The psychology of high-performing professionals
Essays exploring how early experience shapes identity, how patterns persist into adult life, and how change becomes possible.
Origins
How early environments shape identity
Is It Always the Parents’ Fault?
The “Good Immigrant Child”
“It Wasn’t That Bad”
Patterns in adult life
How these patterns organise adult life, work, and relationships
I’m Fine, Just Tired
The High-Achiever in Love
Emotionally Unavailable Partners
Burnout in High-Achievers
The Cost of Being the “Strong One”
The Optimisation Trap
The Leader No One Fully Sees
The Architecture of Stillness
Change
How new ways of relating emerge
The Somatic Gap
What Does It Mean to Heal the Inner Child
How Change Becomes Possible
I’m fine, just tired: On functional freeze, high-functioning depression, and the fading of aliveness
Many high-performing professionals appear to be coping well, yet feel increasingly flat, tired, and disconnected from their own lives. This piece explores functional freeze, a state where performance continues but emotional aliveness begins to fade, and why it so often goes unrecognised.