Janine Sinnott Janine Sinnott

I Don't Know What I Like Anymore: On Quietly Losing Yourself

Someone asks you what you'd like to do on Saturday and your mind goes blank.

Not because you're tired, although you are. Not because there's nothing to do. But because the question — what do you want? — has stopped having an answer. You know what the kids want. You know what your partner would probably enjoy. You know what your mum is hoping you'll say. You know what would be "good for you" in a vague, self-improvement sense. But what you want, separate from any of that? The line's gone dead.

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Janine Sinnott Janine Sinnott

Be Perfect, Please Others: The Quiet Anxiety of High-Functioning Women

You don't look anxious. That's part of the problem.

You hit your deadlines. You remember birthdays. You answer the WhatsApp. You make the appointment for your mum, finish the report on time, and still manage to put a meal on the table that isn't beige. Colleagues describe you as "on top of it." Friends ring you when things go wrong. Nobody, including you, would put you in a clinical box.

And yet. There's the 3am wake-up where your brain rehearses tomorrow's meeting. The tight chest before a difficult email. The way a single piece of mild criticism can shadow your whole week. The exhaustion that doesn't really lift on the weekend, because the weekend has its own list.

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Janine Sinnott Janine Sinnott

When We Minimise What We’ve Been Through (And Why Your Pain Still Counts)

There are so many ways we learn to say “it’s fine” when it isn’t.

We brush things off. We make jokes. We tell ourselves others have it worse. We keep going, stay busy, stay productive, stay together. From the outside, it can look like resilience. From the inside, it often feels like holding your breath. Or the age old metaphor of a swan, looking composed but frantically paddling beneath the surface.

If you recognise yourself here, I want to say this first: there is nothing wrong with you for minimising your pain.

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