Why So Many Women Mistake Grief for Anxiety, Depression, or Burnout
Many women arrive in midlife feeling anxious, exhausted, disconnected, or lost. They may describe feeling overwhelmed by life, frustrated in their relationships, or uncertain about their future. Some wonder if they are experiencing depression. Others assume it is stress, burnout, menopause, or even a midlife crisis.
What many do not realize is that they may be experiencing grief.
Not the kind of grief we typically recognize after the death of a loved one, but a quieter, less visible grief that emerges during one of life’s most significant transitions. It is grief that often goes unnamed because there is no single event to point to and no clear beginning or ending. Instead, it quietly settles into the spaces created by changing relationships, shifting identities, aging, loss, and unmet expectations.
For many women, midlife is the first time life becomes quiet enough to hear it.
When Life Slows Down
During the busy years of raising children, building careers, supporting partners, and caring for others, there is often little time to pause and reflect. Life moves quickly. Responsibilities are constant. There is always someone who needs something.
Then one day, things begin to change. Children grow up and leave home, careers shift or slow down, retirement approaches, you or your spouse retires. Parents age and require more support and relationships evolve. The routines that once defined daily life begin to look different.
It is often during this season that women find themselves taking stock of their lives. Am I where I thought I would be? Is this the life I imagined? Who am I now?
These questions can uncover a profound sense of grief. Not because life has necessarily been bad, but because it has not unfolded exactly as expected.
“Many women are not experiencing a midlife crisis. They are experiencing a midlife reckoning with loss, change, and unmet expectations.”
The Losses We Rarely Talk About
When we think about grief, we often think about death. Yet many of the losses women experience during midlife are less visible and therefore less acknowledged.
Relationships are often at the heart of this grief. Many women find themselves feeling disconnected from their partners after years of focusing on careers, children, and responsibilities. The intimacy they once shared may feel distant. The friendship, companionship, emotional safety, and shared dreams they expected to enjoy in this stage of life may feel out of reach.
Others are navigating divorce or the death of loved ones. Friendships change as lives move in different directions. Children become more independent and begin building lives of their own. Aging parents may require care and support while simultaneously reminding women of their own mortality.
Alongside these relational losses are quieter losses. Opportunities not taken. Dreams postponed. Adventures never pursued. Years spent caring for everyone else while neglecting personal needs and desires. Many women begin to realize how much of themselves they set aside in service of others.
There is grief in that recognition.
When Grief Looks Like Anxiety or Burnout
One of the reasons hidden grief is so difficult to recognize is that it rarely looks like grief. Instead, it often appears as exhaustion, anxiety, irritability, numbness, or withdrawal.
Women may find themselves saying things like, “I don’t know who I am anymore,” or “Nothing really matters to me right now.” Others describe feeling detached from their lives, going through the motions without feeling connected to what they are doing. Some become increasingly withdrawn, losing interest in relationships, hobbies, or activities they once enjoyed.
There can be a quiet resignation that settles in. “It is what it is” or “This is just my life now.”
Physical symptoms are common as well. Chronic fatigue, poor sleep, difficulty concentrating, brain fog, and a general sense of depletion often accompany emotional grief. What may appear on the surface as depression or burnout is sometimes grief asking to be acknowledged.
“A woman may not be grieving a person. She may be grieving a dream, a relationship, a life stage, or a version of herself.”
Menopause and the Emotional Weight of Midlife
Hormonal changes can further complicate the picture.
As estrogen and progesterone levels fluctuate and decline, many women experience increased anxiety, irritability, sadness, and emotional sensitivity. Sleep disturbances become more common, and chronic fatigue can leave women feeling less resilient in the face of life’s challenges.
Because these symptoms often occur at the same time as major life transitions, it can be difficult to separate hormonal changes from emotional grief. The reality is that both may be happening simultaneously.
A woman may be navigating menopause while also grieving an empty nest, a changing marriage, an aging parent, a chronic health condition, or the realization that certain dreams may never come to pass. The emotional burden can feel overwhelming.
When Grief Becomes Hopelessness
One of the most painful aspects of hidden grief is that it can begin to change how women view their future. As losses accumulate, many women start to believe that it is too late for change. They may feel that the best years are behind them or that there is little left to look forward to. This is where grief can quietly transform into hopelessness.
Women withdraw from relationships. Self care feels pointless. New opportunities are dismissed before they are explored. Possibility begins to shrink. Yet what I often see in counselling is that these beliefs are not reflections of reality. They are reflections of grief. When grief remains unacknowledged, it can convince us that our story is over when in fact we are standing at the beginning of a new chapter.
Finding Meaning Beyond What Was Lost
Healing from hidden grief does not mean pretending losses never happened. It does not mean forcing positivity, or ignoring disappointment. It begins by acknowledging what has been lost and making space for the emotions that accompany it.
Acceptance is often an important part of the process. Not resignation, but acceptance. An honest recognition of what cannot be changed and a willingness to stop fighting reality.
From there, women can begin reconnecting with their values and asking meaningful questions.
What matters to me now? What kind of life do I want to create moving forward? What brings me joy, meaning, connection, and purpose?
For many women, this may be the first time they have consciously explored these questions. After years of focusing on everyone else’s needs, they finally have the opportunity to discover what matters most to them.
“Perhaps the purpose of midlife is not to become someone new, but to return to who you have been all along.”
You Do Not Have to Walk Through It Alone
If you recognize yourself in these words, know that there is nothing wrong with you.
You are not weak or failing. You are not broken, you may simply be grieving.
The losses of midlife are real, even when they are invisible to others. Acknowledging them is not a sign of weakness. It is an act of courage. The good news is that grief does not have to be faced alone. Sometimes healing begins with allowing someone to walk beside you. Someone who can help you name what you are carrying, make sense of your experience, and remind you of your resilience when you have forgotten it yourself.
You are more capable and resilient than you may realize.
This season of life is not over. There is still meaning to discover, connection to cultivate, and joy to experience. Perhaps this chapter is not about mourning what could have been. Perhaps it is about embracing what still can be.
