Mindfulness-based, Relational
Online Therapy
for
Quietly Depressed High Performers
in Oregon ,Washington, and Illinois
Helping you navigate the hidden exhaustion of holding it all together, so you can feel more grounded, connected, and alive.
You’re still functioning. But you’re not really okay.
You show up. You get things done. You carry a lot without letting much drop.
People may see you as capable, dependable, driven, high-capacity — the one who always handles it.
But inside, something feels off.
You are not falling apart in an obvious way. You are still working, leading, caregiving, achieving, keeping things moving.
And yet, you feel flat.
Tired in a way that sleep does not fix.
Disconnected from yourself.
Less interested in things that used to matter.
More numb. More irritable. More alone.
You keep functioning, so other people assume you are fine.
You keep performing, so your pain gets overlooked.
You keep going, so even you may wonder if it is “bad enough” to need support.
But functioning is not the same as feeling well.
And being capable does not mean you are not hurting.
Maybe you have been telling yourself that it is just stress. That you only need a vacation, a better routine, more discipline, or a little more rest.
But part of you is starting to wonder whether this is something important that is missing.
What are the symptoms of high-functioning depression
High-functioning depression does not always look dramatic.
You may still be productive. Still reliable. Still showing up for work, for family, and for daily responsibilities. From the outside, you may seem steady, capable, and fully in control.
But internally, the experience can feel much heavier.
It may feel like waking up tired, even after a full night of sleep.
Like moving through the day without much pleasure or anticipation.
Like feeling emotionally flat, but continuing to perform.
Like being hard on yourself, even when you are already doing a lot.
Like staying busy enough that you do not fully feel how depleted you are.
For some people, this shows up as emotional numbness. For others, it shows up as low-grade dread. You may notice that it takes more effort to access joy, motivation, tenderness, or hope. Sometimes it can show up as irritability, chronic overthinking, difficulty slowing down, or a persistent sense of heaviness that lingers quietly in the background. You feel a chronic tension, or a constant sense that you are behind, not enough, lacking in some way.
For many high achievers, depression is easy to miss because competence helps cover it. You may keep meeting expectations while feeling increasingly far away from yourself. And because you are still functioning, it can be easy for others — and even for you — to overlook how much you are actually carrying.
Hello there, welcome.
At Spark Relational Counseling, we work with adults who are functioning on the outside while quietly struggling on the inside. Through mindfulness-based relational therapy, we help you slow down, understand what is happening beneath the surface, and reconnect with yourself in a way that feels grounded, compassionate, and real.
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Stress can absolutely make you feel overwhelmed. But when stress starts blending into emptiness, numbness, or disconnection, it may be time to look more closely.
You might be dealing with more than stress if you notice that rest does not actually feel restorative. You take time off, but you still feel dull or emotionally far away. You sleep, but still wake up exhausted. You keep telling yourself to push through one more week, one more project, one more season, but the relief never really arrives.
It may also feel like your body is carrying the cost. You may notice tightness in your chest, tension in your jaw or shoulders, headaches, digestive discomfort, shallow breathing, racing thoughts, difficulty winding down, or that strange combination of being tired and wired at the same time.
Sometimes quietly depressed high performers do not feel “sad” in an obvious way. Instead, they feel unfocused, detached, unmotivated, more self-critical, less patient, or increasingly unable to access pleasure.
It can start to feel like you are living from responsibility instead of aliveness.
Emotional numbness, burnout, anxiety, and loneliness in High-functioning adults
Many high-functioning adults are not dealing with only one thing.
What looks like burnout may also include anxiety. What feels like anxiety may also include loneliness. What sounds like “I’m just exhausted” may actually include grief, chronic stress, self-abandonment, perfectionism, or a long pattern of overfunctioning.
Emotional numbness can be especially confusing. You may still care deeply, but not feel much. You may struggle to cry, struggle to feel excited, or struggle to access what you want. Life begins to feel muted. You are not falling apart, but you are not fully in contact with yourself either.
For some people, anxiety has been driving performance for so long that when the body begins to burn out, they do not know how to slow down without guilt. The same part of you that helped you succeed may also be the part that keeps you overextending, overthinking, over-caretaking, and overriding your own limits.
