Start Over · The Workbook
This Is Not
Self-Help
I wrote most of this workbook before I understood what grief actually requires.
I wrote it thinking I knew about exhaustion, about starting over, about the weight women carry when life stops making sense. I thought I was writing from experience.
Then my husband died suddenly on January 20, 2026. And I realized — I had written about starting over without ever having lost the ground beneath my feet.
In the weeks that followed, I came back to these pages. Not to transform. Not to heal. Not to become anything. Just to survive the next hour, and then the next day, and then the next week.
What I found was that the structure worked — not because it was wise, but because it was honest. It didn't ask me to feel better. It asked me to look clearly at what was true.
That's what this workbook does. It doesn't promise clarity at the end. It gives you a structure for looking honestly at where you are — so that whatever comes next, you're choosing it with open eyes.
I'm still using these pages. I don't know what I'm rebuilding yet. But I know that the act of writing honestly — of naming what's real instead of what's manageable — is the only thing that has ever helped me.
If you're here because your life fell apart: I'm sorry. And I'm with you.
What This Workbook Is
Five modules. A starting assessment. A 30-day implementation plan.
Each module asks you to write about something hard — and then gives you a framework for making sense of what you wrote. Not to manufacture insight, but to help you see what's already there.
Module 1: Name what you're actually feeling — not what you "should" feel
Module 2: Identify what you're carrying that was never yours
Module 3: Set one boundary without apologizing for it
Module 4: Get clear on what actually matters — and let the rest go
Module 5: Begin again, quietly and on your own terms
Start with the assessment — it takes about 10 minutes and helps you understand where you are before you begin. Or skip straight to Module 1. There's no wrong way to use these pages.
You don't have to do them in order. You don't have to finish. You don't have to share them with anyone. Just write what's true.
Just honest ones.
— Dani Tesolin · São Paulo, Brazil
Before You Begin
Where Are
You Now?
Before you begin the modules, take 10 minutes to place yourself honestly. There are no good or bad answers — only accurate and inaccurate ones.
Choose the option that's most true right now, even if you wish it weren't.
Module 1 of 5
Naming the
Exhaustion
You're not lazy. You're not weak. You're overloaded.
There's a difference between choosing rest and being forced to stop. Survival mode is not a personal failure — it's a nervous system response to carrying more than one person should carry alone.
Before you can start over, you need to know what you're actually starting over from. Not the story you tell other people. The real one.
This module asks you to name it — specifically, honestly, without softening the edges.
What does this heaviness feel like in your body?
How long have you been carrying this?
What would it feel like if this weight were gone tomorrow?
When does this thought usually arrive — morning, night, quiet moments?
What are you hoping to figure out when you think about it?
What would you stop doing if this thought weren't there?
Who benefits from this invisible work?
Have you ever been thanked for it? Does that matter to you?
If you stopped doing it — what would actually happen?
Place each source of exhaustion in the right quadrant. This helps you see what you can actually change — and what you need to stop spending energy resisting.
doesn't mean you should.
Module 2 of 5
What You're
Carrying
Emotional labor. Mental load. The invisible work of holding it all together.
No one sees it. But you feel it every single day. This module isn't about complaining. It's about accountability — understanding exactly what you've taken on, and asking honestly whether it belongs to you.
Which of these have you been carrying the longest?
Which ones do others know you carry? Which are completely invisible?
Which ones arrived gradually, so slowly you didn't notice the weight accumulating?
Who gave you each item on your list — did you take it, was it handed to you, or did it just accumulate?
If you gave one of these back today — what would actually happen?
Who benefits from you carrying what isn't yours?
When did you first take this on?
What would you lose if you stopped carrying it?
What would you gain?
Go back to your list. Sort each item into one of these three categories. Be honest.
doesn't make you strong.
It makes you tired.
Module 3 of 5
Boundaries
Without Guilt
A boundary isn't a wall. It's not rejection.
