Why Work Feels Like a Gamble—and How to Opt Out
In this tools-forward conversation, Kelley sits down with business strategist Jessica Lackey, author of Leaving the Casino, to unpack why so many of us have been taught to gamble with […]
play_arrow
play_arrow
WUWY: Three New Drake Albums + Way Up with Sleek Carter podcast
play_arrow
My Tip – 5.15.26 podcast
play_arrow
335: News from Africa podcast
play_arrow
Protect Your Bag to Protect Your Peace – The GOOD Lounge podcast
play_arrow
I Have Some Thoughts Minisode | Latto, Allyson Felix, & Hantavirus podcast
play_arrow
China is America’s Nepo Baby podcast
play_arrow
Kouri Richins Gets Life Without Parole | How Fast Food Shaped the U.S. podcast
If the year didn’t start gently — if January arrived with tension, grief, or exhaustion instead of clarity — this episode is for you. Kelley offers a softer, more honest way to begin the year: not by conquering it or hardening yourself, but by holding it with both hands. Through a nervous-system-informed lens, she explores why overwhelm and numbness make sense right now, how joy supports regulation rather than avoidance, and how Black women can move forward without abandoning their bodies or humanity in the process.
1. You don’t need to conquer the year — you can hold it.
The pressure to dominate or “win” the year keeps the body braced. Holding the year allows for flexibility, honesty, and care as life unfolds.
2. Overwhelm or numbness is a nervous system response, not a failure.
What many people are experiencing is flooding — the body protecting itself from too much stress and information at once. The work is learning how to return to your body, not push past it.
3. Joy is practical, ancestral, and regulating.
Joy isn’t denial or indulgence — it’s a way the nervous system receives new information. For Black women, joy is inherited, communal, and a companion to grief, not an escape from it.
(Key moments to revisit)
As you move through the coming week, pause and ask yourself:
Where am I gripping my life too tightly right now — and what would it feel like to soften my hands just a little?
Notice what your body needs before deciding what the year should look like. Even one small moment of pleasure, rest, or beauty can remind your nervous system that danger isn’t the only thing happening. Heartache and hope can live in the same body.
Like, share, and subscribe on all platforms, and find us on social media
@blackgirlburnout
Subscribe to our newsletter: blackgirlburnout.com
Watch the episode on YouTube
Drop a review—help us spread the word that rest is not weakness.
Join our Substack family for weekly reflections, tools, and behind-the-scenes notes from Kelley.
Become a paid Substack subscriber ($5/month—the cost of a latte!) for exclusive resources to support your burnout-free life.
Check out PharmaNutra and use my code BGB for a great deal: https://pharmanutra-us.com
Savvy Ladies: https://www.savvyladies.org/
Advertising Inquiries: RedCircle
Privacy & Opt-Out: RedCircle
Our Sponsors:
* Check out PharmaNutra and use my code BGB for a great deal: https://pharmanutra-us.com
Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this tools-forward conversation, Kelley sits down with business strategist Jessica Lackey, author of Leaving the Casino, to unpack why so many of us have been taught to gamble with […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025