Why You Feel Stuck (and What’s Really Going On)
5 Ways To Activate Your Deeper Truth
There comes a moment for every woman in the middle of her life. It is quiet, confronting, and often unexpected. It arrives at a time and place in your life, where you realise you feel stuck.
It is totally a time warp, with a step to the left and a jump to the right. You are not dramatically broken, but something is clearly not right.
You are not in crisis, but you don’t feel normal either. That aspect of you that was always reliable and dependable, now feels suspended. Something has clearly paused. This brings a truckload of uncertainty.
And here’s the truth most women miss as their midlife shift arrives — Feeling stuck isn’t failure. It’s information. It’s the invitation to awaken your inner queen and attend a seasonal shift.
For many women — especially Queenagers (those navigating peri-menopause and menopause), those in middle age, or empty-nesters — this sensation can leave you feeling like you’ve arrived at a party as an uninvited guest.
The shift feels foreign, new and unknown.
From the outside, the queen looks “fine”, but this is not the case internally.
Something within you is shifting on all levels — physically, mentally, emotionally and energetically. You know the shift has been coming, but you didn’t expect your role to change. That hit you out of left field.
You didn’t realise your entire identity would loosen as the oestrogen melted away. You didn’t realise that presence of who you are has to change. What you’ve been building all these years has to morph and evolve.
You didn’t realise that the things that once motivated and inspired you, simply don’t land the same way anymore. These days you’re lucky to get out of bed and put on pants due to the overwhelming exhaustion.
Queen, I’m talking to you. This isn’t laziness. This isn’t lack of purpose. This is your path to the throne. This is your transition.
What’s Really Going On Beneath the Surface?
So what’s under the felt-stuck sensation? Let’s dive a little deeper, because the shift is so much more than a change in your mindset. Honey, this is your biology, psychology, and your lived experience working together to morph you into your next phase of life.
Let’s undertake a high-level view of what’s happening inside you right now.
1. Your Nervous System Is in “Freeze”
When your body perceives overwhelm — not just acute trauma, but chronic stress, emotional load, or life transitions — your nervous system throws you into a core survival state called the freeze response.
Freeze doesn’t look dramatic, but by god it feels intense and significantly different to what you are used to.
Freeze presents in a number of ways like procrastination, indecision, brain fog, lack of energy and even feeling disconnected from motivation. Whilst your body isn’t failing you, when freeze is functional you can feel totally bonkers (that’s a technical term used frequently by Queenagers).
Your freeze reaction is protecting you from perceived overload.
2. Your Chemistry Is Changing
For Queenagers and women in menopause, there is a very real neurochemical shift happening. Your oestrogen declines, which is obvious with the loss of your period. But what many women don’t realise is that oestrogen plays a significant role in the production of :
- Dopamine (motivation and reward) and this can directly cause ‘brain fog’, cognitive flexibility, diminished pleasure and fatigue
- Serotonin (mood and emotional stability) — this can directly contribute to anxiety, low mood, irritability and insomnia
- Acetylcholine (cognitive function) — this directly affects memory, word finding, and reduces attention spans
- GABA (calming agent) — this reduces your ability to manage stress, which results in increased anxiety, irritability, and restlessness
- Cortisol regulation (stress response)
Oestrogen is a hormonal gem that has long acted like a kind of social and emotional buffer — supporting nurturing behaviours, adaptability, and responsiveness to others’ needs. As it decreases, something profound happens — buffer to constantly give, nurture, and perform begins to fall away.
And in its place, a queen can find herself asking a very personal question that has been placed on the shelf for a long time — “What about me?”
Women are wired to nurture and give, and when that hormone subsides, she begins to realise she may not have received any of that love for herself. Asking this question can generate a sensation like being lost.
What is actually happening is the beginning of your self-realignment.
3. You’re Running Old Emotional Patterns on a New Version of You
Ok, we’ve touched on your biology and endocrine system. Now let’s explore your subconscious mind, is that is designed for efficiency.
The human brain is complex and will run patterns to reduce the time and energy spent creating new patterns. Your subconscious mind runs patterns based on your past experiences, conditioned beliefs and learned safety strategies.
So even when you want to change, that freeze response will drive a subconscious reaction — “We’ve never done that before. That’s not safe.” This is your cue for old and unwanted unprocessed emotional baggage, such as:
- Fear of failure
- Fear of success
- Fear of being seen
- Fear of outgrowing your identity
The outcome of exposing fears (even if they’re still subconscious) is that your nervous system doesn’t feel safe. On the conscious level, you feel stuck. Not because you can’t move, but because part of your programs holds the belief that it’s safer not to.
