You’ve tried managing it alone. It hasn’t worked. That’s not your fault.
You’ve read the articles. Tried the supplements. Perhaps even done the 14-Day Reset on your own.
Something shifted — but it didn’t stick. Because knowing what to do and actually doing it, consistently, while running a household, a job, and everyone else’s needs, are two entirely different things.
Maybe you’ve sat in a GP’s waiting room, rehearsing how to explain a tiredness that sleep doesn’t touch. Maybe you’ve read your own bloodwork twice, hunting for what “normal” is missing. Maybe you’ve quietly wondered whether it’s perimenopause, or burnout, or both at once, and nobody’s ever properly untangled the two for you. Maybe it’s simpler than that — you’re wired, not tired-tired, and you genuinely can’t remember what it feels like to sit still without your mind already three tasks ahead. Stopping feels wrong somehow, like you’re not allowed, or like your body’s forgotten how.
This programme is the difference between reading about nervous system recalibration and actually living it — with someone holding the structure for you, and seven other women walking the same six weeks alongside you.
Picture Six Weeks From Now
You sit down and your brain isn’t already three steps ahead, running the list of everything else you should be doing instead.
You stop for five minutes and it doesn’t feel wrong. It doesn’t feel alien, or lazy, or like you’re wasting time you’ll pay for later. You’ve almost forgotten what that kind of quiet feels like — the kind where your body isn’t quietly bracing for the next thing.
You finish work feeling a normal kind of tired — the kind you can actually rest from, not the wired, switched-on exhaustion that sleep never quite touches.
That’s not a promise — every woman’s six weeks looks a little different. But it’s what happens when your nervous system finally gets the chance to remember what stillness feels like, instead of treating it as something to get through as fast as possible.
Why a Programme, Not Just Sessions
You don’t need more information. You’ve probably watched more wellness videos than you can count, ploughed through audiobooks on your commute, read the same five articles reworded a dozen different ways. You could watch a hundred more and still be exactly here, because the missing piece was never knowledge — it was someone helping you actually do something with it, consistently, over time.
That’s the difference a programme makes. There’s a particular kind of relief in not having to decide, week to week, whether now is the moment to book support — with a programme, that decision is already made. You’re not starting from scratch each time either: I already know your health history, what we covered last week, what you’re working towards, so every session picks up exactly where the last one left off.
And you’ll have real evidence of what’s actually changed, not just a feeling — your first MYMOP measurement compared honestly against your last, six weeks apart.
Why Group — Not Just You, Alone With a Workbook
Here’s something worth being honest about: information was never really the missing piece. Community and accountability are.
The most successful behaviour-change programmes in the world aren’t successful because they hand out perfect advice — they’re successful because change sticks when you’re not doing it in isolation. When seven other women are in the room noticing the same patterns, naming the same invisible pressures, showing up week after week — that’s what makes six weeks actually work, rather than becoming another well-intentioned reset that fades by week three.
There’s something else group offers that’s harder to manufacture alone: the relief of realising it’s not just you. Most women arrive at this work assuming their particular version of overwhelm is somehow uniquely theirs — a personal failing, not a pattern. Watching six other capable, intelligent women describe the exact same 2am wired-exhaustion, the same guilt around rest, tends to do something a workbook alone can’t: it quietly dismantles the shame sitting underneath the tiredness.
There’s a name for part of this in behaviour-change research — social accountability — the simple, well-documented fact that people are more likely to follow through on change when it’s witnessed, not private. Not because anyone’s checking up on you, but because turning up to a session is easier when you know seven other women are doing the exact same thing, at the exact same stage of the exact same six weeks.
And there’s a quieter benefit too: hearing someone else name something you hadn’t put words to yet. Pillar 3’s Wheel of Life work, for instance, tends to land differently in a room where you can feel — without anyone saying it aloud — that you’re not the only one carrying more than your share.
You’ll have a private group space to check in between sessions, and you’re always welcome to reach me directly too. You are never doing this alone.

Why This, and Not Just Another Course
I’m Mariko. NHS-accredited, CNM Diploma Level 5 qualified, trauma-informed — but what I bring isn’t just training. It’s lived experience.
For years I lived inside a kind of anxious fog — managing, coping, telling myself I was fine. I genuinely believed that was simply my life. Not a phase, not something to move through — just how things were, and always would be.
I remember one particular evening clearly. My daughter had recently had several visits to A&E for her chronic pain, and it was parents’ evening — a new school year, teachers who didn’t know her yet, each one needing the same explanation of her medical condition from scratch. I sat down with the first teacher and started explaining. I didn’t get much further than that before I was in tears. I couldn’t compose myself enough to see anyone else. I left, and on my way out I bumped into the head teacher, face still wet, and just said I couldn’t stay.
I remember thinking: I can’t even manage a parents’ evening. What must everyone think of me? A grown woman, in tears, unable to get through a fifteen-minute conversation about my own child.
That’s how close to the surface everything sat by then. Not dramatic collapse — just a normal evening, made impossible by how much I was quietly carrying underneath it.

These days I catch myself mid-morning, doing something completely unremarkable — making tea, walking to the car — and realising nothing’s braced. I didn’t know how much room the anxiety had been taking up, every single day and night, until it simply wasn’t there any more.
The chronic anxiety I’d carried for over 25 years wasn’t a separate problem sitting alongside the burnout. It was what happened when my body lived in survival mode for that long. One of my counsellors later recognised I’d actually been operating in two levels of fight or flight.
None of this happened overnight, and it wasn’t a straight line. It took the best part of a year. But when I actually recovered — properly — the anxiety largely just… left.
I use MYMOP — a clinically validated outcome-tracking tool used in NHS and primary care research. Most programmes ask you to trust that something’s working. This one measures it.
★★★★★
“She immediately put me at ease. She took the time to listen to my concerns and made sure I felt comfortable throughout. I came away with some simple, easy to implement goals.”
What’s included
This Isn’t for Everyone
This isn’t for you if the timing genuinely isn’t right, or you’re not ready to give six weeks a proper go. That’s honest, not a sales tactic — wrong timing is wrong timing.
But if you’re waiting for the “right” time to magically appear, it’s worth asking whether you’ve already hit the point where things need to change. Maybe you have — actual burnout, undeniable. Or maybe you can feel it coming, close enough that you’ve quietly started bracing for it.
Either way, you’re likely fed up of living in survival mode. Not some big collapse — just exhausted, in the ordinary, grinding way that’s started showing up in your body as well as your head. You’ve been the strong one for everyone else for so long you’re not sure you have the energy, or even the want, to keep doing it.
Maybe some of it runs quieter still — the pressure of what you think you’re supposed to be managing effortlessly, the judgement, real or imagined, if you admit you’re not. If your own career or plans went quiet somewhere along the way, supporting someone else’s, there’s often a particular grief sitting underneath the tiredness that nobody’s ever actually asked you about.
Here’s the thing about waiting for the right time — it rarely announces itself
“I don’t have time for this”
You’re thinking it. I know you are — everyone who needs this most is also the person with the least obvious time to give it.
Here’s the uncomfortable part: if you don’t make time now, this doesn’t just go away. Maybe you’ve already crashed once, and you know exactly how that goes. Or maybe you can feel it coming this time, closer than you’re admitting to anyone. Either way, waiting rarely means it quietly resolves itself.
Making time now isn’t six weeks lost from an already full life. It’s the six weeks that change how you experience everything after them — your relationships, your work, the ordinary evenings with your family. And you’ll actually be more use to the people who depend on you once you’re not running on empty.






