I help driven, goal-oriented women break free from overwhelm and sadness, and reclaim their sense of joy by providing personalized, high-end psychiatric care.
Owner & Founder, Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner
I'm Brianna
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Why Motivation Feels So Hard Right Now (and What’s Really Blocking You From Starting)
Support for Women’s Mental Health in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware
If you’ve been feeling stuck, unmotivated, or unable to start things that matter to you, you are not alone — and you are not lazy.
Many women describe this experience as wanting to do something, knowing it’s important, caring deeply about it… and still feeling unable to begin.
This can feel confusing and frustrating, especially for high-functioning women who are used to being capable and driven.
But motivation is not a character trait.
Motivation is a neurophysiological state — one that is deeply affected by stress, anxiety, hormones, sleep, emotional load, and life transitions.
Understanding what’s really happening can change how you relate to yourself — and what actually helps.
Motivation Is Not Willpower
Motivation does not come from pushing harder.
It comes from your brain feeling:
safe
resourced
clear
capable
When those conditions are missing, your nervous system shifts into protection mode — which often looks like avoidance, procrastination, or shutdown.
This is not sabotage.
It is your system trying to conserve energy and reduce perceived threat.
Why Motivation Often Disappears
There are three primary reasons motivation becomes inaccessible:
1. The task feels emotionally risky
If a task feels tied to:
fear of failure
fear of disappointment
fear of not doing it “right”
fear of being judged
your brain reads that emotional risk similarly to physical danger — and pulls energy away from action.
2. The task feels cognitively heavy
Unclear, complex, or open-ended tasks require a lot of mental energy.
When your system is already strained, your brain avoids tasks that feel mentally expensive.
3. Your system is already overloaded
Sleep deprivation, chronic stress, postpartum changes, anxiety, hormonal shifts, caregiving, and emotional labor all reduce your available bandwidth.
Avoidance becomes a form of self-protection.
Why High-Functioning Women Struggle the Most
In my work with women across Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware, I often see that the women who struggle most with motivation are also the ones who care the most, hold themselves to the highest standards, and carry the most responsibility.
They are not disengaged.
They are overloaded.
And overload shuts down motivation.
Why Shame Makes It Worse
When you tell yourself:
“I’m lazy.”
“I should be better at this.”
“Why can’t I just do it?”
you increase internal threat — which increases cortisol — which further suppresses the brain’s capacity to plan, initiate, and follow through.
Shame does not create movement.
Safety does.
What Actually Helps Motivation Return
Reduce the first step
Make it so small it feels safe.
Make tasks concrete
Specific beats abstract.
Stack new tasks onto existing habits
This reduces decision fatigue.
Use opposite action
Act gently before you feel ready.
Reduce overall load
Sometimes the problem isn’t the task — it’s that your system is overdrawn.
When to Consider Support
If motivation has felt absent for a long time, or is accompanied by:
persistent anxiety
low mood
irritability
emotional numbness
intrusive thoughts
it may be a sign that your nervous system or mood needs support.
Brianna Dawson PMHNP-BC
If you’re in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, or Delaware and feel stuck in ways that don’t match who you are, I offer a free 15-minute phone consultation to talk through what might be blocking your system and what could help.