Nothing is dramatically wrong. By most measures, things are fine. And yet there is a quiet sense of contraction — less ease, less presence, less access to your own clarity and warmth. A sense that life, somehow, is a little smaller than it could be.
A First Check
The fight-or-flight response is designed as a short-term reaction to genuine threat. When the pressure is sustained — through a demanding job, an uncertain period, accumulated loss, or simply years of giving more than you were receiving — the nervous system can learn to stay in that state permanently.
What follows is not a moral failure or a sign that you need to want it less. It is a learned pattern: the nervous system running a protection programme that made complete sense when it was installed, and has simply not had the conditions to update.
Chronic stress and burnout coaching, at this level, is not about managing the symptoms of that state more efficiently. It is about working directly with the nervous system’s threat assessment — so that the alarm no longer needs to sound at the volume it does.
Nervous System Science
Research on allostatic load — the accumulated wear from chronic stress — confirms that sustained sympathetic activation affects cardiovascular, immune, cognitive, and hormonal function. The body is not being dramatic. It is paying a real physiological cost for a state the nervous system cannot exit on its own.
How the Pattern Develops
Work load, uncertainty, loss, relational stress, or simply no margin
Fight-or-flight becomes the default, not the exception
Fear of falling behind, of resting, of showing strain — keeps it fuelled
Window of tolerance shrinks; reactivity rises; presence decreases
Often for years, before something forces a reckoning
The pattern is not a character flaw. It is a nervous system state — and nervous system states can be updated.
Recognition Signals
Chronic stress and burnout don’t always look like collapse. Often they look like someone still doing everything — just at a cost that’s becoming harder to sustain.
ou rest, and wake up tired. Rest doesn’t feel restorative — it just briefly interrupts the running. The tiredness is not about hours.
You respond more sharply than you intended. Small things land heavily. You’re aware the response is outsized — and that awareness itself is exhausting.
Tight chest, shallow breathing, neck and shoulder tension, headaches, digestive disruption. The body is expressing what the nervous system is holding.
The sense of waiting for the next thing. Difficulty actually landing in a moment of calm. Safety feels temporary. Vigilance feels like caution, not fear.
Output hasn’t declined — but it’s taking more to produce it. The margin between what you give and what you have is narrowing, quietly, over time.
Work, relationships, activities that once carried energy feel flat. Not a crisis — just a muted version of the life you remember wanting.
The research context
Burnout is not a productivity problem. It is a nervous system state. And nervous system states can change.
Recognition Signals
Many of the people who do this work are not visibly struggling. From the outside — and often from their own internal vantage — they are managing. Performing. Delivering. Meeting expectations, sometimes exceeding them.
The burnout lives underneath. In the cost of that performance. In the absence of ease that used to be present. In the widening gap between what they’re giving and what they actually have.
This is sometimes called high-functioning burnout — and it is one of the hardest forms to recognise, because the primary evidence for needing support is invisible to everyone except the person experiencing it.
You don’t need to have reached a point of breakdown for this work to be relevant. The fact that you haven’t broken down yet is not evidence that you don’t need support — it may simply be evidence of how much capacity you’ve been drawing on to avoid it.
Four common presentations
Takes on more than their share, finds it hard to delegate, feels responsible for the wellbeing of those around them. Appears generous. Is quietly depleted.
Output remains high, but requires increasingly more effort. The returns are diminishing. Rest doesn’t recover what work expends.
Holds it together for everyone else. The stability they project for others is not available to them internally.
Years of sustained pressure with no real recovery period. The fatigue is old. The bracing has become background noise they’ve stopped noticing.
The Coaching Process
This is not a fixed curriculum. It’s a structured process that adapts to where your nervous system is and what it needs next. These phases describe the general direction — not a rigid sequence.
Baseline
Understanding your pattern
ELI Assessment, intake conversation, mapping your specific nervous system pattern and the history that shaped it. No assumptions — we start from what’s actually true for you.
Awareness
Recognising the signals in real time
Learning to notice when your nervous system is moving into protection — before it becomes reactivity, shutdown, or physical symptom. Building the internal vocabulary for what’s happening.
Reduction
Reducing the fuel that sustains it
The pattern is maintained primarily by fear and bracing — not by circumstances. Working directly with those fuel sources to interrupt the self-reinforcing cycle.
Expansion
Gradually increasing the range within which your nervous system can engage with challenge, rest, connection — without tipping into reactivity or numbness. This is the lasting change.
Sessions are 60 minutes, four per month. The work is cumulative — each session builds on the last.
Energy Leadership Index
One of the particular challenges of chronic stress and burnout is that the problem is largely invisible — to others, and often to yourself. You know something is off. But there’s rarely a clear image of what, exactly, or why.
