Giver” Era is Officially on Hiatus

Hey everyone, Tina here. Pull up a chair, grab a snack (because I certainly don’t have one to share right now), and let’s have a little heart-to-heart about the state of my “customer service” department.

You know that friend? The one who is always the “fixer”? The one people call when they need a jumpstart at 2 AM, a $20 loan until Friday, or a shoulder to cry on because they ignored your advice and went back to their toxic ex for the fourteenth time?

Yeah. For a long time, I was that girl. I prided myself on being the reliable one. I had the “I got you” energy on lock. But lately, I’ve realized that my “I got you” tank is running on fumes, and the fumes are actually just me hyperventilating into a paper bag.

Reaching the Limit: Entering the “Don’t Ask Me For Nothin'” Season

The other day, someone reached out asking for a “huge favor.” My eye started twitching before I even finished reading the text. It wasn’t even a hard favor, but my brain immediately went into lockdown mode. It was in that moment I realized I’ve reached my limit. I have officially entered my “Don’t Ask Me For Nothin’” era.

I saw this quote today that basically summed up my entire soul in one sentence:

“If u need anything, I mean anything, don’t hesitate to ask another mf cause ion got it.”

Read that again. Let it marinate. It is poetic. It is honest. It is my new voicemail greeting.

The Reality of Setting Boundaries

I know it sounds a little harsh, but hear me out. Setting boundaries is usually described as this elegant, peaceful process where you sit in a lotus position and say, “I am protecting my peace.”

In reality? Setting boundaries feels more like closing the shutters, locking the door, and pretending you aren’t home when you see the “Can I ask you a question?” bubble popping up on your phone.

What “Ion Got It” Really Means

“Ion got it” isn’t just about money—though, let’s be real, inflation is out here acting like a supervillain—it’s about everything:

1. Emotional Labor

I am currently at capacity. My empathy meter is at 1%. If you tell me your problems right now, I might just respond with “dang, that’s crazy” for three hours straight because I simply do not have the bandwidth to process your drama.

2. Time

If you ask me to help you move, just know I have a mysterious back injury that only flares up when I see a cardboard box.

3. Energy

I used to be the person who would stay up late helping people figure out their lives. Now? If it’s past 9 PM, my brain has already clocked out, filed its taxes, and gone to sleep.

Overcoming the Guilt of Being “Polite”

I think a lot of us feel this way, but we’re too “polite” to say it. We keep saying “yes” until we’re bitter, tired, and looking at our friends like they’re chores.

So, I’m giving you permission to join me in this season of unavailability. It’s okay to tell people that the shop is closed for inventory. It’s okay to admit that you are currently the “mf” who needs help, rather than the one giving it.

A Quick Guide for Those Asking for Favors

So, if you’re reading this and you were about to text me to ask if I can “just quickly” do something… please refer back to the quote above.

  • Do I love you? Yes.
  • Am I rooting for you? Always.
  • Do I have the mental, physical, or financial resources to solve your current crisis? Refer to the previous answer.

Refilling the Cup

I’m taking some time to refill my own cup. And honestly? My cup is currently a thimble. It’s going to take a while. Until then, there are approximately 8 billion other people on this planet—surely one of them has what you’re looking for!

Stay hydrated, stay blessed, and most importantly, stay away from my inbox with “favors” for at least three to five business months.

#emotionalBurnout #FriendshipBoundaries #HealthyRelationships #MentalHealthAwareness #personalGrowth #protectingYourPeace #SayingNo #SelfCareTips #settingBoundaries #storiesFromTina #TheFixerMentality

Emotional Burnout in Marriage Explained reveals how stress, unmet needs, and disconnection can drain a relationship—and how awareness can help restore understanding and connection.

Read more: https://www.gracetallman.ca/blog/emotional-burnout-in-marriage-explained

#MarriageStruggles #EmotionalBurnout #RelationshipHealth #MentalWellness #CoupleSupport #HealingTogether

Dispatches from the Quiet Zone

Lately, I’ve been living in what I can only describe as a very quiet, very weird little universe where the same emotional reruns keep playing on repeat, and apparently I’m the unwilling main character. If life is a group project, then I would love to know why I’m always the one holding the clipboard, the stress, and somehow the blame for things I didn’t even touch. At this point, I don’t even argue with the loop anymore. I just sit there like, “Ah yes, this again. Wonderful. Love that for me.”