It's the honest line between where you end and where someone else begins. You don't need to defend it. You don't need permission to draw it. But you do need to know where it is — because you can't enforce what you haven't named.
How long have you known this needed to change?
What have you been waiting for — permission, timing, the right moment?
What's the smallest version of this change you could actually make?
What are you doing that someone else could actually do?
What are you doing that simply doesn't need to be done?
If you paused this for two weeks — what would actually happen?
What would you stop doing?
What would you start doing?
Who would notice — and would their reaction change what you do?
For each boundary you're considering, work through this. The guilt usually lives in the gap between column 2 and column 3.
You don't owe anyone an explanation
for protecting yourself.
Module 4 of 5
Reclaiming
Clarity
You don't need more motivation. You need to know what actually matters.
Clarity doesn't come from adding more goals, more systems, more versions of yourself. It comes from removing what doesn't serve you until what's left is real. Doing less isn't failure. It's focus.
If you had 50% less time and energy — what would survive the cut?
What are you doing that you'd stop if no one was watching?
What would you protect if you had to give everything else up?
What are you doing out of habit, not intention?
What are you maintaining for appearances — yours or someone else's?
What would you stop doing if you gave yourself permission?
What would you stop doing if you believed you'd already done enough?
What standard are you holding yourself to — and whose is it?
What would it feel like to end the day and call it complete?
Take everything currently on your plate — commitments, projects, relationships, obligations — and place them here. Then ask: does this serve where I'm actually going?
to be doing enough.
Module 5 of 5
A Gentle
Reset
Starting over doesn't have to be loud.
It doesn't require a grand announcement, a complete reinvention, or burning everything to the ground. Sometimes the most powerful beginning is the one no one else sees. The small shift. The quiet decision to stop pretending you're fine and start doing one honest thing differently.
Why have I kept doing this until now?
Who will notice? Does their reaction change my decision?
What does stopping this free up — time, energy, self-respect?
When did I last protect this consistently?
What would I need to say no to in order to protect it?
What does protecting this tell me about what I actually value?
Why have I been doing it the old way?
Who does the old way serve — me, or someone else's expectation?
What would the new way feel like in practice?
What would my day look like one month from now if this reset is working?
What would I feel that I don't feel now?
What would I have stopped doing that I'm still doing today?
Look back at all five module checkpoints. What pattern do you see?
You just need to come back to yourself.
Implementation
30-Day
Quiet Reset
You've named what's true. Now the work is making it real — not all at once, not perfectly, but consistently.
This plan gives you one focus per week for 30 days. Each week builds on what you discovered in the modules. Each day has a simple check-in — not a task list, just one question to orient yourself.
This is not a productivity plan. It's a structure for staying honest with yourself when daily life starts pulling you back into old patterns. Use it as a compass, not a schedule.
This week is about honoring what you found in Modules 1 & 2 — without rushing past it.
Morning: What am I actually feeling right now?
Evening: What did I pretend today — and what did that cost me?
Weekly review: Where did I carry something that wasn't mine this week?
This week is about Module 3 — making the boundary you identified real, not theoretical.
Morning: What am I saying yes to today that I don't actually want to?
Evening: Where did I hold my boundary — and where did I give it up?
Weekly review: What did setting this boundary actually cost me? Was the cost what I feared?
This week is about Module 4 — living by the clarity you found, not just writing about it.
Morning: What matters today — and what am I protecting it from?
Evening: Did I protect what matters? If not — what got in the way?
Weekly review: What would it look like if this protection became permanent?
This week is about Module 5 — not the finish line, but the actual beginning.
Morning: What am I doing differently today than the version of me from last month?
Evening: Was today more honest than yesterday? In what way?
Weekly review: What does starting over actually feel like — different than I expected?
Day 30.
Come back to your Module 5 Final Checkpoint. Read what you wrote. Ask yourself: Is this still true? What's different? What do I want to carry into the next month?
That's the only metric that matters.