You’re Not Lazy – You’re Dysregulated

Why You Feel Overwhelmed and What You Can Do About It

If you’ve been feeling exhausted, unmotivated, or stuck lately… I want you to hear this first:

You’re not lazy. You’re Not Lazy-You’re Dysregulated: Why You Feel Overwhelmed and What You Can Do About It

This is something I hear from clients all the time:
“I just can’t get myself to do anything.”
“I don’t understand why I feel this way.”

And most of the time, what’s actually happening has nothing to do with laziness.

It’s your nervous system

What’s Really Going On

When your body has been under stress for a while- whether it’s work, relationships, finances, health, or just life- your nervous system starts to shift.

It moves into survival mode. You might notice yourself feeling:
  • Irritable or frustrated
  • Anxious or constantly overthinking
  • Tired, shut down, or unmotivated

These are what we call fight, flight, or freeze responses.

And when your system stays there too long… it turns into what many people experience as burnout.

Why It Feels Like Laziness

Here’s the part that trips people up.

When you’re dysregulated, your brain is focused on survival- not productivity.

So things that should feel simple suddenly feel overwhelming. You might find yourself:
  • Staring at tasks and not starting
  • Putting things off even when they matter
  • Feeling tired no matter how much you rest
  • Wanting to do things- but just not having the energy

And then comes the self-talk: “Why can’t I just get it together?”

But this isn’t about willpower.

It’s about capacity.

What Burnout Actually Looks Like

Burnout doesn’t always look like stress or anxiety.

Sometimes it looks like:
  • Doing the bare minimum
  • Cancelling plans
  • Feeling disconnected
  • Losing motivation
  • Wanting to be left alone

That “I don’t care anymore” feeling?

That’s often your nervous system trying to protect you.

What Actually Helps (And What I Tell My Clients)

When you are in this state, pushing harder usually doesn’t work.

What helps is regulation first, then action.

Here are some places I usually start with clients:

Start Smaller Than You Think

Not your whole to-do list.

Just one thing.

One email.
One load of laundry.
One short walk.

That’s how you rebuild momentum.

Start Smaller Than You Think

Not your whole to-do list.

Just one thing.

One email.
One load of laundry.
One short walk.

That’s how you rebuild momentum.

Support Your Body First

Before you try to think your way out of it, support your body.

Simple things like:
  • Going for a walk
  • Stretching
  • Sitting outside
  • Taking a few slow breaths

These aren’t small- they are foundational.

Loosen the Pressure

Rigid routines can actually make things worse when you’re overwhelmed.

Instead of:
“I need to get everything done today”

Try/do: ( and you know I don’t like the word ‘try’)
“What’s one thing I can do today that feels manageable?”

Reduce the Noise

If your system is already overloaded, constant input makes it worse.

Take breaks from:
  • Social media
  • Notifications
  • Constant stimulation

Even short quiet moments can help reset your system.

Change the Way You Talk to Yourself- this is very important

This part matters more than people think.

Instead of:
“I’m so lazy”

Try/do:
“I think I’m overwhelmed”

That shift alone can change how you respond to yourself.

When to Reach Out for Support

If this has been going on for a while, you don’t have to figure it out alone.

In therapy, we don’t just talk about what’s wrong—we look at:
  • What your nervous system is doing
  • What’s keeping you stuck
  • How to slowly rebuild your capacity

At a pace that actually works for you.
This blog is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute
for professional medical or mental health advice.

Final Thought

The next time you catch yourself thinking:

“Why can’t I just get it together?”

Pause for a moment and ask:

“What do I need right now?”

Not what you should be doing.
Not what you used to be able to do.

But what your system needs- today.

Because when you start there…
things begin to shift.

I hope you found this helpful.  Stay grounded, stay aligned, and trust your own process.

Angela Masuzzo, RSSW
Trauma-Informed Psychotherapist
Virtual therapy available across Ontario- Individuals and Couples

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