Powered by RND
PodcastsHealth & WellnessBattling burnout | Recover from Fatigue, Overcome Brain Fog, Stress relief

Battling burnout | Recover from Fatigue, Overcome Brain Fog, Stress relief

Mikaela Klingborg - Battling Burnout
Battling burnout | Recover from Fatigue, Overcome Brain Fog, Stress relief
Latest episode

Available Episodes

5 of 19
  • 18. 4 Steps to Ease Setbacks During and After Burnout
    Having a setback can feel like a slap in the face. You're on your way back, you have hope of getting better, of getting well, and then you're just pushed straight down into that bottomless darkness. It's like a mockery, like someone wants to tell you not to believe that you can get well. The fear comes right away, and thougths like, maybe I can't get well? Maybe this will go on forever? And it feels like the setback will last forever. But a setback can also feel like a gentle reminder to take it a little easier, something you shake off and with a few minor adjustments get out of. Today I'm going to talk about how I avoid that dark place of setbacks and crawl back on track. How I do to have fewer, milder and shorter setbacks.   Key takeaways Setbacks will always happen, even if you do everything right. It's important not to get worried, lose hope, or throw out all your routines just because you have a setback. Setbacks come, but setbacks also go away. Things will get better again. Review your routines. Do you do the things that make you better, like journaling, taking brakes, mindful movements?  Question your to-do list. Do you really need to do everything, and with that deadline? Reframe it to remove things and prolong the dadlines.   Give yourself more time for recovery, like breaks, reading, listening to music, pilates, forrest walks or yoga.  Note that this podcast will take a short break for a couple of weeks. 
    --------  
    13:13
  • 17. Best hacks to reduce overwhelm in everyday life
    Have you ever been in need to make a decision, but been so overwhelmed that the decision feels impossible to make? Maybe standing in front of the toothpaste aile in the grocery store, unable to choose one of all the options? Or looking at your to-do list, unable to choose what to start with? Not to mention the decision of what to eat for dinner. Or do you have activities that you know you should do to feel better, but just doing them feels impossible? Today I want to share 2 tools that I use to reduce my overwhelm in those everyday situations, and make everyday life easier and run more smoothly.   Key takeaways Every decision we make requires energy and willpower. The more decisions we make, the more energy is used, and eventually there is no energy left. By making as many decisions as possibbly into routines, you need to take fewer decisions, get energy over for better things and get rid of that overwhelm.  Seccond guessing your healing process all the time gives doubt, fear and stress, which put the brain into high alert, worsening your symptoms like brain fog and overwhelm. By building a process to follow, trust it and stick with that, you can lower the stress on your brain, increasing your symptoms. 
    --------  
    12:44
  • 16. Too much to do? Do this to relieve stress and shorten that to do list
    Does it feel like your to-do list never ends? Like the more you do, the more you get to do? Like time and control are slipping out of your hands? It's a common feeling when there's too much going on in life. And the more you do, the worse off you'll be. Today I'm going to talk about why we get more stressed when we're stressed, how the brain creates this vicious cycle. I'm also going to talk about how to break it and give concrete tools and examples to calm your brain and make your schedule more manageable.   Key takeaways When we get stressed, activity in the irrational part of the brain increases and rational brain activity decreases. This causes us to make decisions that give us more and more to do. A good way to deal with this is to write a list of what you have to do, and what the consequences will be if you don't do it. Then reexamine your thoughts by questioning whether there is evidence that it will work out that way? You can especially look for if you think you can predict the future, have a too high minimum level or think you can read minds.
    --------  
    16:37
  • 15. The fun way to heal from fatigue
    Do your thoughts constantly go to how tired you are? Do you constantly feel how hard life is? Do you constantly try to feel if you are getting worse? If you are getting more tired, more brain fog, more dizzy, more nauseated, more palpitations? There is a risk that you are making yourself worse, and your life and your exhaustion even harder. Today I'm going to talk about how to make your exhaustion easier to live with, and maybe even enjoyable at times. I'm going to talk about how your thoughts can help you heal. And no, I'm not going to talk about thinking positively or lying to yourself. Being exhausted is a pain, there's a lot of sadness, anxiety, fear and frustration. But that doesn't have to mean it's always like that. It can actually be wonderful, fun and relaxing. Key takeaways When you get sick and start thinking more about how sick you are, which is completely natural and something we all do, we strengthen the neural pathways that sense the bad. We become super good at feeling bad, so-called sensitization. Which stresses our brain and our nervous system, which makes us more tired, more nauseous, dizzy, gives us more pain or whatever symptoms we have. But just as we can build neural pathways to feel bad, we can build neural pathways to feel good. We can train ourselves to feel good by focusing more on what we actually enjoy. It needs to be what you really enjoy, not what I enjoy or what you pretend to enjoy. When you leaning into positive sensations, you create safety for the brain, the stress level drops and the nervous system can leave its survival mode for a while. You can reinforce this reaction by writing down what you experience and by photographing it.
    --------  
    15:14
  • 14. 3 steps to recover from fatigue and brain fog without setbacks
    Do you want to do things, but get setbacks every time you try? Recovering from fatigue and brain fog is a balancing act. On the one hand, you have to allow time for recovery and not do too much. On the other hand, too much restriction becomes a confirmation for the brain that your illness is dangerous, which increases stress and increases symptoms. So how should you do it? That's what I'm going to answer today.   Key takeaways: Let go of the demands for your optimal recovery. It's okay not to succeed in getting the perfect recovery. Plan your activities based on effort and make sure you get enough recovery between the intense activities. It's not dangerous to be stressed sometimes, as long as you take it easy before and after. Plan recovery in the form of active rest, passive rest and sleep.
    --------  
    13:15

More Health & Wellness podcasts

About Battling burnout | Recover from Fatigue, Overcome Brain Fog, Stress relief

Are you stuck in your burnout? Tried it all but not getting better? I’m Mikaela, and I’ve been there too: brainfog, memory loss, dizziness, nausea, fatigued. Desperate, frustrated and no hope. But I’ve healed, and so can you. In this podcast I’ll share the methods and knowledge to • stop the fatigue and get more energy • get rid of the brain fog • overcome the dizziness • ease stress related pain like back pain and neck pain • relieve stress for your brain and nervous system I’m not a doctor, nor a psychologist or therapist. But I do know how it feels to be at the absolute bottom, and how to get out from there. The methods I used are based in neuroscience and nervous system regulation. If you’re ready to embrace the power to heal yourself, to get your energy and life back - this podcast is for you. Take a break, put down that to do list and let’s get started. There’s hope for everyone, and I’m here to help you find it.
Podcast website

Listen to Battling burnout | Recover from Fatigue, Overcome Brain Fog, Stress relief, Happy Place and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features
Social
v7.15.0 | © 2007-2025 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 4/18/2025 - 10:43:14 AM