
You’re Not Broken You’re Just Tired
A Book for Overwhelmed Women: Real Feelings Soft Boundaries No Fake Positivity
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Lena Hale

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
A quiet, honest book for women who are done pretending they’re fine.
You’ve held it together.
You’ve done what was expected.
You’ve tried to stay grateful, to keep the peace, to smile through the overwhelm.
But deep down, something’s off.
Not a crisis. Not a disaster. Just… a slow unraveling.
You’re exhausted—and not in the “need a nap” kind of way.
More like the “don’t know how to keep going, but still do” kind of tired.
This book is for that version of you.
What this book is — and what it’s not:
It’s not a fix-it book. It doesn’t give you a 10-step plan or a morning routine to save your life.
Because before you can fix anything, you have to believe you're allowed to feel broken.
And most of us don’t.
We downplay, dismiss, compare, keep going.
We tell ourselves it’s not that bad. Other people have it worse. We should just be more grateful.
This book interrupts that voice.
It names what hurts. It softens what’s harsh.
And in that quiet recognition, something shifts:
You stop fighting yourself.
You stop apologizing for being tired.
You start noticing what you actually need.
There are no promises here.
Just a gentler kind of honesty.
And sometimes, that’s where healing begins.
What’s inside:
- quiet reflections on burnout, emotional overload, invisible labor, and the guilt of never doing enough
- gentle truths about ambition, identity, relationships, and the pressure to keep it all together
- reminders that you’re allowed to feel what you feel—even when it’s not convenient or cute
- subtle shifts that help you stop performing and start returning to yourself
Each chapter ends with a short section called “What (Sometimes) Helps.”
Not advice. Not rules. Just small, practical suggestions for when you’re too tired to figure it out alone:
- trying something on instead of committing to a whole new life
- subtracting before adding
- noticing what makes you laugh too hard or cry too suddenly
- redefining “realistic” in your own terms
Because sometimes, the right next step isn’t a plan.
It’s a quiet change in how you see yourself.
This book is for you if you’ve ever thought:
- “I should be fine. So why do I feel so off?”
- “I don’t even know what I want anymore.”
- “Everyone else seems to handle life better than I do.”
It’s not going to fix everything. It’s not trying to.
But it might help you feel seen. And less alone.
For women in their 30s, 40s, and beyond who are quietly struggling under the weight of should,
this book offers a softer kind of support.
Not louder. Not tougher. Just truer.