And underneath all of this, there is often loneliness.
Not always the loneliness of physically being alone, but the loneliness of feeling unseen. The loneliness of being valued for what you do more than for who you are. The loneliness of having people around you but still feeling emotionally far away. The loneliness of being the competent one who does not know where to put your own needs.
How this can show up in relationships
Quiet depression does not stay neatly contained inside your work life. It often shows up in your closest relationships, too.
You may feel more withdrawn with your partner, less emotionally available, or less interested in connection even though you still care. You may notice that affection feels harder to access. Conversations may feel effortful. Small misunderstandings can feel disproportionately draining.
Sometimes high performers begin to overfunction in relationships the way they do everywhere else. You keep planning, tracking, checking in, solving, managing, and holding things together. But underneath that competence, you may feel resentful, lonely, or unseen.
Other times, the opposite happens. You may shut down more easily. You may not know how to explain what is wrong because there is no single crisis to point to. You just know that you feel far away from yourself, and that distance starts to affect the people closest to you.
When this happens, therapy can help you understand not only your symptoms, but also the relational patterns around them.
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A lot of high performers delay therapy because they believe they are “not struggling enough.”
You may think that because you are still going to work, still caring for others, still meeting obligations, you should be able to handle this on your own. You may worry that therapy is only for when things get really bad.
But weekly therapy can be especially helpful before things fully collapse.
When you are quietly depressed, burned out, or emotionally numb, change often requires more than insight. It requires a consistent space where you do not have to perform, manage, or prove anything. A space where your internal experience is not minimized simply because you are still functioning.
Weekly therapy creates enough continuity for us to notice patterns, build trust, slow down your nervous system, and help you reconnect with what you feel, need, and want. Rather than only talking about stress, we begin to understand the deeper rhythms beneath it. We work with the parts of you that keep pushing, the parts that feel tired, and the parts that may not have had much room at all.
Over time, therapy can help you feel more present, more emotionally connected, more honest with yourself, and less alone inside your own life.
What therapy with us can look like
At Spark Relational Counseling, we offer a warm, thoughtful, and nonjudgmental space for adults who are carrying a lot.
When working with us, we begin by getting to know your experience with care. We want to understand what has been feeling heavy, flat, disconnected, or difficult lately, but also the larger context around it. Your relationships. Your responsibilities. Your identity. Your family history. The patterns that helped you survive, succeed, or stay connected to others.
Through mindfulness-based relational therapy, we help you slow down enough to notice what is happening inside instead of automatically moving past it. We may explore the emotional cost of overfunctioning, the role anxiety has played in your success, how perfectionism or caretaking developed, and what your system learned about rest, vulnerability, and worth.
In therapy, we can help you:
Feel less emotionally numb and more connected to yourself.
Understand the difference between stress, burnout, anxiety, and depression.
Notice body-based signs of distress earlier
Build healthier boundaries without as much guilt
Improve your relationship with rest, need, and support
Reduce overfunctioning in work and relationships
Reconnect with pleasure, meaning, and steadiness
We know many of our clients are thoughtful, insightful people. Often, the issue is not that you have never reflected on yourself. It is that insight alone has not fully shifted the pattern.
Over time, therapy is not only about understanding what is happening — it is also about creating the conditions for something new to happen. In a warm, attuned, and steady therapeutic relationship, you can begin to have a different emotional experience than the one you may be used to: being supported without having to earn it, Letting the overworked parts release the burden instead of carrying it alone, and making space for your inner world without needing to push it aside. As these experiences unfold, they can begin to create the kind of long-lasting change that helps you feel more grounded, more open, and more fully yourself again.
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Your mental health matters, but so does your time.
If you are a busy professional, entrepreneur, caregiver, or high-capacity adult, it can feel hard to imagine adding one more thing to your schedule. Online therapy can make it easier to receive support without needing to reorganize your entire life.
We offer online therapy for adults in Oregon, Washington, and Illinois. This can be a good fit if you want consistent care that works with your real life: between meetings, during a quieter part of the day, from your home office, or from a private space where you can exhale a little more easily.
Online therapy can still be deep, relational, and effective. It can give you a regular place to slow down, reflect, and reconnect with yourself without the extra strain of a commute or more logistical stress.
