When “I’ve got it” is really “I don’t feel safe.”
If you’re the one who always holds it together – the organiser, the fixer, the reliable one – I see you.
Over-functioning (or overfunctioning) often looks like competence on the outside… and chronic pressure on the inside. You might be praised for “handling everything”, while privately feeling exhausted, resentful, or anxious that if you drop the ball, everything will fall apart.
Consider this reframe: over-functioning is often a nervous system strategy – not a personality flaw.
Over-functioning and people-pleasing: what it can look like
This isn’t just productivity; it’s the emotional load of feeling responsible for everyone and everything.
- “It’s easier if I just do it.”
- “If I don’t stay on top of it, something will go wrong.”
- “Rest can wait, once it’s all done.” (It’s never all done.)
- “If I’m not useful, I’m not worthy.”
It often overlaps with people-pleasing, perfectionism, over-explaining, difficulty delegating, and carrying more than your share – at work, at home, and in relationships.
Perfectionism as a protective strategy
For many people, perfectionism isn’t about high standards; it’s about safety:
“If I do it perfectly, I’ll be safe / accepted / not criticised.”
This can come from criticism or high expectations, unpredictability or chaos, shame experiences, or early learning that linked love and approval to performance. (Sometimes it also overlaps with the “fawn” response: keeping the peace by over-adapting.)
The cost: stress, burnout, and high-functioning anxiety
Over-functioning works… until it doesn’t.
Common costs include:
- chronic stress and burnout risk
- feeling “wired but tired” and unable to switch off
- resentment or loneliness (because you’re capable, but not supported)
- disconnection from your needs
- worth becoming tied to doing
Many high achievers describe this as high-functioning anxiety, coping on the outside, spiralling on the inside.
Two tools to try this week
1) The “safe enough” test
Ask: What’s the smallest version of this task that meets the brief?
Not the version that proves your worth, the one that meets the requirements.
2) Time-boxing
Set a timer. Work until it ends. Stop when it’s done.
Not when it feels perfect.
These are small nervous system experiments: I can stop, and I’ll still be okay.
A trauma-informed way forward
This isn’t about forcing yourself to “just relax”. It’s about understanding the fear underneath the pattern and supporting your system back towards safety.
A gentle prompt:
“If I don’t do this perfectly, what am I afraid will happen?”
And the reminder your nervous system may not fully trust yet:
You don’t have to earn your worth. You already have it.
If over-functioning, people-pleasing, perfectionism or burnout are costing you, you don’t have to untangle it alone. At Centre Self Collective, we offer trauma-informed therapy (including EMDR therapy or EMDR immersives when appropriate) to help shift the pattern with care, not pressure.
If you’re ready, reach out and book a free 15 min enquiry call with Hannah our friendly Admin and Client Support officer who can answer questions you may have, and get you book in for a session (Daylesford, Brunswick, or telehealth).