Burnout is rarely a time-management problem. It’s usually an identity problem.
In professions built around responsibility for others, over-functioning becomes normalized. The most capable become the most relied upon. The most committed become the most depleted. Educators. Clinicians. Therapists. School leaders. Healthcare executives.
Many high-responsibility professionals aren’t simply overworked. They are organized around being the steady one, the strong one, the one who does not drop the ball. Settings may differ: classrooms, hospitals, nonprofits, executive teams. The pattern is consistent. Urgency is rewarded. Self-sacrifice is praised. Exhaustion becomes invisible.
Dr. Rebecca Hubbard is a licensed clinical psychologist and TEDx speaker who helps high-responsibility professionals examine the deeper drivers of burnout and build sustainable ways of working. Her work integrates psychological science, performance research, and over a decade of clinical practice. She brings both data and lived insight into what happens when competence fuses with identity and responsibility stops having edges.
These sessions are clear, rigorous, and practical. Participants leave with language to describe what they have been experiencing and tools they can use immediately without adding more to their workload.
Who This Work Is For
This work resonates most in environments where the stakes are human:
If your role requires holding complexity, absorbing stress, and continuing to function, this work will feel familiar.
Available as keynotes, conference breakouts, leadership retreats, and interactive workshops.
Sessions can stand alone or build on one another to address burnout at three levels: identity, culture, and daily practice.

High-achieving professionals often internalize a simple equation: effort equals worth. For many high-responsibility professionals, burnout is not just about workload. It is
about who they believe they must be.
In caregiving and leadership cultures, urgency becomes proof of commitment. Rest begins to feel suspect. Over time, productivity shifts from strategy to identity.
This session examines how those patterns form and how they are reinforced by workplace systems. It clarifies the psychological cost of chronic urgency and challenges the belief that depletion is the price of excellence.
Participants will:
● Identify identity patterns that increase burnout risk
● Understand how chronic stress impacts regulation and decision-making
● Reframe boundaries as strategic, not selfish
● Define performance in ways that are sustainable over time
Especially resonant for educators, healthcare professionals, and leaders responsible for both outcomes and people

Most professionals do not need more information about self-care. They need implementation that matches reality.
This session introduces micro self-care, brief regulation practices embedded directly
into the workday.
Not aspirational. Operational.
Participants learn how to integrate nervous system regulation into transitions, documentation, meetings, sessions, planning blocks, and high-stakes conversations. The focus is not on adding time, but on shifting how existing time is used.
Participants will:
● Practice short, evidence-informed regulation techniques
● Identify implementation barriers such as productivity pressure and all-or-nothing thinking
● Understand how small repetitions reshape stress patterns
● Create a personalized integration plan grounded in their specific environment
This session is particularly impactful in schools and healthcare settings where stepping away is rarely an option.

For many high-responsibility professionals, burnout is not just about workload. It is about who they believe they must be.
Early messages about excellence, resilience, and responsibility create powerful identities. Those identities drive success. They can also eliminate margin.
This session explores how achievement becomes fused with self-concept and why expanding identity beyond productivity is essential for sustainable leadership.
Participants will:
● Examine the origins of their high-achiever or over-responsible identity
● Recognize patterns of over-functioning that no longer serve them
● Reframe limits and vulnerability as markers of maturity
● Articulate a definition of excellence that allows for humanity
Resonant in healthcare systems, educational institutions, women’s leadership spaces, DEI initiatives, and executive retreats

Dr. Hubbard’s work is informed by research on burnout, stress physiology, decision fatigue, and resilience. At the same time, it is shaped by years of direct clinical work with physicians, educators, executives, graduate students, and high-achieving professionals navigating complex personal and cultural pressures. She believes rigorous science and lived experience are not in opposition. Personal narratives are data. Workplace realities matter. Culture shapes coping. Her sessions bridge research and real life — offering frameworks that are both theoretically sound and practically usable.
I combine evidence-based strategies with lived experience to help individuals and teams step out of overdrive. Together, we explore the patterns that drive chronic stress, uncover practical ways to operate sustainably, and create systems that support long-term well-being and high-impact performance.