Quick Answer: Showing up for yourself when depleted means choosing one small act—under five minutes—that's just for you, like stepping outside or drinking water intentionally. Name the lie exhaustion is telling you, remove one draining thing from tomorrow, and remember that tiny acts done in your own favor rewire something inside you that reminds you that you still matter.
Showing up for yourself when you're running on empty means choosing one small, intentional act — just one — that tells your body and mind you still matter in your own life. It doesn't require energy you don't have. It requires a decision that takes less than five minutes. Showing up for yourself is the practice of doing one tiny thing in your own favor, especially on the days when everyone and everything else has drained you dry. This is for the woman who poured out everything today and forgot to save anything for herself — the mom, the caretaker, the one holding it all together while quietly falling apart.
Before you start, know this: none of these steps require a full morning routine, a gym membership, or your life to be in order. You don't need motivation. You don't even need to feel ready. You just need to pick one step on the day you read this and do it before your head hits the pillow.
The first thing to do when you feel emptied out is name what's running on repeat in your head. For most women, it's some version of: I have nothing left, so I don't deserve anything right now. Or: Everyone else needs me more than I need me.
That's not truth. That's exhaustion talking.
You don't have to journal about it. You don't have to unpack it in therapy (though if you're in a really dark place, please reach out to someone qualified to help — that's strength, not weakness). Just catch the thought. Say it out loud if you need to. "I keep telling myself I don't matter right now." Naming it takes away some of its power.
This takes about thirty seconds. One honest sentence in your own head.
Not the laundry. Not the emails. Not the kid's lunch for tomorrow. Something that is only for you and takes under five minutes.
A few real options:
At OK Tease Co., everything we do centers on helping women feel strong again, especially when they've lost themselves in the chaos. One thing I've learned through my own hard seasons: the tiniest act done for yourself rewires something inside you. You start to remember that you're still in there.
This is the step nobody talks about. Showing up for yourself isn't always about adding something good. Sometimes it's about subtracting something draining.
Look at tomorrow. What's one thing you can cancel, delegate, or just let go of? The playdate you said yes to out of guilt. The errand that can wait until next week. The text conversation that's pulling energy out of you.
Drop one thing. You will not fall apart. The world will not end. And you'll walk into tomorrow with just a little more breathing room.
Estimated effort: five minutes of looking at your calendar or to-do list and making one honest cut.
Guilt is the tax that exhausted women pay for existing. You feel guilty resting. You feel guilty saying no. You feel guilty doing something for yourself while someone else might need something.
I've been there — deep in the season of raising my kids, pouring out constantly, feeling like resting made me selfish. My faith carried me through a lot of those moments. God didn't design you to run empty and call it faithfulness. He made you a force, and even forces need to be replenished.
Guilt doesn't mean you're doing something wrong. It usually means you're doing something new. Sit with it and do the thing anyway.
Some seasons don't wrap up neatly. You don't get the resolution. The hard thing keeps being hard. And in those seasons, daily consistency with small acts matters more than any single big gesture.
Here's what's worked for me personally: movement. Not a two-hour gym session. Just moving my body in some way every day — even if it's ten minutes. Walking. Stretching. Something. Physical strength and emotional resilience are connected in a way that's hard to explain, but when I started prioritizing even small workouts, I felt more like myself again. Peptides have been part of my own personal journey of feeling better, too — I just started feeling more energy and more like me, and that mattered during a season when I didn't recognize myself.
The hard season might not end tomorrow. But you showing up for yourself inside of it? That changes everything about how you walk through it.
If you're in a place where the exhaustion feels bigger than what rest can fix — if it's deeper than a hard day or a hard week — please reach out to a qualified professional. The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7 by call or text. Asking for help is one of the boldest things a strong woman can do.
You are not too far gone. You are not too empty. You are still worth showing up for — especially today.
Wear Your Power.
OK Tease Co. is a modern women’s apparel brand rooted in purpose, confidence, and intentional storytelling.
Stillwater, Oklahoma
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