You brush it off. A rude comment from a colleague, a moment of feeling overlooked, the exhaustion and overwhelm creeping under your skin. ‘It’s not that bad.’ You tell yourself to toughen up, move on, be grateful. But deep down, these small wounds pile up, and the more you dismiss them, the smaller you start to feel.
For high-achieving professionals, downplaying pain isn’t just a habit—it’s a survival mechanism. In fast-paced, high-pressure environments, you learn to minimize your struggles because admitting them feels like weakness. You tell yourself others have it worse, that you should just push through. But the more you dismiss what hurts, the more invisible your own needs become—even to yourself.
Over time, this pattern erodes your sense of worth. The more you ignore your own pain, the harder it becomes to recognize when something actually isn’t okay. You stop advocating for yourself, stop setting boundaries, and start believing that maybe you don’t deserve better. And when you feel inferior, it affects everything—your confidence, your relationships, your ability to show up as your full self.
This week in therapy, a client shared: “I don’t even know when it started, but I’ve spent years convincing myself that things don’t bother me. I let people talk over me in meetings. I tell myself it’s fine when someone takes credit for my work. But I know it’s not. I just don’t know how to let myself feel like I deserve better.”
As we unpacked it, they realized that this wasn’t just about work. They had spent so long minimizing their pain that they no longer trusted their own feelings. They had trained themselves to be small, even in spaces where they had every right to take up space.
Through therapy, we worked on shifting their inner language—allowing them to acknowledge what hurt, instead of rationalizing it away. We introduced boundary-setting techniques, small ways to start asserting themselves without feeling like they were “too much.”
We also practiced self-validation, replacing thoughts like “It’s not a big deal” with “It mattered to me, and it’s okay that it did.” Slowly, they began recognizing their own value—not just in their work, but in every aspect of their life.
If you’ve been downplaying what hurts, feeling smaller every time you do, you don’t have to keep doing this. In my 1:1 therapy sessions, we’ll work together to rebuild your sense of worth, set healthy boundaries, and help you start recognizing that your feelings do matter.