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· 5 min read · Anna Fernandes Lucas

Five quiet signs of emotional overload

The loud signs of overload are easy to spot. It is the quiet ones — the ones we explain away — that tend to catch up with us.

When people imagine emotional overload, they usually picture a breakdown — tears, panic, an inability to function. But by the time the loud signs arrive, the quieter ones have usually been around for a while. Learning to notice the quiet signs is one of the most useful things therapy can offer.

A few patterns to watch for: a narrowing of the things you find pleasure in; a creeping sense that everything is an obligation; difficulty making small decisions; small interactions feeling larger than they used to; and a particular kind of irritability that surprises you because it does not match how much you actually care.

These are not a diagnosis. They are an invitation to pay attention.

Anna Fernandes Lucas

Clinically reviewed

Anna Fernandes Lucas

Founder & Clinical Lead · Psychotherapist (HeilprG)

All clinical content on this site is overseen by Anna Fernandes Lucas, founder of the International Psychology Clinic in Munich.

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