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When Your Capacity Says No: Stepping Back Without Shame

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Manage episode 520082192 series 3674243
Content provided by Shannon Reilly. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Shannon Reilly or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

What happens when your body says “I can’t” — but your brain keeps pushing anyway?

For many of us, especially neurodivergent or highly sensitive folks, the tension between what we think we “should” do and what our capacity can actually hold can be intense.

In this episode, Shannon explores what it really means when your capacity says no — why it’s not weakness, why your nervous system is trying to protect you, and how to step back without shame or over-explaining.

This conversation offers both reflection and regulation: a compassionate look at the survival patterns that make us override our limits, and a grounded framework for reclaiming clarity, boundaries, and nervous system trust.

In This Episode

  • Why capacity is not a moral scorecard — it’s a state that moves and changes
  • Common reasons neurodivergent nervous systems override limits (fawning, masking, performance conditioning)
  • Early warning signs that your capacity is slipping — and how to interpret them as information, not failure
  • How to step back with compassion using a 3-step boundary framework
  • What to say (and not say) when your system needs a pause

Key Takeaways

  • Your nervous system is not judging you — it’s informing you.
  • Avoidance isn’t laziness. It’s often your body’s way of signaling overwhelm or misalignment.
  • If you don’t create the boundary, your body will.
  • Over-explaining is a fawn response in long form. You don’t need to justify your no.
  • Stepping back is self-leadership, not failure.

Try This: Capacity Check-In

Before the shutdown hits, ask yourself:

  • What are my earliest signs of overwhelm?
  • Where am I overriding my limit to avoid disappointing someone?
  • What boundary would honor my nervous system this week?

Then write it down. Awareness creates choice.

Capacity Check-In Worksheet ✨ — A self-assessment to help you identify your signals, limits, and boundaries before burnout or shutdown.

👉 Download it at simplifyspaceandsoul.com

🧭 Connect


  continue reading

39 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 520082192 series 3674243
Content provided by Shannon Reilly. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Shannon Reilly or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

What happens when your body says “I can’t” — but your brain keeps pushing anyway?

For many of us, especially neurodivergent or highly sensitive folks, the tension between what we think we “should” do and what our capacity can actually hold can be intense.

In this episode, Shannon explores what it really means when your capacity says no — why it’s not weakness, why your nervous system is trying to protect you, and how to step back without shame or over-explaining.

This conversation offers both reflection and regulation: a compassionate look at the survival patterns that make us override our limits, and a grounded framework for reclaiming clarity, boundaries, and nervous system trust.

In This Episode

  • Why capacity is not a moral scorecard — it’s a state that moves and changes
  • Common reasons neurodivergent nervous systems override limits (fawning, masking, performance conditioning)
  • Early warning signs that your capacity is slipping — and how to interpret them as information, not failure
  • How to step back with compassion using a 3-step boundary framework
  • What to say (and not say) when your system needs a pause

Key Takeaways

  • Your nervous system is not judging you — it’s informing you.
  • Avoidance isn’t laziness. It’s often your body’s way of signaling overwhelm or misalignment.
  • If you don’t create the boundary, your body will.
  • Over-explaining is a fawn response in long form. You don’t need to justify your no.
  • Stepping back is self-leadership, not failure.

Try This: Capacity Check-In

Before the shutdown hits, ask yourself:

  • What are my earliest signs of overwhelm?
  • Where am I overriding my limit to avoid disappointing someone?
  • What boundary would honor my nervous system this week?

Then write it down. Awareness creates choice.

Capacity Check-In Worksheet ✨ — A self-assessment to help you identify your signals, limits, and boundaries before burnout or shutdown.

👉 Download it at simplifyspaceandsoul.com

🧭 Connect


  continue reading

39 episodes

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