Here you’ll find thoughtful, compassionate posts designed to support your mental and emotional well-being. Whether you're navigating anxiety, healing from trauma, working through relationship challenges, or simply exploring personal growth, these articles offer insight, reflection, and practical tools you can use in daily life.
This blog is for anyone who wants to better understand themselves, feel more grounded, and live with greater intention. Some posts share helpful strategies from therapy, others explore common human experiences like burnout, grief, or self-doubt. All are written with care and without judgment.
Feel free to read what resonates, share with others, or bring topics into your own therapy sessions. You don’t have to have it all figured out to start somewhere.
April 2, 2026
Written By: Rachel Cooper, MS, LPC Associate
Supervised by Amber Quaranta Leech, PHD, LPC-S
| About the Author Rachel is a Licensed Professional Counselor Associate who works with high-achieving adults struggling with anxiety, perfectionism, and overthinking. Read more about her background and approach to therapy here. |
For: Shifting Perceptions - Blog by Amority Health

You reached the milestone.
The degree, the promotion, the business launch, the finish line you’ve been moving toward for years.
And yet, what follows isn’t always relief or fulfillment.
Sometimes it’s quiet.
Sometimes it’s disorienting.
Sometimes it feels like loss.
If this resonates, you’re not alone and you’re not ungrateful. You may be experiencing something we rarely name:
Achievement grief or post-achievement depression: the emotional and identity disruption that can happen after reaching a major goal.
Achievement grief isn’t a formal diagnosis. It’s a way of describing a very real psychological experience:
This is especially common among high achievers who are used to living with:
For many, achievement isn’t just something you do, it becomes part of who you are.
So, when the goal is complete, something deeper shifts.
When your identity was built around the pursuit
High achievers often organize their lives around goals; academically, professionally, or personally.
When the goal ends, it can feel like:
Research on identity formation suggests that roles and long-term goals play a central part in how we define ourselves (Erikson, 1968).
When your brain is no longer in “future mode”
Goal pursuit is neurologically rewarding. Anticipation and progress activate dopamine systems tied to motivation and reward (Berridge & Kringelbach, 2015).
When the goal is achieved:
This can feel like emotional flatness, not because the achievement didn’t matter, but because your system is recalibrating.
When you outgrow the version of yourself who was striving
Even positive change can involve loss (Bridges, 2004).
In this case, you may be letting go of:
Think of your goal as a scaffold around a building.
For a long time, the scaffold gives structure, direction, and support. It tells you where to go and how to grow.
But once the building is complete, the scaffold is removed.
Even if the structure is stronger than ever, the sudden openness can feel unfamiliar, almost unsettling.
Achievement grief lives in that space:
when the support system disappears, and you’re left standing in what you’ve built.
In therapy, this often sounds like:
Because high achievers are so accustomed to forward movement, stillness can feel like failure, even when it’s not.
Reframe for “I should feel happy”
A common thought pattern is:
“I should feel happy now.”
Try shifting it to:
“I’m adjusting to a new phase of my life.”
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) emphasizes examining and restructuring unhelpful thoughts (Beck, 2011). The goal isn’t forced positivity; it’s a more accurate and compassionate perspective.
A small step to finding your footing again
Instead of solving everything at once, try this:
Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) highlights small exceptions and incremental change as meaningful starting points (de Shazer et al., 2007).
You don’t need a complete life redesign right now.
You need a starting point that feels manageable and real.
While uncomfortable, achievement grief can open important doors:
reconnection with personal values
This experience can be a transition, not just a loss.
It’s important to notice when additional support may help:
These experiences can overlap with depression, anxiety, or burnout, and deserve thoughtful care.
One of the most common pressures high achievers feel is:
“What’s next?”
But growth doesn’t always look like immediate reinvention.
Sometimes it looks like:
You are allowed to be in-between identities.
Achievement grief doesn’t mean your success was meaningless.
It means your life is shifting in a way that deserves attention and care.
Winning doesn’t end your story.
It simply removes the script you were following.
If this resonated with you, you’re not alone, and you don’t have to navigate it without support.
This post is part of the Shifting Perceptions series, where we explore the nuanced emotional experiences of high achievers beyond surface-level narratives.
Feel free to explore other posts on perfectionism, imposter syndrome, burnout, and life transitions.
If you’re considering therapy, this can be a space where your experiences are understood with depth, clarity, and intention.
Navigating uncertainty can bring up anxiety, perfectionism, and self-doubt and it's okay to accept help. If you’re a high-achieving adult in Austin (or anywhere in Texas) and ready, I look forward to helping you explore practical strategies, reframe unhelpful thoughts, and build emotional resilience. Reach out today to start your journey toward clarity and self-compassion, and explore if online therapy with Rachel Cooper at Amority Health could be the right fit.
| About the Author Rachel is a Licensed Professional Counselor Associate who works with high-achieving adults struggling with anxiety, perfectionism, and overthinking. Read more about her background and approach to therapy here. |
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Welcome to Explore More
If this article resonated with you, explore other articles in our Shifting Perceptions series. Topics include overcoming burnout, managing anxiety, and finding work-life balance, all designed to help you build resilience and create long-term change.
Shifting Perceptions Blog Suggestions:
Each post offers insights and practical tools to help high-achieving adults navigate challenges with clarity, balance, and self-compassion.
Written by Rachel Cooper, a psychotherapist specializing in anxiety, overthinking, burnout, imposter syndrome, perfectionism, and life transitions. Learn more about therapy for high achievers at Amority Health.
References
Beck, J. S. (2011). Cognitive behavior therapy: Basics and beyond (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.
Berridge, K. C., & Kringelbach, M. L. (2015). Pleasure systems in the brain. Neuron, 86(3), 646–664. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2015.02.018
Bridges, W. (2004). Transitions: Making sense of life’s changes (2nd ed.). Da Capo Press.
de Shazer, S., Dolan, Y., Korman, H., Trepper, T., McCollum, E., & Berg, I. K. (2007). More than miracles: The state of the art of solution-focused brief therapy. Routledge.
Erikson, E. H. (1968). Identity: Youth and crisis. Norton.
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Disclaimer
This blog is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute mental health treatment, diagnosis, or a therapeutic relationship. Reading this content does not replace professional psychological care or counseling.
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