Sunday night dread isn’t proof you’re not committed. It’s your nervous system preparing you for overwhelm, judgment, and self-doubt; and with the right tools, you can retrain it.
Do you ever feel that pit in your stomach on Sunday nights? You’ve spent the weekend with family, maybe caught up on errands, maybe even tried to rest. But as the sun sets, your chest tightens and your brain starts whispering: “I should’ve billed more. I should’ve drafted more. I should’ve gotten ahead.”
Most lawyers explain this away as lack of commitment or discipline. “If I’d worked harder, I wouldn’t feel this way.” But Sunday night dread isn’t about not doing enough. It’s your nervous system anticipating the overwhelm, the fear of letting people down, the perfectionism, and the self-doubt you expect to face on Monday. Psychologists call this anticipatory anxiety.
In this episode of The Lawyer Burnout Solution, I’ll unpack why Sunday night dread shows up even if you technically rested all weekend, the beliefs fueling the guilt and panic, and a few simple ways to calm your body so you can reclaim your Sunday evenings.
In this episode you’ll learn:
This isn’t about pushing harder or being more disciplined. It’s about understanding how your body responds to the pressures of legal life, and learning to shift those responses so you can feel grounded, clear, and in control.
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Full Show Notes, Episode Transcript, Plus More Resources for Women in Law: