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My income dropped to less than $12,000 after burnout caused my health to collapse. I had to learn how not to overwork myself.

For most of my career, I relied on pushing through. I built a reputation for delivering under pressure, often pulling things together at the last minute and performing at a high level. That pace came with a cost: long work hours, inconsistent sleep, and a constant sense that I had to stay ahead of everything.

For a while, it worked. Then, last spring, my body stopped cooperating.

After receiving full payment from a new client — the kind of moment that normally would have felt like relief — I found myself on the bathroom floor, crying and unable to respond to messages or continue working.

I didn’t understand what was happening. It would take the better part of a year to begin to make sense of what my body was trying to tell me.

Before the crash, success did not feel stable

From the outside, my life looked successful.

I had been an entrepreneur for more than a decade, written books, and given a TEDx talk. At my peak, I brought in over $140,000.

But it never felt like enough. No matter how much I earned or accomplished, I lived with a constant sense of pressure — always anticipating the next problem, the next demand, or the next thing that could go wrong.

Looking back, I can see that I built my life around overwork. I was burning the candle at both ends, working at all hours, and ignoring the signals my body was sending me.

What I thought was resilience was often something else: pushing past my limits to meet expectations, both external and internal.

My health and housing became unstable

After that moment on the bathroom floor, things intensified.

I began experiencing severe physical symptoms, including intense pain, recurring headaches, digestive issues, and periods of exhaustion that made it nearly impossible to function. At times, the pain felt serious enough to warrant emergency care.

From the outside, these “episodes” may have looked like mental health issues. But in my body, it was deeply physical.

I did seek medical care, but my tests came back normal, even though my body did not feel normal.

At the time, I was renting a room in a shared home with a warm, multigenerational family. The house was lively and full of activity — beautiful in many ways — but overwhelming for a nervous system already overloaded.

As my symptoms became more visible, they drew more attention than I could manage.

A few days later, I left. Around 8 p.m., I packed a laundry basket of clothes, along with some pillows and blankets, into my SUV and drove away without a clear plan.

Over the following months, my living situation was precarious. I no longer had a home base or even a room to return to. My belongings were spread across multiple storage locations, and my car became a place where I felt some sense of safety.

Through a connection, I was able to rent an Airbnb by the beach for $50 a day for a period of time. I also stayed in hotels, spent time in parks, and slept in my car on some nights.

Because income was secondary to survival, it dropped to less than $12,000 for the year.

How I got through it

When people hear my income dropped that low, they usually ask the same question: How did you survive?

The answer is that I stopped trying to do everything alone.

Throughout my life, I was fiercely independent out of necessity. I was the person who handled problems and made chaos work. Accepting support did not come naturally to me.

That season taught me something different. I had always believed in God, but this was the first time I had to rely on that belief in a real, daily way. I didn’t always know how things would come together, but I learned to trust and surrender in a way I never had before.

I also met someone who became my partner, and our stable relationship became an important source of stability during a time when very little was stable.

Through our relationship, I experienced a felt sense of safety in my body for the first time in my life. It also showed me how unfamiliar it was for my body to receive something good without immediately preparing for loss, pressure, or payback.

What I learned about resilience

Over the following year, as I began paying closer attention to my body instead of overriding it, I started to see a pattern.

What I experienced was not just because of burnout. It was the accumulation of years of operating in a constant state of pressure and hypervigilance. It was a system-wide depletion under chronic stress, trauma adaptation, and sustained circumstantial load.

For most of my life, resilience meant enduring difficult environments and making them work.

What I began to understand instead was the difference between surviving and being in environments — and relationships — where there was genuine safety, resonance, and reciprocity.

I’m rebuilding my life and career in a way my body can actually sustain, and I’m no longer doing it alone. I don’t have a stable home, and I’m still building my career back to where it once was.

From the outside, a year where my income dropped below $12,000 might look like failure.

But for me, it became the year I stopped measuring resilience by how much I could endure — and started defining it by whether my life was something my body could actually sustain.




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Lauren Crosby

I moved away from my family in my 30s. When I called crying, my dad dropped everything and came to see me.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Ruth Davis, a Creative Director in LA. It has been edited for length and clarity.

In 2019, I relocated with my 12-year-old daughter and fiancé to Los Angeles, which is two hours away from the “family village” where I had grown up.

All my family — siblings, cousins, aunts, uncles, and grandparents — all lived within 15 minutes of each other. I knew it was going to be a hard move for our nuclear family unit, but I was convinced LA was the right place for us to be.

I didn’t fully understand the impact it would have on me.

My dad is my everything

It was my dad whom I immediately felt I had lost.

Before we moved, my dad was everything to me. He and my mom had split when I was young, so my dad had full custody. It was just the two of us all the time.

When I had my daughter, my dad moved in with us and was there to help with all the practical aspects of raising a child. But he was also just there as emotional support for me. He made me complete.

After we moved, we only saw him once a month, when he’d take the train to visit us. I missed him and felt overwhelmed without him.

In August 2025, I was grieving the loss of two family members, feeling overwhelmed with sadness, but also with life in general. I remember sitting on my bed, losing it, crying.

I called him, crying

My daughter was knocking on the door, asking me when we were leaving the house — we were going out for the day. I snapped at her. I couldn’t leave the bed. I wanted to show up for her in that moment, but couldn’t.

In that moment, I felt like a failure compared to my dad. He had lived through so much grief and so many hard times, and yet I never knew because he managed to hold everything together.

All I could think to do was to call my dad, crying as he answered. He listened to me and then told me he would call me right back.

“Everything is going to be OK,” he said before hanging up. Dad has never been a “words” person.

Not too long after, he called back and told me he had been to the train station to buy a train ticket to come visit the next day.

Knowing he was coming felt like a double-edged sword. I felt incredibly lucky to have a dad who would come and see me at the drop of a hat, but I also felt self-doubt because my elderly dad could get it together, but I couldn’t.

The next morning, when I knew my dad was on the train, bound for my house, I was certain everything would be OK. My dad was coming. With him, life feels normal and complete.

I won’t advise my daughter to move away

I don’t regret the wonderful changes the move afforded me and the position in life it put my nuclear family and me in. But had I known not seeing my dad every day would wreck me as it has, I don’t know if I would have done it the same way.

I had bought into the modern idea that decisions should always be made with the nuclear family in mind, but the distance from him made me realize how much I emotionally value my dad in ways I didn’t think imaginable.

Knowing what I know now, I would never advise my daughter to move away from her village, even if it means she’ll move closer to a partner’s village, as I did. I think as a mother, I did her a disservice by moving her away from my family, her tight-knit community.




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Jobs report updates: US added fewer jobs in December than expected, but unemployment dropped

It’s jobs day in America.

The US added 50,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.4%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ monthly report on the employment situation.

Economists expected to see 70,000 jobs added in the final month of 2025, and an unemployment rate of 4.5%.

The report wraps up a year of a job market marked by a “Great Freeze” in which companies haven’t been hiring very much, employees haven’t been switching jobs a ton, but large-scale layoffs that would mark a deeper downturn haven’t materialized yet either.

Check back here for updates leading up to and following the biggest job market data release of the month.




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