The Success Trap: Why High-Achieving Women Are Running on Empty
Women at senior levels of the workplace are burning out at faster rates than their male counterparts—and face a steeper path to the top.
According to the 2025 Women in the Workplace report, women leaders are experiencing burnout at significantly higher rates than men. Research published by Catalyst in 2026 revealed that women have been leaving the U.S. workforce at unprecedented rates, driven primarily by caregiving pressures, a lack of schedule flexibility, pay dissatisfaction, and chronic burnout. A Q4 2025 Gallup poll further underscored the paradox: women employed full-time in the U.S. reported higher levels of engagement and stronger motivations to advance compared to men—yet also reported higher levels of burnout.
In short, women are trying harder, caring more, and breaking down faster.
The Science of Survival Mode
Researcher and strategist Dr. Samantha-Rae Dickenson has made it her mission to understand how women become conditioned into chronic overperformance and burnout as a survival strategy. Through her High-Functioning Survival Mode™ (HFSM™) framework, she has spent over 15 years designing human-centered systems within Fortune 500 and SaaS environments before turning her attention to the patterns she was seeing up close.
"My systems-thinking background became foundational to how I understand survival patterns as adaptive responses to the environments people are conditioned to survive within," Dickenson explained. She is currently leading the first global HFSM™ research study, with more than 1,000 participants across 29 countries and five continents, exploring the relationship between chronic overperformance, trauma adaptation, burnout, and long-term health outcomes.
Dickenson described the mechanism plainly: "Over time, the nervous system adapts to chronic over-functioning as a survival strategy, associating productivity with safety. What makes this dangerous is that many of the systems rewarding women for overperformance are also extracting from them at unsustainable levels."
HFSM™ often looks like success from the outside. It's the woman who excels professionally, holds everything together for everyone else, and never slows down. But behind closed doors, she is running on exhaustion, hypervigilance, and chronic overwhelm.
The Bigger Picture: Success as a Trap
Dickenson connected her research to broader societal patterns shaping women's lives globally. "Femicide reflects the most extreme manifestation of this dynamic. Mass layoffs are the economic manifestation. And the 'girlboss' revival is the ideological manifestation. All three reinforce the same contradiction: women are rewarded for self-erasure while simultaneously being treated as disposable."
She was direct about why certain cultural narratives make things worse. "This is also why framings like Emma Grede's are harmful. Framing proximity to power as universally attainable keeps women locked in the HFSM™ loop—chasing a mirage while depleting themselves in the process."
What Workplaces Are Getting Wrong
Seasoned human resources professional Keisha Toussaint put it bluntly: "Workplaces have to stop approaching burnout like it's a surface-level problem."
"What they're doing now is just ignoring the environment that contributed to exhaustion in the first place. Real change, to me, looks like equitable workloads. It looks like psychological safety and leadership on flexibility without punishment. Clear growth opportunities. And managers who are actually trained to lead people—not just manage performance."
Toussaint also urged companies to pay closer attention to the data they already have. "Exit interviews, engagement surveys, turnover trends—why are people leaving? Intentionality is such a big thing."
The Conditioning No One Talks About
Dickenson emphasized that this isn't an equal-opportunity problem. "Women—particularly Black women and migrant women—have historically carried disproportionate professional, emotional, domestic, and communal labor. Over time, that creates dangerous conditioning where worth becomes tied to usefulness. What I'm observing through my HFSM™ research is that many high-performing women become conditioned to override exhaustion, suppress emotional needs, and disconnect from their bodies to maintain stability, achievement, or safety."
This dynamic was perfectly captured by Keke Palmer in her TED Talk: "Somewhere along the way, I began believing I was a thing that saved us. I was Keke Palmer. I built an entire way of moving through the world around staying alert, staying useful, staying on. I was reflexively disembodied, constantly juggling everything thrown at me. I got so good at letting my body run on autopilot that I would have these huge gaps in my life where I lacked recall."
Building a System That Sustains Instead of Extracts
When asked about solutions, Dickenson was clear: "We need to build more human-centered systems alongside the existing ones—systems that prioritize sustainability over extraction. That can look like cooperative support models, healthier workplace cultures, redistributed labor within households, and community structures that allow women to rest without guilt."
She left the final thought hanging with precision: "The current system rewards depletion. The system I'm describing would allow women to operate from support and alignment—instead of chronic survival."
