When the Strong One Breaks: Leadership After the Life You Didn’t Choose
- Maja Arnadottir
- 2 days ago
- 6 min read

There’s a particular kind of grief that doesn’t look like grief.
It looks like competence.
It looks like a person still answering emails.
Still showing up to meetings.
Still functioning.
Still finding the right words for other people.
It looks like “I’m okay.”
And yet inside… something is splintering.
Not loudly.
Not dramatically.
Quietly. In the nervous system.
In the body.
In the identity.
This is for the high performers.
The ones who can carry anything… until they can’t.
The ones who can lead a room, hold a company, hold a family — while privately holding themselves together with breath and sheer will.
If you are in a major life transition right now — death, divorce, betrayal, burnout, a sudden health shift, a life that cracked in half — I want to say something gently and clearly:
Your collapse is not proof that you’re weak.
It’s proof that you have been strong for too long.
And your system is telling the truth.
The Myth of the “Strong One”
Most high-performing people weren’t trained to rest.
They were trained to function.
To be reliable.
To be “the one who handles it.”
To be the emotional adult in the room — often since childhood.
To lead with logic.
To stay productive.
To find the solution.
And when life ruptures, the strong one does what the strong one always does:
They keep moving.
They manage the logistics of the heartbreak.
They carry other people’s emotions.
They make decisions with shaking hands.
They do the “right” things.
They survive.
And this is where it gets confusing.
Because from the outside it can look like resilience.
But from the inside, it often feels like dissociation.
You’re functioning — but you’re not here.
You’re present — but you’re not inside yourself.
And then one day, the adrenaline drops.
The calls stop coming.
The paperwork thins out.
The crowd returns to their normal lives.
And your body… finally gets a turn.
Why Collapse Happens Around 12–24 Months
There’s a pattern I see often — in grief, in trauma aftermath, in major life transition:
This is not a clinical rule — but it is a common nervous system arc I see repeatedly in high-capacity individuals.
The first phase is shock and logistics.
You run on survival chemistry.
Then later — sometimes a year, sometimes two — collapse arrives.
Not because you’re “not coping well.”
But because the body kept the score.
The nervous system can only carry so much unprocessed impact before it demands a recalibration.
Collapse looks like:
• exhaustion that sleep doesn’t fix
• brain fog and forgetfulness
• a sense of apathy, flatness, “I don’t care”
• inexplicable aches, inflammation, immune crashes
• inability to motivate, initiate, or sustain what used to be effortless
• a strange sense of being “gone” inside your own life
And because high performers are high performers… they judge themselves for it.
They assume it means something about their character.
It doesn’t.
It means your body is honest.
It means your system is no longer willing to perform capacity.
The Identity Death No One Warns You About
In major transition, there is the obvious loss — the person, the relationship, the role, the dream, the future.
And then there is the deeper loss:
The version of you that existed inside that life.
This is why “just move on” is such a violent phrase.
Because you’re not only grieving what happened.
You’re grieving who you were when life made sense.
You’re grieving the inner certainty that said:
“This is my life. This is my person. This is what I know to be true. This is my future.”
When that collapses, the question becomes existential:
Who am I now?
Not as a title.
Not as a role.
Not as a performer.
But as a human.
This is where high performers get stuck.
Because identity has often been built on:
• being needed
• being capable
• being the one who holds it together
• being valuable through output
• being loved through strength
And major transition strips all of it down to the bone.
It is terrifying.
And it is also a threshold you did not choose, but cannot avoid.
The Strong One’s Real Work: Letting Yourself Be Held
There is a moment in deep transition when self-leadership looks different than people think.
It isn’t “push through.”
It’s “let down.”
Let down the mask.
Let down the timeline.
Let down the pressure to be inspiring.
Let yourself be human.
This is the part many high performers resist — not because they don’t want support, but because receiving support feels like losing control.
But this is the truth:
You cannot outwork a nervous system reset.
If your system is dysregulated, you will not think your way back to clarity.
You will not strategy your way into peace.
You will not productivity-hack your way out of grief.
You have to be met.
Held.
Witnessed.
And slowly guided back into yourself.
Grief Is Not Only Death
Let me say this clearly:
I work with people in high impact positions.
I also work with people in grief.
And I work with people in transition.
I know this not only as a coach — but as a woman whose life split into before and after.
And often, the transitions are grief — even when no one died.
• the founder who sold the company and feels empty afterward
• the executive whose marriage ended and now can’t access joy
• the leader who hit burnout and lost their confidence overnight
• the high performer who lost health, fertility, a dream, a future plan
• the woman who realized she built a life that looks “successful” but doesn’t feel like hers
Grief is the body’s response to an ending.
And many people are grieving lives they don’t know how to name as grief.
So they call it depression.
A midlife crisis.
Stress.
Sometimes it is those things.
And sometimes it is grief.
Unprocessed, unaccompanied grief.
What Healing Looks Like for High Performers
Healing is not a motivational quote.
It’s a practice.
And for high performers, it often begins with one radical shift:
Stop treating your collapse as a personal failure.
Collapse is information.
Your system is communicating.
Your body is doing what bodies do when they’ve carried too much for too long.
Healing looks like:
• micro-rests, not dramatic retreats
• small consistent rituals, not perfect routines
• nervous system regulation before cognitive strategy
• honest naming of emotions, especially the “unacceptable” ones
• support that doesn’t require you to be easy to help
• structure that doesn’t feel like pressure
• rebuilding identity from essence, not performance
And yes — it also looks like ambition again.
But a healthier kind.
One that doesn’t require self-abandonment.
A Quiet Reframe for the Strong One
If you are in the middle of a major transition, try this on:
You are not behind.
You are not broken.
You are not failing.
You are in initiation.
An unchosen passage that burns away what is false.
And as brutal as that sounds… it is also where your truest self begins to return.
Not the persona.
Not the role.
Not the capable mask.
The real you.
The one who can lead without bleeding out.
The one who can achieve without collapsing.
The one who can love without disappearing inside someone else’s orbit.
If You’re Here, This Is Your First Step
If you are the strong one and you’re tired of being strong…
Start here:
1. Put a hand on your chest.
2. Take one breath that is not for performance.
3. Whisper something honest:
“This is hard.”
That sentence is not weakness.
It’s contact.
And contact is where healing begins.
⸻
If You’re in a Major Transition and You Want Support
I work privately with high-performing humans navigating major life transitions — both the ones life delivers unexpectedly, and the ones you bravely choose for yourself.
The kind that divide your life into before and after.
The kind that shake identity.
The kind that require more than strategy.
This is not therapy.
And it is not hustle coaching.
It is psychologically grounded, nervous-system-aware, strategically clear support for leaders and visionaries who are carrying weight — responsibility, ambition, grief, reinvention — and want to remain whole while doing so.
We work at the level of identity, regulation, leadership presence, and conscious becoming.
You do not have to be collapsing to deserve support.
You do not have to be broken to seek depth for your own being.
If you are standing between who you were and who you are becoming, we begin with a calm, intelligent conversation about what this season actually requires.
You do not have to hold the in-between alone.
Warmly,
Maja LOVE



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