
Burned Out From Doing It All? How Defining Your Core Values Can Help You Reclaim Your Energy
Burned Out from Doing It All? How Defining Your Core Values Can Help You Reclaim Your Energy
If you’re a high-performing woman who feels like you’re doing everything right—but still feels exhausted, disconnected, or overwhelmed—you’re not alone.
There’s a specific kind of burnout that doesn’t come from laziness or lack of discipline.
It comes from doing too much of what doesn’t actually matter to you.
You’re productive. Responsible. Capable.
You’re checking the boxes. Showing up. Holding it all together.
And yet—something feels off.
Like you’re living a life that looks good on paper… but doesn’t actually feel like yours.
If that resonates, we need to talk about something most women have never been taught how to do:
Define your values.
Why Burnout Isn’t Just About Doing Too Much
Most women think burnout means they need better time management, more discipline, or more support.
But often, that’s not the real issue.
The real issue is this:
You’re living according to values that aren’t actually yours.
From a young age, women are taught what should matter:
Be kind
Be available
Be selfless
Be nurturing
Be everything to everyone
And over time, those expectations don’t just influence us—they become our identity.
We stop asking:
“What do I actually want?”
And start living based on:
“What am I supposed to want?”
When “Should” Becomes Who You Are
I was raised with a very clear set of values:
Faith.
Divine Nature.
Individual Worth.
Knowledge.
Choice and Accountability.
Good Works.
Integrity.
And for a long time, I believed those were my values.
Not because I chose them—but because they were given to me so early and so consistently that I never questioned them.
But over time, I felt something I couldn’t quite explain.
A quiet tension.
A sense that something didn’t fully fit.
That tension has a name: cognitive dissonance.
It’s what happens when your internal truth doesn’t match how you’re living your life—and it is incredibly stressful on your mind and body.
You can function there for years.
But eventually, it catches up to you.
And often, it shows up as burnout.
The Part That Might Make You Uncomfortable
Here’s where this gets real.
There are things I’ve been told should matter to me… that don’t.
For example—social connection in the way it’s often expected of women.
I care about people. I enjoy meaningful conversation. I like checking in and staying connected.
But I don’t enjoy hosting.
I don’t enjoy being responsible for creating an experience for everyone else.
I don’t enjoy the pressure of making sure everyone is having a good time.
I don’t enjoy the cleaning before, the cleanup after, or the unspoken expectation that I’m now in charge of other people’s comfort.
And for a long time, I thought that meant something was wrong with me.
Because this is what women are taught:
You host.
You gather people.
You create connection.
You make things feel special.
So I tried to make myself enjoy it.
And I couldn’t.
Not because connection is bad—but because that version of it doesn’t align with who I am or what I value.
And when I kept forcing it?
It drained me.
Not just physically—but mentally and emotionally.
Because I wasn’t just showing up… I was performing.
Trying to meet an expectation that was never actually mine to begin with.
And that’s when it clicked:
Just because something is valued by society doesn’t mean it has to be valued by me.
Your version of connection might look completely different—and that’s the point.
Another Place This Shows Up (That No One Talks About)
This didn’t just show up in social connection.
It showed up in motherhood too.
Specifically—the “school mom” role.
You know the one:
Read-to-your-kid days
Class parties
Room mom responsibilities
Teacher appreciation
Holiday events
All of it
I believed—for a long time—that being a good mom meant being involved in everything.
So I said yes.
Over and over again.
And I hated it.
It was draining.
I would show up, smile, do the thing… and then leave completely depleted.
And the worst part?
I didn’t even have anything left for my kids afterward.
The very people I was trying to show up for… were getting the leftovers.
Burnout doesn’t come from not caring.
It comes from caring about things that were never yours to carry.
The Turning Point: Defining My Core Values
At some point, I stopped asking:
“What should matter to me?”
And started asking:
“What actually does?”
After sitting with that question—honestly, and over time—I landed on three core values:
Growth
Health
Family
And even within those, one stood above the rest:
Growth.
I am driven by becoming.
By doing hard things over and over again.
By evolving. Learning. Expanding.
Health isn’t something I force—it’s something I genuinely enjoy.
And family isn’t about performance—it’s about being present for the process of raising humans.
How to Discover Your Core Values
If you’ve never done this before, don’t worry—most people haven’t.
Here’s a simple way to start:
Step 1: Start with a List
Search “list of core values” and write down the ones that resonate.
Start big—50 to 75 options is normal.
Step 2: Narrow It Down Slowly
Over the course of a few weeks, begin eliminating values that:
Feel like “shoulds”
Don’t show up in how you actually live
Sound good—but don’t feel true
Ask yourself:
Would I choose this if no one saw it?
Do I actually prioritize this?
Step 3: Get It Down to 3–5 Core Values
This is where clarity happens.
Too many values = no direction.
Most people ultimately land on just a few core drivers.
Step 4: Identify Your Anchor Value
One of your values will likely stand above the rest.
This is the lens through which you make decisions.
For me, that’s growth.
What Happens When You Get Clear
When I got clear on my values, everything changed.
My Relationships Improved
I found a partner who shares that same core value of growth.
We challenge each other.
We support each other.
We grow together.
My Parenting Shifted
I stopped trying to raise perfect kids—and started raising humans.
Messy, emotional, learning-as-they-go humans.
Instead of fearing failure, I now see it as part of the process.
I get to be:
A mom
A coach
A support system
An advisor
And I actually enjoy it—because I’m aligned.
My Energy Came Back
When you stop forcing yourself into roles that don’t fit, you stop draining your energy on things that don’t matter.
And that changes everything.
A Simple Exercise to Start Today
Write down everything currently demanding your time and energy.
Then ask yourself:
Does this align with who I actually am and what I actually value?
If the answer is no—or even “not really”—that’s something to look at.
Because every “yes” to something misaligned is a “no” to something that actually matters.
You Don’t Need to Do It All
You were never meant to do everything.
You were meant to do what matters.
And the only way to know what that is… is to define it for yourself.
Ready to Go Deeper?
This is the work we do every day—helping women move out of burnout and into clarity around their health, energy, and life.
If you’re tired of doing everything and still feeling off, we can help.
Call or text (801) 477-6484 or visit evolvedwomenshealth.com to learn more about working with us.
Because the goal isn’t to become who you’re supposed to be.
It’s to become who you already are—without the noise.