The Difference Between Being Tired and Being Worn Down

There’s a special kind of tired that comes from being in the same pattern long enough to recognize the sound it makes before it even starts. It’s not just regular tired, like “I need a nap and a snack.” It’s deeper than that. It’s the kind of tired that gets into your bones, settles into your thoughts, and starts unpacking its bags like it pays rent. It’s the kind of tired that makes you look at people and think, “I have absolutely no extra energy to explain myself to you when you’ve already decided your version of the story.” And honestly, that’s been the mood.

When Misplaced Blame Becomes a Pattern

I’ve started to notice how often people love a neat explanation, especially when it saves them from actually looking at the whole mess. If something goes wrong, someone has to be the convenient answer. Someone has to be “the problem.” And somehow, some days, that role gets handed to me like a party favor nobody wanted. It’s almost impressive how quickly misplaced blame can find a home. Like it has GPS. Like it’s late for a meeting and knows exactly where to land. Meanwhile, I’m standing there thinking, “I did not order this package, and I would like to return it unopened.”

The Weight of Being an Emotional Sponge

What wears me down most is not just the weight itself, but the fact that it keeps pretending to be new. The same tensions, the same misunderstandings, the same invisible rules that nobody bothered to explain, and the same expectation that I’ll just absorb it all quietly like some kind of emotional sponge. And for a while, I did. I kept trying to be reasonable. I kept trying to make sense of things. I kept trying to be the person who could smooth out the edges, carry the discomfort, and still smile like I wasn’t holding my own internal weather system together with duct tape and denial.

The High Cost of People Pleasing

But there comes a point where you realize that constantly trying to make other people comfortable can turn into a full-time job with terrible benefits. No dental. No vacation days. Just a recurring sense of being emotionally overdrawn.

Choosing Distance as a Form of Peace

So now I keep to myself more. Not in some dramatic, mysterious, candle-lit way like I’m a character in a novel who stares out rainy windows and writes poems no one asked for. More in the practical sense of “I am tired, I am done performing, and silence is starting to look very reasonable.” I’ve learned that distance can become normal when closeness has been too expensive. You stop reaching for what keeps slipping away. You stop expecting warmth from places that only give you drafts. You stop opening the same doors hoping for a different room behind them.

And the strange thing is, once you stop expecting much, life gets quieter. Not better, not worse—just quieter. The kind of quiet that feels empty at first, then familiar, then oddly protective. I used to think silence meant something was wrong. Now I think sometimes silence is what happens when a person finally decides not to keep volunteering their heart for inspection.

Finding Humor in the Chaos

I won’t pretend that this version of life is glamorous. It’s not. There is nothing aesthetic about being emotionally exhausted while also trying to remain functional enough to answer messages, do responsibilities, and act like you’re not internally side-eyeing the universe. There is nothing cute about carrying burdens that were never yours and somehow still ending up as the person everyone looks at when the dust settles. If there were medals for endurance, I’d like mine in a very ordinary font and maybe with snacks attached.

Humor helps, though. A little. Not in a “laugh everything off” way, because that gets old fast, but in the way that lets you stay human when things feel too heavy. Sometimes you need to look at the absurdity and say, “Wow, this is a terrible setup. Truly impressive how bad this arrangement is.” Sometimes the only thing keeping you from sinking is being able to notice the comedy in the chaos. Because if you can’t laugh at the fact that you’re being asked to carry emotional furniture you never ordered, then what exactly are you supposed to do—carry it with perfect posture?

Accepting the Reality of Silence

Still, underneath the jokes, there’s a real weariness here. The kind that makes you stop trying to translate yourself for people who have already decided not to understand. The kind that makes you withdraw not because you don’t care, but because caring has started to feel one-sided and expensive. The kind that makes you accept that some people will always misread your silence, and some will only notice your pain once it becomes inconvenient for them. That realization hurts, but it also clarifies things.

Why Distance is Honest

I think that’s part of why I’ve become so comfortable with distance. Not because I enjoy it, but because it asks less of me. It doesn’t demand explanations. It doesn’t hand me false hope with a smile. It doesn’t tell me I’m overreacting when I’m clearly exhausted. Distance is honest in its own strange way. It says, “This is what it is.” And sometimes that is the closest thing to peace available.

The hardest part is knowing how much of this I’ve had to learn the unglamorous way. Not through a breakthrough, not through some neat little moment of enlightenment, but through repetition. Through being let down enough times that the pattern stopped feeling surprising and started feeling scripted. Through learning that not every battle deserves my energy. Through realizing that some people will keep projecting their noise onto you no matter how calm you are, because the point was never accuracy. The point was convenience.

And that’s a lonely thing to understand. It makes you feel like you’re living in a world where everyone is speaking a language you learned too late. You show up with honesty, they bring assumptions. You offer clarity, they prefer chaos. You carry the truth, and somehow still end up apologizing for the mess. It gets old. It gets laughably old. At some point, you start wanting to print a sign that says, “I am not available for blame I did not manufacture.”

Survival Isn’t Always Heroic

But even with all that, I’m still here. Still moving. Still getting through the day one small, unremarkable step at a time. Still finding tiny pockets of comfort in ordinary things. The first sip of something warm. A stretch of quiet that doesn’t demand anything from me. A moment where nobody needs me to be anything other than present. A joke that lands just right. A laugh that escapes before I can stop it. These little things matter more now than they used to, probably because when life is loud in all the wrong ways, even the softest good thing feels like a small act of mercy.

I’ve also learned that not all survival looks heroic. Sometimes survival looks like answering one more email, making one more meal, taking one more shower, and not falling apart in the middle of it. Sometimes it looks like sitting in the car before going inside, just to gather yourself. Sometimes it looks like lowering expectations until they fit inside your actual energy. Sometimes it looks like choosing peace over proving a point you already know won’t be heard correctly. That counts too. More than people realize, actually.

Being Worn Down is Not Being Weak

So if you’ve ever felt like you were carrying the emotional leftovers of everyone else’s decisions, I see you. If you’ve ever been tired in a way that sleep doesn’t fix, I know that place. If you’ve ever looked around and felt like the distance between you and everyone else was becoming part of the furniture, you’re not alone in that either. Some of us have had to get very good at functioning while quietly disappearing a little at a time. That doesn’t make us cold. It makes us worn. There’s a difference.

And maybe that’s the part I want to say most clearly: being worn down does not mean being weak. It means something has taken too much for too long. It means you have survived environments that asked you to shrink, absorb, explain, and endure. It means you got tired of being the easy target for unresolved patterns that were never yours to begin with. It means you reached a point where silence felt safer than trying to persuade people who had already made up their minds.

I don’t know exactly what comes next, and I’m not going to dress that up like a motivational poster with a sunset on it. Some days, all I know is that I’m here, and I’m tired, and I’m still trying. Some days that is the whole story. But there’s honesty in that too. There’s power in naming the weariness without pretending it’s something prettier. There’s relief in admitting that the noise is too much, that the role is unwanted, that the blame is misplaced, and that a part of me really does wish this whole thing would just end already.

Not in a dramatic way. Not in a cinematic way. Just in a deeply human way. In the way a person longs for the looping to stop, for the burden to lift, for the silence to finally feel like rest instead of retreat.

Until then, I’ll keep going the way I have been: quietly, cautiously, with a little humor where I can find it. Because if life insists on being absurd, I might as well notice. And if the world wants to keep handing me things I never asked for, then at least I can name them clearly and set them down, even if only for a minute.

Some days that’s enough. Some days it has to be.

#BurnoutRecovery #CopingWithStress #DealingWithEmotionalExhaustion #emotionalBurnout #emotionalExhaustion #EmotionalHealth #FindingPeaceInSilence #LettingGoOfToxicPatterns #LifeLessons #MentalHealthWellness #MisplacedBlame #peoplePleasing #personalGrowth #PersonalGrowthBlog #protectingYourPeace #selfCare #settingBoundaries #storiesFromTina #Wordpress

Reclaiming Your Peace (And Your Sundays)

Hey there, it’s Tina. Pull up a chair, grab a beverage of choice—preferably something stronger than the lukewarm tea I’ve been nursing—and let’s have a real talk.

I recently had a “moment.” You know the one. It’s that moment where someone looks you dead in the eye and says, with all the audacity of a pigeon trying to steal a whole slice of pizza, “You’re the one making this difficult.”

I’m sorry, what? I paused. I actually looked behind me to see if there was another Tina standing there causing a scene. Nope. Just me. Me, who spent the last three years playing unpaid therapist, personal assistant, and Chief Emotional Garbage Collector for someone who couldn’t find their own boundaries with a GPS and a search party.

The Truth Behind the Word “Difficult”

It’s funny how that word works, isn’t it? “Difficult.” It’s the universal code word for: “You’ve stopped being a doormat and the sudden friction is hurting my feet.”

For a long time, I wore my “Easy-Going” badge like a Miss America sash. I was the “cool” friend, the “flexible” partner, the “reliable” colleague who would fix your mess before you even realized you’d spilled it. But here’s the secret I learned the hard way: When you spend all your time being “easy,” you’re usually just making life easy for people who don’t deserve the effort.

Why You Should Embrace Being “Difficult”

The image I shared on Instagram recently really hit home for me. It said: “When they call you ‘difficult,’ what they really mean is that you stopped fixing their mess.” And honestly? Looking back, I should have been “difficult” from day one.

I should have been a whole mountain range of difficult. It would have saved me a lot of money on stress-relief candles and a lot of hours staring at my ceiling wondering why I felt so drained. If refusing to be walked over makes me difficult, then honey, call me the final level of a video game on “Extreme” mode. I am officially embracing the title.

What Real Boundaries Look Like

Here is what being “difficult” actually looks like in the real world:

  • Setting a Boundary: “I can’t help you with that project at 9 PM on a Sunday.” (Translation: “I have a date with my pajamas and a Netflix show about bread, and you are not invited.”)
  • Enforcing Consequences: “I told you that if you spoke to me like that again, I would leave the room. I am now leaving the room.”
  • Reclaiming Your Time: No longer being the “fixer” for someone who lacks the maturity to hold a screwdriver, metaphorically speaking.

Love is the Engine, But Respect is the Oil

We often stay in these lopsided dynamics because of love. We think, “But I love them!” or “We have so much history!” Listen to Tina: Love is the engine, but respect is the oil. Without respect, that engine is going to seize up, smoke, and leave you stranded on the side of the highway in a bad outfit.

Loving someone doesn’t give them a “Get Out of Jail Free” card to treat you like you’re less than. If someone has been in your life for years and they still don’t know where the line is? They aren’t “forgetful.” They’re overstepping because they think the line is optional.

The New Tina Manifesto: Valuing Your Mental Health

So, here is the new Tina Manifesto. I have zero patience left for people who mistake kindness for a weakness they can exploit. If I have to be the “villain” in someone’s story because I decided to value my own mental health, then I hope I’m at least a well-dressed villain with a great monologue.

To whoever needs to hear this:

  • It is okay to be difficult.
  • It is okay to say “No.”
  • It is okay to stop cleaning up messes you didn’t make.
  • Find the People Who Value Your Limits

    The people who truly value you won’t find your boundaries “difficult.” They’ll find them helpful, because they actually want to know how to love you well. Everyone else? They can go find a “simpler” person to bother. I’m busy being “complicated” and enjoying every second of it.

    Does this resonate with you? Have you been called “difficult” lately for simply standing your ground? Tell me your stories in the comments—let’s be “difficult” together.

    #emotionalBurnout #HowToSayNo #LifeIn2026 #MentalHealthAwareness #PersonalGrowthBlog #protectingYourPeace #ReclaimingYourTime #SelfRespect #settingBoundaries #storiesFromTina #toxicFriendships

    Feeling emotionally drained in your marriage? Learn to identify emotional burnout, restore connection, and strengthen your relationship.

    Read more: https://www.gracetallman.ca/blog/emotional-burnout-in-marriage-explaine

    #MarriageAdvice #EmotionalBurnout #RelationshipTips #MentalHealth #GraceTallman

    When your soul feels louder than your voice—this is what burnout can look like on the inside. It's not just tiredness. It's spiritual noise. And it's begging to be heard.
    #RefillYourEnergyTank #EmotionalBurnout #EnergeticReset #Voguegenics

    https://voguegenics.com/refill-your-energy-tank/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

    Refill Your Energy Tank & Reclaim Your Peace

    You’re not broken. You’re empty. This is how you recover—without guilt, hustle, or needing to explain. 🕯 ➡️ voguegenics.com/refill-your-energy-tank

    Voguegenics - Where Style, Sass, and Life Hacks Collide.

    🎧 New episode: We Can’t Afford to Cry Anymore (It’s Dehydrating)
    Topic tags: #Inflation #Shrinkflation #EmotionalBurnout

    TLDR: Being alive is expensive. And yes, we’re funny about it.

    [Tone: dry humor /j]

    https://apocalypseandavocados.transistor.fm/s1/19

    #PodcastMastodon #QueerVoices

    The recording of yesterday's live show about emotional burnout is now available for my Patrons: https://go.cosmicnation.co/LYLM080523P
    I've also released the full recording of an earlier session from April 20 about Inner Strength that you can find here: https://go.cosmicnation.co/JM200423

    #EmotionalBurnout #MeditationForStress #MindfulPodcast #SelfCareSunday #MentalHealthMatters #BurnoutRecovery #MeditationNation #BurnoutPrevention #MentalHealthAwareness #SelfLove #VeroWellness #TMGcommunity

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