You’re not sick. You’re not depressed (at least not officially). You’re not lazy. But something is off, and you know it. You look in the mirror and wonder where the woman you used to be went. You used to have energy. You used to laugh more. You used to care about things beyond just getting through the week.
Sound familiar? You might be one of the millions of women who are burned out in midlife and have no idea that’s what’s happening to them. This particular flavor of exhaustion is sneaky. It doesn’t announce itself with a dramatic breakdown. It just slowly steals you from yourself until one day you’re standing in the kitchen at 7pm, holding a spatula, completely unable to remember what you even wanted for dinner – and realizing you can’t remember the last time you wanted anything at all.
If you’ve been Googling things like “why do I feel so disconnected from myself” or “why am I so tired and empty all the time,” you’ve come to the right place. This is the article for you, for the retreat for burned out women who are ready to come back to themselves.
“I used to know who I was. Now I just get through the days.” Sound familiar? That’s midlife burnout – and it’s way more common than you think.
What Midlife Burnout Actually Looks Like (Hint: It’s Not Just Tired)
We talk a lot about burnout in the context of overworked corporate types collapsing at their desks. But midlife burnout in women looks a lot quieter – and a lot more internal.
It shows up as:
- Going through the motions every day, but feeling weirdly numb about all of it
- Snapping at people you love, then feeling guilty about it for hours
- Canceling plans because being “on” for anyone feels like too much
- Lying awake at night even when you’re bone tired
- Scrolling your phone for 45 minutes before bed because your brain won’t stop, but you’re also too fried to read
- Wondering if this is just… what life feels like now
That last one is the one that breaks my heart the most. Because the answer is no. This is not what life is supposed to feel like. And recognizing that midlife burnout is the culprit is actually the first step toward doing something about it.
Why Women in Midlife Are the Most Burned Out Humans on the Planet
The 40s and 50s are genuinely a pressure-cooker decade for women. You’re often sandwiched between aging parents who need you and kids (or adult kids) who still need you. You might be managing a career while running a household while maintaining a marriage while trying to keep up with friends while, somewhere in there, attempting to have an identity of your own.
Layer on top of that the hormonal shifts that come with perimenopause – the sleep disruption, the brain fog, the mood swings, the complete reconfiguration of how your nervous system handles stress – and it’s a miracle more women aren’t walking around with a permanent glazed expression.
The real problem? Nobody tells you this is happening. Nobody hands you a guide that says, “Hey, heads up, your entire internal landscape is shifting right now and it’s going to feel disorienting.” So instead of understanding what’s going on, women just… push through. Keep going. Assume they’re failing at something.
You’re not failing. You’re depleted. Big difference.
“You’re not failing. You’re depleted. The sooner you get those two straight, the sooner you can actually start recovering.”
Why You Can’t Think Your Way Out of This One
Here’s something a lot of high-achieving women find really annoying: burnout doesn’t respond to willpower. You can’t hustle your way to recovery. You can’t white-knuckle yourself back into feeling like yourself again.
That’s because burnout lives in the nervous system, not just the mind. When you’ve been running in survival mode for too long – cortisol through the roof, always alert, always available, always producing – your nervous system gets stuck in that gear. And staying stuck is exhausting in a way that a good night’s sleep or a long weekend just can’t fix.
What actually helps is the opposite of hustle. It’s rest that’s real, not just sleep. It’s community with other women who get it. It’s moving your body in ways that feel good instead of punishing. It’s slowing down long enough for your nervous system to remember that you’re safe.
A women’s stress relief retreat isn’t a luxury. It’s a prescription. Time away, fully immersed in an environment designed to help you decompress, reset, and reconnect – that’s the kind of intervention that actually moves the needle.