Here Are Five Strategies to Support Gently Move The Queen To Her Throne
A Queen should set her own pace. Not by forcing or pushing herself harder. The shift is an invitation to be kinder to yourself. Sister, you need to learn to work with your body, soothe your nervous system, and remain observant of the rising thoughts and feelings that aren’t positive.
A Queen should not work against herself, her mind or her body. Her role is to restore order to the lands she governs.
1. Somatic Movement (Release the Freeze)
Queen, your body likely holds the freeze state. So begin nurturing the nervous system. Try the following:
- Gentle somatic shaking
- Stretching like yoga or pilates
- Slow, intuitive movement
Gentle movement signals to your nervous system — “it is safe to unfreeze and move forward.”
2. Breath Activation
When you feel flat or frozen, your breath often becomes shallow. Cue the vision of a hyperventilating meerkat running startled across the Savannah to escape the tiger.
There are no shortage of free breathing techniques available. The key to breath work success is to continually practice to regulate your nervous system. Breath work isn’t about curing your stress. Purposeful breathing is designed to help you become present in this moment and observe your internal world.
When you activate your freeze state, your brain will delve into the memory bank and locate an earlier developed program that mimics your current situation. You could be reacting to nothing!
Here’s a game-changer to switch out of freeze and reset your vagal tone:
- Two short, energising inhales through the nose, then pause or hold your breath
- Then a slow exhale, breathing out as if through a straw
This helps re-activate your nervous system without overwhelm.
3. Cognitive Reframing
The human brain processes about 60,000 thoughts a day. Roughly 75% of those thoughts are negative, and it is estimated that 90% of that negativity was experienced yesterday. We all experience garbage thoughts. The key to letting garbage out is to first acknowledge them. Be observant of your internal dialogue.
Garbage thoughts sound like “I can’t”, “It’s too late”, or “What’s the point?”
Here’s the formula —
- Is that true?
- How do I know that’s true?
- Where do I feel that in my body?
- Who would I be without it?
You don’t need blind positivity, but I do highly recommend curiosity over certainty.
4. Pattern Mapping
One of the most successful methods to insert circuit breakers into old behaviours that no longer serve you is to become observant. I run retreats whereby I take participants through a process to first soothe their nervous system and feel safe. Then we identify garbage thoughts. Next we allow ourselves to see the cycle of how our thoughts and feelings drive our behaviours.
You can readily explore your emotional cycling and mapping of patterns through daily journaling. Ask yourself the following questions-
- Where have I felt this before?
- What do I tend to do next?
- What am I avoiding?
Your evolving awareness within the present moment permits you to break the autopilot cycle of your freeze program.
5. Incremental Change
You don’t need a reinvention overnight — in fact I don’t recommend it at all. If by some chance you managed to change overnight, you’d miss the lessons of how your mind and body are, or aren’t, harmoniously balanced.
Queen, the awareness you gain along the way from emerging out of functional freeze, are the steps that help you ascend your throne throughout your shift phase.
You need one small, safe step. Pause.
That’s right, one thing at a time. Do the action, then gift yourself a little kindness like a walk or actually drink that cuppa.
Small actions support the certainty scaffold, which builds evidence of safety for the subconscious which is still hanging on tight. Remember safety creates momentum.
Conclusion
This moment you’re in, is not a dead end. It is more than a threshold. Your shift brought to you by midlife, menopause, or your empty nest phase — this is where your old identity dissolves…
You’re not stuck, you are simply steering yourself back into a more finely tuned alignment.
You’re not stuck —but your nervous system is trying to protect your. Your nervous system is trying to keep you safe. Your patterns are trying to keep you familiar. Your body is asking you to listen.
Your body is inviting you to think and feel differently. You can choose differently. Not all at once. Not perfectly, but consciously.
And Queen, that’s where everything begins to shift.
About Karen
Change Facilitator
Karen Humphries is a Mental Health Counsellor, Kinesiology Practitioner + Accredited Business Mentor, Wellbeing Coach, Meditation Facilitator, Hypnotherapist, and Resource Therapist. Karen is also a published author. She is a self-confessed laughaholic. She loves being of service to the world with her humorous and positive approach to life, encouraging people to ‘choose to change and bloom from within.’