The Energy Leadership Index (ELI) Assessment addresses this directly. It is a research-backed attitudinal assessment that makes visible the energy patterns — the ways of perceiving, responding, and relating — that are operating beneath the surface.
For people in chronic stress, the ELI typically reveals clusters of Level 1 and Level 2 catabolic energy: helplessness, conflict, resistance, and pushing. These are not character flaws. They are nervous system adaptations to sustained pressure. Seeing them named and mapped — often for the first time — is the beginning of the work.
The ELI also provides a baseline from which progress becomes measurable. Coaching that starts without one is navigation without a compass.
Personality tests describe stable traits — they tell you what kind of person you are and suggest working with that. The ELI measures something different: your current attitudinal stance toward your life and circumstances. Because attitude is dynamic rather than fixed, the ELI is not a static label. It is a snapshot that can change — and tracking that change over time is one of the most tangible ways to see coaching progress.
The online assessment takes approximately 20 minutes to complete. It is followed by a dedicated 60–90 minute ELI debrief session with Jan, where your results are explored in depth: your seven energy level percentages under normal conditions and under stress, your Average Resonating Level, and — most importantly — what your specific profile reveals about the patterns most worth paying attention to in our work together.
The ELI can be offered as a standalone assessment and debrief, or as an integrated part of the Calm Capacity Coaching programme. For clients who want a clear starting point — a tangible picture of their current energetic and attitudinal baseline before the deeper nervous system work begins — it makes a powerful opening to the process.
Jan is a certified ELI Master Practitioner (ELI-MP) — an advanced designation from iPEC that certifies practitioners in the full administration and debrief of the Energy Leadership Index. The ELI is exclusively available through iPEC-certified coaches.
Why This is Different
Most approaches to chronic stress and burnout work on behaviors and mindsets — they try to improve coping. The Calm Capacity approach works with the nervous system state.
Recognition Signals
If your question isn’t here, a discovery call is the right place to ask it. It’s confidential, free, and carries no obligation.
Yes. Many of the people who do this work describe themselves as high-functioning — still meeting their responsibilities, still delivering. The burnout lives underneath: in the growing cost of performance, in the absence of ease that used to be there. You don’t need to have reached breakdown for this work to be relevant.
This is coaching, not therapy. It is forward-focused and works with patterns, capacity, and nervous system awareness — not clinical diagnosis or treatment. It draws on nervous system science and PRT principles. If there are clinical concerns that fall outside coaching scope, Jan will always be direct about that.
The structure is four 60-minute sessions per month. Most people feel meaningful shifts within the first two to three months. Deeper patterning — particularly patterns that have been operating for years — might require longer. This is always discussed openly, and pace is never pressured.
The window of capacity — sometimes called the window of tolerance — is the range of activation within which your nervous system can function flexibly. Engage with challenge without reactivity. Rest without guilt or vigilance. Chronic stress narrows this window. The coaching works to widen it gradually, from the inside.
No, not al all — the ELI Assessment is an optional although strongly recommended starting point for chronic stress work. It provides a concrete map of the energy pattern of your nervous system. Coaching without it is possible; coaching with it is more accurate and more efficient.
Sessions are usually conducted online via video call. This makes the work accessible regardless of location, and — for many people experiencing chronic stress — removes the additional friction of travel or scheduling around a fixed venue. That being said, if we happen to be in the same area, in-person sessions are absolutely possible.
“I had been high-functioning for so long I had stopped noticing the cost. The ELI was the first thing that made the invisible visible. Seeing it mapped — objectively — made it real in a way years of ‘I should slow down’ never had.”
Coaching client — (female, 42 yrs)
“I came in not quite believing coaching would touch something that had been with me for eight years. Three months in, the bracing I had accepted as just my personality was measurably different. That was not what I expected.”
Healthcare professional — (male, 53 yrs)
“What surprised me most was not the techniques — it was understanding why the pattern was there at all. Once it made sense, the fear around it changed. And when the fear changed, so did everything else.”
Coaching client — (female, 37 yrs)
your coach
Jan’s work is rooted in a straightforward premise: most of what limits people is not a lack of willpower, strategy, or information. It is a nervous system that has learned to stay in protection — and has not yet had the conditions to update.
This approach draws on Pain Reprocessing Therapy, the Energy Leadership Index, and Jan’s background in the Capacity Driven Leadership Method — an integrated framework that addresses the nervous system not just as a wellness concern, but as the foundation of how people lead, relate, and sustain.
“The people I work with are not broken. They are usually just running a protection pattern that made complete sense when it was installed. The work is not about fixing — it’s about updating. The nervous system is far more adaptable than most people have been led to believe.”
next step
A discovery call is 30 minutes, completely confidential, and carries no obligation. It is a space to talk about what you’re experiencing and understand whether this approach is a good fit — nothing more, nothing less.
Sessions online · Worldwide · Four sessions per month