What a Nervous System Reset Actually Feels Like
You might be skeptical. (That’s fine. Skepticism is very midlife burnout of you, honestly.) But here’s what women consistently report after spending a few days at a retreat designed specifically around women’s stress reduction and burnout recovery:
- They laugh again – real laughing, not polite laughing
- They sleep deeply, sometimes for the first time in months or years
- They remember things they used to love that they’d completely forgotten about
- They have actual conversations – the kind where you talk about real things, not logistics
- They feel lighter. Not because anything in their life changed, but because they gave their nervous system permission to exhale
That’s what’s waiting on the other side of running on empty. And the fastest shortcut to getting there is getting out of your regular environment entirely – and into one that’s been thoughtfully designed to do the opposite of everything that burned you out.
At the Women’s Wine & Unwind Retreat in the Texas Hill Country, that looks like journaling and breathwork in the morning, optional horse yoga, aerial yoga, trail rides, an ice bath and sauna if you’re feeling brave, skeet shooting (yes, really – women love it), candle making, a stress reduction workshop, a closing sound bath, and a whole lot of connection with women who are going through exactly what you’re going through.
There’s also wine. Obviously.
This Is for the Woman Who’s Tired of Waiting to Feel Better
Here’s what I know about the women who come to this retreat: they’ve been waiting. Waiting until things slow down. Waiting until the kids are more settled. Waiting until work lets up. Waiting until they “earn” a break.
Babe. Things aren’t going to slow down on their own. That’s just not how midlife works.
The women’s stress reduction retreat for midlife burnout exists for one reason: to give you the full-body reset you’ve been putting off. Not a generic spa weekend. A real retreat – one with programming that actually addresses what’s happening in your nervous system, real community with women who get it, and enough fun to remind you that joy is still available to you.
You don’t have to feel like this forever. You just have to decide to stop waiting.
Ready to stop running on empty?
The Women’s Wine & Unwind Retreat is a curated experience designed for exactly this moment in your life. Real rest. Real connection. Real tools. Learn more and grab your spot at our Wine and Unwind in Texas…or FRANCE – because you deserve to feel like yourself again.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How do I know if what I’m feeling is burnout and not just regular stress?
Regular stress usually has a clear cause and lifts when the stressor goes away. Burnout is different – it’s a persistent, bone-deep exhaustion that doesn’t go away with rest, and it’s often accompanied by emotional detachment, low motivation, and a sense that you’ve lost your sense of self. If you’ve been feeling this way for months and can’t pinpoint a single cause, burnout is very likely what you’re dealing with.
Q: Can a retreat actually help with burnout, or is it just a temporary fix?
A retreat isn’t a cure-all, but it’s a powerful pattern interrupt. Most women in chronic burnout have been running on fumes for so long that they need a full environmental shift to break the cycle – something their regular daily life simply can’t provide. The programming at a women’s stress relief retreat is designed to address the nervous system directly through breathwork, movement, rest, and community, which creates lasting shifts, not just a short-term mood boost.
Q: I feel guilty spending money and time on myself. How do I justify it?
This question is the burnout talking. The version of you that’s depleted, short-tempered, checked out, and barely present isn’t your best self for anyone – including yourself. Investing in a reset isn’t selfish; it’s the most practical thing you can do for your life, your relationships, and your work. Also: you’ve been taking care of everyone else for years. You are allowed to be on your own list.
Q: I’ve never been to a retreat. What if I don’t fit in or it’s awkward?
The women who come to this retreat are warm, real, and in exactly the same season of life as you. The programming is designed to make connection easy and natural – you’re not forced into trust falls or mandatory vulnerability circles. Most women are surprised by how quickly they click with the other attendees. Coming alone is also totally fine – in fact, many women say it was the best decision they made.
Q: What if I try to relax and I just… can’t?
That’s one of the most common things women say walking in – and one of the things they laugh about most by the end. A well-designed retreat removes the conditions that keep your nervous system in overdrive: the constant demands, the interruptions, the never-ending to-do list. With that stuff gone and the right programming in place, your nervous system will relax. It’s actually its job. You just have to show up.

Shannon Jamail hosts intimate women’s retreats in Texas and internationally – and the majority of women who attend come solo. If you’re ready to stop waiting and start showing up for yourself, we’d love to welcome you.
→ See upcoming retreats and grab your spot







