I Was Mourning a Version of Myself I Couldn’t Reach

For a long time, I convinced myself that the way I felt was just part of being an adult, a teacher, a mom, and someone carrying too much responsibility all the time. I thought exhaustion was normal. I thought feeling uncomfortable in my own skin was something I simply had to accept as I got older. I assumed the swollen ankles, lack of energy, inflammation, brain fog, and constant frustration with my body were just part of life.

So I kept trying harder.

I tried eating better. I tried cutting things out. I tried working out more consistently. I tried motivating myself with guilt, discipline, and sheer willpower. Every time something didn’t work, I blamed myself for not sticking with it well enough.

Meanwhile, I was showing up every day for everyone else.

My students still got the best version of me I could give them. My family still relied on me. From the outside, I probably looked completely fine.

But internally, I felt disconnected from myself in a way that’s difficult to explain unless you’ve experienced it too.

The hardest part wasn’t even the weight itself. It was the feeling that I had lost access to who I actually was.

Deep down, I knew there was a version of me that still existed somewhere underneath the exhaustion and frustration. I remembered being more energetic, more confident, more patient, and more present. I remembered feeling comfortable in my own body instead of constantly trying to hide it behind oversized clothes and baggy cardigans in a freezing classroom.

And honestly, I think a lot of teachers understand this feeling more than we admit.

Teaching requires an enormous amount of emotional energy. We spend our days pouring into other people while ignoring our own needs for months, or years, at a time. We normalize stress and burnout because everyone around us is stressed and burned out too. We joke about surviving on caffeine and functioning on empty because it feels easier than admitting how deeply depleted we actually are.

Eventually, I stopped asking myself why I felt so bad and started assuming this was simply who I had become.

That mindset began to change when I finally stopped focusing only on “trying harder” and started learning about what was actually happening in my body. For the first time, I considered that maybe this wasn’t just a motivation problem or a discipline problem. Maybe there were legitimate metabolic, hormonal, inflammatory, and health-related reasons why I felt stuck no matter how hard I worked.

That shift changed everything for me.

Not overnight, and not in some unrealistic, magical way. But slowly, I started feeling more like myself again. I had more energy. My body felt better. I stopped obsessing over hiding myself. I felt more present in my own life instead of feeling like I was just surviving it.

Ironically, the biggest transformation wasn’t physical. The biggest transformation was emotional. I stopped mourning the version of myself I thought I had lost. I started recognizing her again.

I’m sharing this because I know there are so many women, especially teachers, who are quietly carrying these same feelings while continuing to function at a high level every single day. So many women who look “fine” from the outside but internally feel exhausted, uncomfortable, inflamed, discouraged, and disconnected from themselves.

If that’s you, I hope you know this:

You are not lazy.
You are not failing.
And you probably do not need more shame, more pressure, or more punishment.

Sometimes you simply need different support, better information, and a willingness to stop blaming yourself for struggling.