Common Questions Around High Functioning Depression
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Yes. Depression does not always look like being unable to get out of bed or completely withdrawing from life. Many people continue going to work, caring for others, meeting deadlines, and appearing “fine” on the outside while quietly struggling on the inside.
This is part of why high-functioning depression can be easy to miss. You may still be productive and responsible, but feel emotionally flat, exhausted, disconnected, or far from yourself. Just because you are still functioning does not mean you are feeling well — and you do not have to wait until things get worse to seek support.
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When medication is recommended for depression, clinicians often consider antidepressants such as SSRIs or SNRIs, and sometimes other medication classes depending on the person. SSRIs are commonly used first because they are widely prescribed and tend to have fewer bothersome side effects than some older antidepressants, but the right fit varies from person to person.
* We are not a PCP and thus this is NOT medical advice.
If you are wondering whether medication might help, it can be a good next step to talk with a primary care provider or psychiatrist who can assess your symptoms carefully and help you weigh options.
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Sometimes it is burnout. Sometimes it is depression. And sometimes the two overlap more than people realize.
Burnout often comes from prolonged stress, over-responsibility, and not enough recovery. Depression can include emotional numbness, hopelessness, loss of pleasure, disconnection, or a deeper sense of heaviness that does not go away even when things slow down. In therapy, we can help you sort through what is stress-related, what may be depression, and what patterns in your life may be keeping the cycle going.
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Emotional numbness can happen when your system has been carrying too much for too long. Sometimes it is a response to chronic stress, burnout, anxiety, or the habit of constantly pushing through without enough space to feel, process, or rest.
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“High-functioning anxiety depression” is not a formal diagnosis, but it is a phrase many people use when they are living with both anxiety and depression while still appearing capable on the outside. You may still be getting things done, staying productive, and managing daily responsibilities — but underneath that functioning, you may feel chronically worried, emotionally tired, numb, disconnected, or quietly overwhelmed.
For some people, anxiety is what keeps everything moving. It drives the overthinking, planning, perfectionism, and constant pushing through. At the same time, depression may show up underneath that drive as heaviness, emotional flatness, low motivation, loneliness, or the sense that life has started to feel more like something to survive than something to enjoy. This can be especially confusing because anxiety can make you look highly functional, even while depression is quietly draining your inner world.
Therapy can help untangle these overlapping experiences. It can give you space to understand what is fueling the pressure, what is contributing to the numbness or depletion, and how to begin relating to yourself in a way that feels more sustainable, compassionate, and whole.
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In high achievers, anxiety often does not look like panic on the outside. It may look like overthinking, overpreparing, perfectionism, difficulty resting, people-pleasing, or the constant feeling that you should be doing more.
You may feel driven to stay productive not because you feel calm and clear, but because slowing down brings up discomfort, guilt, or fear. Many high achievers are praised for their competence while privately living with a nervous system that rarely feels settled. Therapy can help you understand how anxiety may be fueling performance — and what it might look like to feel effective without always feeling on edge.
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High-functioning anxiety often hides behind traits that other people praise. It can look like being responsible, prepared, productive, thoughtful, and always on top of things. But internally, it may feel very different. You may have a hard time relaxing, even when there is finally time to rest. Your mind may keep scanning ahead, anticipating problems, replaying conversations, or wondering what you forgot.
Some of the quieter red flags can include overthinking simple decisions, feeling guilty when you slow down, needing to stay busy to feel okay, being highly self-critical, struggling to be present, or feeling like your body never fully settles. It can also show up physically through tension, shallow breathing, trouble sleeping, stomach discomfort, headaches, or that tired-but-wired feeling many high achievers know well.
Because it can look like competence from the outside, high-functioning anxiety is often minimized. But when your nervous system is working that hard all the time, it takes a real toll. If that part of your experience resonates, you may also want to read more about our Anxiety Treatment services.
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For many people, yes. Online therapy can be a very effective option, especially for professionals who want meaningful support but have limited time and a full schedule. It can make therapy more accessible by removing the stress of commuting and helping sessions fit more realistically into your week.
