Therapist Burnout Podcast: Mental Health, Business, and Career Tips for Therapists, Counselors, & Psychologists

Dr. Jen Blanchette

Are you a Therapist, Counselor, Coach, Psychologist, or Trauma Professional dealing with burnout or compassion fatigue? Do you own your private practice and it's full and you're miserable? Are you working with too many clients in an agency or group practice? Are you considering quitting the profession all together? If so, you've found the right podcast, we will answer the following questions: Am I suffering from burnout? What are the symptoms of therapist burnout? What other things can I do besides therapy or working 1:1 with clients? What other roles or jobs could I do after my career as a therapist or helper? What other business ideas can I explore besides private practice or agency work?

  1. HACE 4 DÍAS

    89. Work-Life Balance is BS—what to do instead

    Work-life balance is a myth—and it’s keeping therapists stuck in burnout. We’re told to strive for balance, to neatly separate our professional and personal lives, as if caregiving, therapy, parenting, and invisible household labor can be tucked into separate boxes. But the truth? For therapists and other caregivers, life doesn’t work that way. In this episode, I introduce a new concept I’m calling the Caring Quotient: the total emotional, physical, and mental energy you spend on caregiving—inside and outside the therapy room. When your caring quotient is maxed out, burnout is inevitable. I share stories from my Nana’s fried chicken, my own journey into motherhood after my son’s heart surgery, and years of working with brain injury survivors and their partners who were drowning in care. These stories reveal a deeper truth: burnout isn’t about poor self-care—it’s about the weight of unmeasured caregiving. You’ll learn: Why “work-life balance” sets therapists up for failureHow caregiving bleeds into every part of our lives—therapy sessions, parenting, household labor, emotional holdingWhy women therapists are disproportionately impacted by rising caregiving demandsThe connection between cognitive overload, caregiving, and therapist burnoutHow counterbalance—not balance—can help restore your capacity to carePractical ways to recognize when your caring quotient is maxed out and what renewal can look likeThis episode is for therapists who feel like they’ve hit the wall—emotionally, mentally, and physically. If you’ve ever wondered why your burnout feels different from other jobs, the caring quotient may be the missing piece. I’ll leave you with this reflection: What is your caring quotient right now? Are you maxed out, or do you have space for renewal? 👉 Coming in October: A full series on practice closure—how to know when it’s time, how to honor endings, and how to create space for what’s next.

    21 min
  2. 22 SEP

    88. What Is Therapist Burnout? Understanding the Layers

    👉 First things first: Join my Therapist Pen-Pal List Get my weekly notes, practical prompts, and updates on ways to work with me. Subscribe: https://balanced-thunder-281.myflodesk.com/drjenb Episode snapshotAfter nearly two years of talking with hundreds of therapists about burnout (and living my own), I’m revisiting the core question: What is therapist burnout—really? I share a body-based story from a back injury, then map burnout using a memorable lasagna metaphor so you can name what you’re feeling and choose a first small step. You’ll hear about: Why the ICD-11 frame only scratches the surface for cliniciansWhy vacations alone don’t fix therapist burnoutThe layered experience of exhaustion, resentment, “I don’t care,” clinical grief, vicarious trauma, moral injury, body symptoms, and shameSmall moves to create safety and margin before “doing the trauma work” on yourselfThe Lasagna Layers of Therapist Burnout (because therapists need a good metaphor)Noodles: Exhaustion as the base You’re doing too much. First step: do less. Fewer clients, fewer tasks, more margin.Sauce: Anger and resentment Irritability that leaks into everything. Paperwork, payers, tough sessions, home life.Cheese through everything: “I don’t care” Scary to admit. Often a nervous system survival response, not a character flaw.Hidden filling: Clinical grief Losses without ritual or witnessing. Client death, sudden endings, ghosting.Spicy layer: Vicarious trauma Intrusions, hypervigilance, worldview shifts from the work itself.Bitter bite: Moral injury When systems force choices that betray your values. It hits identity and ethics.Burnt edges: Body symptoms Headaches, GI issues, tight chest, sleep disruption—your body waving a red flag.Top layer: Shame The whisper that says “You’re a bad therapist.” It seals the whole dish and keeps you stuck.A body-based reframeLike my back flare, burnout involves multiple systems at once. It’s not about you “mismanaging stress.” It’s about adjusting inputs, removing aggravators, and rebuilding capacity step by step. Try one small move this weekCreate margin: Remove one task or one client block.Add safety: Choose one nervous-system support (sleep, movement, gentle connection).Get care: Loop in your therapist, PCP, or a trusted peer for assessment and support.Related episodeEp. 70: Burnout doesn’t stay at work — how it spills into life and what to do next.Share + stay connectedIf this helped, share it with a therapist friend. That’s how this message grows. Join the Therapist Pen-Pal List: weekly notes, gentle prompts, behind-the-scenes updates, and first dibs on offers.

    30 min
  3. 8 SEP

    86. Quiet Cracking? Burnout 3.0

    In this episode, I dive into the newest burnout buzzword making its way across the workplace: quiet cracking. Unlike quiet quitting, which is a conscious decision to pull back, quiet cracking describes the inner unraveling behind a professional mask. You may look fine, you may even be excelling, but inside you’re falling apart. I share what this term reveals—and what it misses—about the lived reality of burnout, depression, anxiety, compassion fatigue, moral injury, and clinical grief. I talk about my own experiences of quietly cracking during the pandemic, why interoception is key to recognizing early signs, and how we keep pushing until the cracks explode. We’ll also look at why women burn out more, what Gen Z is teaching us about burnout, and why business solutions that stop at wellness apps or “new tasks” are missing the point. Real talk: when you’re depressed, the last thing you need is more to do. What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhat “quiet cracking” means and why it resonates right nowThe difference between quiet quitting and quiet crackingWhy therapists and helpers often still “show up” while quietly falling apartHow interoception—the ability to sense what your body is telling you—can signal cracks before collapseHow burnout overlaps with depression and anxiety, and why that granularity matters for careThe unique layers of therapist burnout: compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, moral injury, and clinical griefWhy women experience higher rates of burnout, and how structural inequities add to the loadWhy Gen Z may be the “burnout canary in the coal mine” and what older generations can learnWhy corporate fixes like wellness apps and new assignments won’t address the root of burnoutWhat systemic and clinical solutions could actually make a differenceEpisode HighlightsQuiet cracking defined: The silent unraveling masked by productivity and professionalism.Still showing up: Therapists (and many helpers) keep going until they literally cannot get out of the car.The soda can metaphor: Repressing stress until it bursts, often in dramatic and uncontrollable ways.Women and burnout: Research shows women experience higher rates of burnout than men, especially in caregiving roles.Coco Gauff at the US Open: A moment of visible emotion in elite sports and what it teaches us about pressure, performance, and mental health.Brain injury work parallel: Patients told “it’s just anxiety” when trauma was driving their symptoms—mirroring how burnout gets flattened and misdiagnosed.My pandemic experience: I thought I was burned out, but I was also deeply depressed, having panic attacks, and living with anxiety. Even as a licensed psychologist, I missed it at first.Granularity matters: Burnout can look like depression, and depression can look like burnout. Compassion fatigue, moral injury, and trauma complicate the picture.Gen Z and screen time: Rates of depression and anxiety have skyrocketed since smartphones became central to adolescence. Gen Z is speaking the truth older generations have hidden.The cost of quiet cracking: A recent Fortune article reported it’s costing companies $438 billion in lost productivity. On paper, the job market looks stable, but 60–80 percent of workers are burned out.Business solutions fall short: Assigning new tasks to someone who is depressed or burned out isn’t just ineffective—it’s cruel. A culture fix without systemic and clinical backbone is a band-aid on a crack in a dam.Real Talk SegmentWhen you’re depressed, the last thing you need is more tasks. Business keeps trying to treat burnout like a morale problem instead of a health problem. We need lighter workloads, peer support, real mental health care access, and fair pay for providers. Without that, no wellness app or gratitude journal will make burnout better. Resources MentionedEpisode 70: Burnout or Depression? Let’s Get GranularEpisode 74: Burned Out, Dysregulated, Still Showing UpWHO ICD-11 burnout definition: Read hereBMJ Open systematic review on organizational burnout interventions: Read hereFortune article on quiet cracking and workplace cost: Read hereCrisis Resources988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (U.S.): 988lifeline.orgTalk Suicide Canada: 1-833-456-4566 or talksuicide.caInternational directory: findahelpline.comNAMI Frontline Wellness: Support for healthcare and mental health workersStay ConnectedPen-Pal List for Therapists: Weekly reflections and resources Sign up hereLinkedIn: Dr. Jen Blanchette

    33 min
  4. 1 SEP

    85. A Letter About Rest

    As therapists, we know rest is essential—yet it often feels out of reach. In this deeply personal episode, Dr. Jen Blanchette reflects on the meaning of Labor Day, the hidden labor therapists carry, and what it means to reclaim rest in a world that never stops buzzing. Inspired by a prompt from Liz Gilbert’s Letters from Love, Jen shares a moving letter she wrote to herself—a love note to the part of her that’s tired, overwhelmed, and trying to keep up. This episode is a reminder: ✨ Rest isn’t something you earn. It’s something you’re allowed. ✨ Burnout doesn’t always come with a crash—it’s the slow erosion of presence, joy, and space. ✨ Even in seasons of struggle, rest can still find you—if you let it. Whether you’re on the verge of burnout or simply longing for more breathing room in your practice and life, this episode offers space to exhale. 🔑 In This Episode:The surprising historical roots of Labor Day—and how they mirror today’s burnout cultureHow therapists are experiencing a new kind of labor crisis in the digital ageThe pressure to always be available—and why radical boundaries matterA letter from unconditional love to anyone who’s tired of holding it allWhy reclaiming rest is not selfish, but sacred📬 Want more reflections like this?Join the Therapist Pen Pal list to receive personal letters, insights, and first access to new offerings from Jen. 🔗 [Link in show notes] 💬 Connect with Jen:LinkedIn: @drjenblanchette Newsletter: The Shift on LinkedIn Website: www.drjenblanchette.com

    10 min
  5. 25 AGO

    84. Should You Start a Podcast as a Therapist? What I’ve Learned in 4 Years

    Links & Resources Mentioned Join the Therapist Pen Pal List – ask me questions for future AMA episodesPodcasting Business School with Adam SchaeubleThe Podcast Launch Journal by John Lee DumasHave you ever wondered what it’s really like to start a podcast as a therapist? In this Ask Me Anything episode, I answer a listener’s question: “How has the process of podcasting gone for you, and what has the response been like?” I’ve now been podcasting for four years total—two with my first show, The TBI Therapist Podcast, and two with The Therapist Burnout Podcast. In this episode, I share what I’ve learned across both experiences: the mistakes I made, the surprising opportunities that came out of it, and why my “why” for podcasting has shifted over time. If you’re considering launching your own podcast, this episode will give you a real look at what it takes, how to hold it lightly, and why clarity on your purpose matters more than fancy equipment or perfect marketing. What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy my first podcast felt like a “failure” (and how I see it differently now)The difference between podcasting as self-expression vs. marketing toolHow podcasts can evolve into unexpected opportunities (like my work helping therapists close practices)Why you won’t get a huge response at first—and why that’s actually goodThe time commitment and labor behind a weekly show (and why I set a 100-episode commitment for myself)How therapists’ unique skills (empathy, interviewing, deep listening) make us great podcastersPractical tips on choosing a niche, naming your show, and setting realistic expectationsEpisode TakeawayPodcasting is both labor and love. It can be a tool for visibility, a creative outlet, or a way to connect more deeply with your audience. But most importantly—it doesn’t have to be forever. Hold it lightly, let it evolve, and notice whether it feels like something you can’t not do.

    42 min
  6. 18 AGO

    83. 5 Questions to Ask Yourself if you Want to Quit Something

    Are you stuck in a job, practice, or even a hobby that no longer brings you joy? In this episode, I share my own story of letting go of teaching a fitness class — something that began as joy but slowly turned into striving and burnout. We’ll talk about Liz Gilbert’s four categories of work (hobby, job, career, vocation), Cal Newport’s Be So Good They Can’t Ignore You, and how easy it is to confuse passion with vocation. You’ll also hear how diet culture, striving for certifications, and perfectionism sneak into both therapy and fitness — and how to recognize when something that once brought joy now drains your energy. If you’ve ever wondered whether it’s time to stop doing something that no longer fits, this episode will give you a framework of 5 powerful questions to guide your decision. What You’ll Learn in This Episode:Why “follow your passion” isn’t always the best career advice (thanks, Cal Newport).Liz Gilbert’s framework of hobby, job, career, and vocation — and why not everything in your life should be all four.How I realized teaching my Monday night lifting class was more depleting than renewing.The role diet culture, perfectionism, and certifications play in therapist burnout.5 Questions to help you decide if it’s time to let something go in your work or hobbies.How to reclaim joy, creativity, and pleasure now — even in midlife. Resources MentionedElizabeth Gilbert on Hobby, Job, Career & Vocation (YouTube): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0g7ARarFNnwBig Magic: Creative Living Beyond Fear by Elizabeth Gilbert (Barnes & Noble): https://www.elizabethgilbert.com/books/big-magic/So Good They Can’t Ignore You: Why Skills Trump Passion in the Quest for Work You Love by Cal Newport: https://calnewport.com/writing/Email Love from me--yes, you're pen-pal Dr. Jen: https://balanced-thunder-281.myflodesk.com/drjenb

    27 min
  7. 11 AGO

    82. When You are Navigating a Hard Season as a Therapist

    In this Ask Me Anything episode, I answer a listener’s heartfelt question: “How could a newer therapist — about one year into practice — navigate a trauma-heavy caseload while dealing with the grief of a parent being diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer?” We talk about what it means to hold space for others while you’re also going through a personal crisis — especially in the early years of your career when you may be more vulnerable to burnout. I share my own experiences navigating depletion during COVID, the vicarious trauma that caught me off guard early in my career, and the emotional output of early motherhood after my son’s traumatic birth. This is a conversation about capacity, permission, and the small but essential ways you can create rhythms of rest in seasons where life feels unbearably heavy. What You’ll Hear in This Episode The reality for early-career therapists:The 2025 Moodle study showing younger and early-career therapists are statistically more prone to burnout.Why newer therapists often get assigned the most acute, complex cases — and how that intersects with personal crises.The double impact of primary and secondary trauma:How your own grief or crisis can combine with the emotional load of trauma work.What happens to the nervous system when you stay in prolonged sympathetic dominance.My personal experiences in difficult seasons:Developing panic attacks during COVID and not realizing my depletion until burnout hit.Losing two clients during the pandemic and only later recognizing the emotional toll.The vicarious trauma I experienced working with an infant loss case while pregnant — and what I wish I’d done differently.The underestimated emotional output of early motherhood after my son’s traumatic birth, and launching a private practice when I hadn’t yet healed.Questions to ask yourself in a crisis season:What is my true capacity for work right now?Is there other income I can earn that is less emotionally demanding?Is there financial wiggle room to take time off?What can I put down, even temporarily?Rhythms of rest and restoration in busy, painful seasons:Short walks between sessions, one work-free evening a week, connection with friends.Rituals and spiritual practices to mark beginnings, middles, and ends.Calling in favors and receiving help without guilt.A reminder for every therapist:“Put the stones down. The river will carry them now.”You are worthy of the same care you give others.Listener Spotlight I share a review from Alison in CA that truly made my day: "Genuine, grounded, no hard sell (thank god!)… I feel like I’m getting coffee with an old friend who gets me and has great insight when I hear her. THANK YOU!!"Resources & Links Mentioned Join my free Pen-Pal List for behind-the-scenes stories, resources, and a place to submit your own AMA question (direct submission): drjenblanchette.com/therapist-burnout-podcast or the pen-pal list: https://balanced-thunder-281.myflodesk.com/drjenbIf you’ve been enjoying the show, I’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts — I read every one, and they mean so much.

    20 min
5
de 5
19 calificaciones

Acerca de

Are you a Therapist, Counselor, Coach, Psychologist, or Trauma Professional dealing with burnout or compassion fatigue? Do you own your private practice and it's full and you're miserable? Are you working with too many clients in an agency or group practice? Are you considering quitting the profession all together? If so, you've found the right podcast, we will answer the following questions: Am I suffering from burnout? What are the symptoms of therapist burnout? What other things can I do besides therapy or working 1:1 with clients? What other roles or jobs could I do after my career as a therapist or helper? What other business ideas can I explore besides private practice or agency work?

También te podría interesar