Resilience at Work
- Sonia Brown MBE

- 12 hours ago
- 6 min read

Have You Ever Felt “Fine”… But Quietly Exhausted?
You are showing up. Delivering. Leading but something feels off.
Not burnout in the dramatic sense just a constant, low-level pressure that never quite switches off. Those are micro stressors and they matter.
Research from American Psychological Association shows that chronic, low-level stress does not simply sit in the background. It accumulates. Over time, it begins to affect cognitive performance, decision-making, memory and long-term physical health.
When you place that within the lived experience of Black and ethnically diverse women, the picture becomes more complex and more concerning.
UK-based insights from Mental Health Foundation highlight that Black women are significantly more likely to experience sustained workplace stress, often driven not by one major incident, but by ongoing pressure, bias and under-recognition.
This is reinforced by data from Office for National Statistics, which continues to show persistent gender and ethnicity pay gaps, meaning many Black women are expected to deliver at a high level while being financially undervalued.
At the same time, labour market trends in both the UK and the United States point to disproportionate impact during periods of economic tightening. Reports from McKinsey & Company and LeanIn.Org indicate that women of colour are more likely to be in roles with less protection, fewer sponsors and higher exposure to redundancy during restructuring cycles.
In the US, similar patterns have been observed, where Black women are overrepresented in roles vulnerable to layoffs and underrepresented in senior decision-making positions where job security is often stronger.
Layered on top of this is the daily reality of microaggressions.
Research from Catalyst shows that women of colour are far more likely to experience “micro stressors” at work, being interrupted, overlooked, having their judgement questioned or needing to constantly adjust how they show up. These are often dismissed individually, but collectively they create a constant cognitive and emotional load.
This is where burnout becomes less about workload and more about context.
When you combine under-recognition, pay inequity, job insecurity and repeated microaggressions, the result is not just stress. It is sustained pressure without adequate recovery. That is what makes this conversation critical.
Not because stress exists but because for many women, it is structural, cumulative and still too often invisible.
Scholars such as Dr Thema Bryant emphasise that unprocessed stress does not disappear. It shows up in the body, in behaviour and in burnout.
Stop. This Is Not Just “Part of the Job.”
Have you ever normalised what is actually wearing you down?
It rarely shows up as one big moment. More often, it is subtle. The interruption in meetings that you brush off. The extra emotional labour you carry to keep things smooth. The constant need to read the room before you speak, to assess tone, reaction and consequence before your voice is even heard.
Individually, these moments can seem small. Easy to dismiss. But over time, they accumulate. They shape how you show up, how much energy you expend and how much of yourself you hold back just to navigate the space effectively.
That is why so much generic wellbeing advice falls short. It speaks to stress in isolation, but not to the context in which that stress is experienced. For many women, particularly those navigating layered expectations and bias, it is not just the workload that drains you. It is everything that comes with it.
What Actually Works?
Let’s bring this back to you, as a senior professional or business owner who is expected to perform, decide and deliver… consistently.
You do not need generic wellbeing advice. You need strategies that protect your thinking, your energy and your leadership capacity in real time.
Start With How You Manage Cognitive Load
In high-responsibility roles, your value is not just in what you do, but in how clearly you think. Research from Harvard Business Review shows that even short, intentional pauses improve decision quality and reduce mental fatigue.
This is not about stepping away for long periods. It is about creating deliberate moments between high-demand tasks where your mind can reset. Not scrolling. Not switching between emails. A real pause. Even five minutes of stillness or structured reflection can sharpen how you lead your next decision.
Then There Is Boundary Framing
At your level, the issue is rarely saying no. It is how you say it without damaging influence or relationships. Research from University College London highlights that clearly communicated boundaries reduce stress and improve workplace dynamics. This is not withdrawal. It is leadership clarity. Being explicit about expectations, timelines and capacity allows you to operate with authority rather than react under pressure.
Then there is the one most high-performing women underestimate until they experience it properly. The quality of their network. Not visibility. Not popularity. The right circle.
Evidence consistently shows that peer support reduces stress responses and strengthens resilience, but this only works when the environment is aligned. You need spaces where you are not translating your experience, not filtering your reality, not over-explaining your position before you can even begin. Spaces where the conversation starts with understanding, not justification.
At this stage in your career, resilience is not about pushing through more it is about protecting how you operate.
Have You Ever Had the Right Support… and Felt the Difference Immediately?
One NBWN member shared this after joining a support circle:
“I did not realise how much I was holding until I was in a space where I did not have to hold it alone. Within weeks, I was thinking more clearly, sleeping better and showing up differently at work.”
That is not coincidence that is environment.
NBWN has been building these environments for over two decades through SistaTalk and structured wellbeing sessions. These are not passive groups. They are intentional spaces where peer accountability, shared insight and real conversations take place.
Here is what often follows:
Clearer thinking.
Stronger decision-making.
Better positioning at work.
Access to mentors, job leads and opportunities through trusted relationships.
As we know, wellbeing and career progression are not separate they are connected.
Stop Pushing Through. Start Positioning Differently.
Have you ever believed that resilience meant taking on more, absorbing more and proving you can handle what others cannot?
For many high-performing women, that belief has been quietly rewarded for years. Until it is not. Until the cost shows up in your clarity, your energy and your ability to lead at the level you know you are capable of.
So the question shifts.
What if resilience is not about endurance …but about discernment? About knowing what to carry, what to challenge and what no longer deserves your energy.
This is where the real work begins.
Start by identifying one micro stressor you have normalised. Not the obvious pressure, but the subtle, repeated drain that is quietly shaping how you show up. Then decide what boundary needs to sit around it. Not a reaction, but a deliberate standard that protects your time, your focus and your authority.
Just as importantly, consider where you are processing all of this. Doing this work in isolation will slow you down. The right environment, where your experience is understood without explanation, does not just support you. It sharpens you.
That is how change begins. Not with more effort but with better decisions.
For Women Ready to Move Beyond Survival
If you are a senior professional woman or business owner over 40, you already know the cost of carrying stress without support.
What you may not have had is access to the right kind of support.
NBWN speaks directly to this reality. Through our mentoring-led network, you gain:
Clarity in high-pressure environments
Peer support from women navigating similar challenges
Practical wellbeing strategies grounded in real experience
Access to leadership conversations, opportunities and growth pathways
This is about more than awareness it is about building resilience that protects your wellbeing and advances your career.
If you are ready to strengthen your mental wellbeing, improve your decision-making and operate at a higher level without burning out, contact NBWN and step into a space designed for exactly that.
If this made you stop and think, do not keep it to yourself. Like, comment and share it with another woman who is carrying more than she should alone because resilience should not mean silence.




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