Online therapy can still be warm, relational, and depth-oriented. For many busy adults, it actually makes it easier to show up consistently, which is an important part of building trust and creating lasting change. If you value convenience but still want real therapeutic depth, virtual therapy can be a strong fit
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High-functioning depression can improve, but it usually does not go away simply by pushing through, staying busy, or waiting for life to calm down. In many cases, the pattern persists precisely because you are still functioning well enough to keep going while quietly carrying the pain underneath it.
What often helps is not just time, but support. Therapy can help you understand the emotional, relational, and nervous-system patterns that may be keeping the depression in place. It can also help you create a different experience of yourself — one with more honesty, care, room to feel, and space to respond to your needs before they get pushed aside again.
Many people do feel significantly better over time, especially when they are able to address not only the symptoms, but also the deeper pressures, roles, and coping patterns that have shaped how they have learned to survive. Healing may not always happen all at once, but meaningful and lasting change is possible.
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Step 1.
Fill out the contact form and choose a good call-back time.
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Step 2.
Hear back from us within 24-48 hours (except for weekends and holidays).
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Step 3.
Begin rebuilding trust and feeling ssecure and confident in your relationship.
Frequently Asked Questions About Our Practice
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Perhaps you have been through many therapy websites and wave through quite a few profiles. Searching for an online therapist can be a complicated process. We honor and understand the frustration, hope, and worry in starting your therapy work. Therefore, we offer a free 15 mins phone consultation to help discuss your needs and answer any questions you may have.
Our hope is by the end of the call, you will have a better sense of the service I provide and make a more informed decision.
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Based on how the current insurance system is set up, in order to use your in-network insurance benefits, the insurance company requires me to give you a mental illness diagnosis. This diagnosis becomes part of your permanent medical record and may negatively impact your future life choices ( adoption, life insurance, employment, etc.). In addition, therapy under an in-network insurance panel is not confidential. Insurance companies and managed care panels essentially become another person in your treatment, as they require reports about our meetings to authorize sessions. They also have the power to decide how many sessions you will receive.
We believe that those crucial decisions should be made between you and your therapist, not a stranger from the insurance office.
For these concerns on in-network insurances benefits, we choose to accept only out-of-network benefits for insurances purposes. If you would like to use your insurance, we will assist by providing you with a "superbill" (An itemized receipt) for you to take advantage of any out-of-network benefits that your plan offers. Depending on your plan, your insurance company may reimburse your session cost up to a percentage. Please note that a diagnosis is still required, but we will have confidentiality and control over your course of treatment.
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The timeline largely depends on the fluctuation of your therapist's schedule. Usually, sessions are available to be scheduled as soon as 5-7 days from the initial contact. If you are ready now, click here to skip the wait and request a session.
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If this is your first time going to therapy, we imagine it may be both exciting and a bit nerve-wracking. We know what that feeling feels like, and congratulations on taking this crucial first step. To help you better prepare, we found this articleprovides some helpful information about what will happen during our first session.
Before arriving for your first appointment, it could also be helpful to take a moment and think about what you would like to accomplish through therapy. How have you been feeling lately? How would you like to feel? You do not have to feel obligated to tell your therapist "everything" during your first session. Instead, it is simply an opportunity to share enough and check in with yourself on how you feel sitting with your therapist. It may also be helpful to think about what questions you might have for your therapist during your first session. You will know that a therapist is a good fit for you when you feel at ease, heard, and confident in their ability to help you during your first session.
For a complete list of FAQs, including rates and our COVID practice, Please visit our FAQs section.
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Start Therapy for High-Functioning Depression
Other Mental Health and Couples Therapy Services
At Spark Relational Counseling, we offer a variety of mental health services to support you and your needs, online in Illinois, Oregon, and Washington. We offer anxiety treatment and therapy for entrepreneurs. For individuals with immigrant parents and/or trans-racially adopted adults, we offer culturally sensitive individual counseling to help you address issues around identity and culture. For professional working women with concerns around dating, we offer individual therapy for women dealing with loneliness that helps you feel more confident in building a strong romantic relationship. Additionally, for those in a relationship. we specialize in couples and marriage counseling and premarital counseling as well. If you are a small business owner, we offer therapy for entrepreneurs to help you navigate the ups and downs of owning a business. We are here to support you on your path to a more connected and fulfilling life.