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Today, we need to talk about a piece of advice that sounds helpful… but isn’t.
“Remember your why.”
You’ve probably heard it. You’ve probably said it to yourself. You may have even said it to someone else. I did… and I’ll be the first to tell you… it wasn’t just unhelpful. It did damage.
If you’ve been trying to survive this school year by reconnecting to your why, and it’s not working, this matters: It’s not you.
When Passion Stops Working
There’s this quiet assumption in our field that passion should carry you through anything. Hard day? Go back to your why. Feeling overwhelmed? Dig deeper. Burned out? Care more. Except… that’s not how this works.
You can love your job deeply and still feel like you can’t walk through the doors some days. You can be highly trained, deeply committed, and still sit in your car wondering if you have anything left to give. That doesn’t mean you’ve lost your purpose, it means something else is going on.
The Real Problem Isn’t Your Why
Research gives us a much clearer picture. The Job Demands–Resources Model shows that burnout doesn’t come from working hard. You’ve always worked hard.
Burnout happens when demands stay high and resources disappear. That’s the combination that breaks people. So when someone says “find your why,” what they’re really asking you to do is solve a resource problem with motivation. That’s like trying to refill an empty well by wanting water more. It doesn’t work.
What’s Actually Draining You
Take a second and think about your current reality.
The constant interruptions.
The non-counseling duties.
The overwhelming caseload.
The lack of support.
The meetings that go nowhere.
The emotional weight you carry for your students.
Now layer this on top:
Less autonomy.
Less trust.
Less time.
Less connection.
That’s not a motivation issue, it’s a resource deficit. No amount of “why” is going to fix that.
Why You Feel So Exhausted (And Why It Keeps Getting Worse)
There’s another piece of research that explains this perfectly. When you start losing resources, it doesn’t happen one at a time. It compounds. You lose one support, then another, then another.
Before you know it, you’re in what researchers call a loss spiral. Everything feels heavier. Everything takes more effort. Everything costs more.
That’s why this school year might feel different. It’s not just hard… it’s been building.
So What Should You Do Instead?
If “find your why” isn’t the answer, what is?
Let’s break it down into three research-backed moves that actually work.
Stop the Bleeding:
You don’t need to fix everything. You need to protect what’s left. Start by identifying your biggest energy drains this week. Not the big systemic issues. The small, specific leaks you can reach.
Then ask: Can I eliminate this? Can I reduce it? Can I set a boundary around it You’re not rebuilding the system. You’re plugging leaks.
Identify What You Actually Need:
Your motivation isn’t broken. One of your core psychological needs is. Research shows we all need three things to function well:
Autonomy – feeling like you have control over your work
Competence – feeling effective and skilled
Relatedness – feeling connected and understood When one of these gets crushed, everything starts to feel off.
So ask yourself: Which one is most depleted right now? Just pick one.
Take One Small, Aligned Action:
You don’t need a full reset. You need one small move. If you need autonomy, make one decision that’s yours. If you need competence, do something that reminds you you’re good at this. If you need connection, have one real conversation with someone who gets it.
That’s it. Small. Intentional. Real.
You Don’t Need to Feel Your Why
This might be the most important shift of all. You don’t need to feel inspired to act in alignment with your purpose. You just need to act. One small action that reflects the school counselor you are is enough to start changing momentum.
That action becomes proof that you’re still here, you still know what you’re doing, and your work still matters.
Not because you forced yourself to feel it… Because you did it.
Your Why Was Never Gone
If this year has felt heavier than usual, there’s a reason. It’s not that you’ve lost your passion. It’s that the conditions around you have made it harder to access.
Your why didn’t disappear. You just couldn’t reach it from where you were standing. So instead of chasing it… build a floor under yourself. Protect your energy. Meet your needs. Take one small step. That’s how it comes back.
You Don’t Have to Do This Alone
If what you’re missing most right now is a space where you can think out loud with people who truly understand this work, that matters more than you might realize.
Inside the School for School Counselors Hub, the Blog, and the Mastermind, you’ll find ongoing support, real conversations, and practical clarity that helps you navigate the reality of this job without losing yourself in it.
If social media feels loud or unhelpful, the Skool community offers a calmer space to connect, reflect, and grow alongside other counselors who get it.
You deserve support that actually supports you.

I resonated with this episode. Thank you for being so open about your experiences this year. I switches schools last year and am really missing the sense of belonging. It makes each day so challenging. It’s a school filled with what I call land minds. People wait and watch for you to make a mistake. There’s no trust and no collaboration.
This episode reminded me to focus on the small things I can do each day to make it a little better.
Thank you!! Hope you are feeling better!