Sign up

to receive

exclusive bonuses

and regular updates about

books and lots more.

Form protected by reCAPTCHA. Google’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Read my Privacy Policy.

Follow Chenelle:

Facebook Goodreads Bookbub Linkedin
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Policy

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. This site includes Amazon and other affiliate links.  If you buy a book through these links, I’ll earn a small commission. This does not affect your purchase price. Amazon and the Amazon logo are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates.

Š 2026  
Chenelle Lee Hitchcock
Website by GoCreate.me

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.

Got It
Learn more