SEASON 2: EPISODE 11
Episode Feedback
How to keep it together when everything feels like it’s falling apart.
EPISODE SUMMARY
A mental health crisis doesn’t always manifest like a car crash. Sometimes, it appears as a slow unraveling caused by exhaustion, disconnection or a quiet, nagging sense that something isn’t right.
In this deeply personal episode of Merging Into Life, host Sabrina Pierotti opens up about her own recent health scare. She is joined by psychologist Vassia Sarantopoulou, founder of AntiLoneliness, to discuss how we can build lasting emotional resilience even when life doesn’t go according to plan.
From recognizing the subtle signs of emotional burnout to understanding the benefits of therapy, this episode offers powerful insights on how to sit with uncomfortable emotions. Tune in to learn how to move through a crisis — rather than just surviving it.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Burnout symptoms can sneak up on you. Detachment, exhaustion, brain fog and a loss of joy are major warning signs. Don’t wait for a total breakdown to start your healing journey.
- Your feelings aren’t “bad” — they are data. Sadness, anger and loneliness are not problems to fix; they are signals asking for care rather than suppression.
- The benefits of therapy are vast, but it isn’t one-size-fits-all. If your first therapist isn’t a match, keep looking. Finding the right fit can change your entire recovery process.
- Dealing with loneliness isn’t just about being physically alone; you can feel isolated in a crowded room. True connection starts with knowing yourself and reaching out from that grounded place.
- Self-connection is just as vital as social connection. True healing requires a balance of both: time alone to reflect and time with others to feel seen, supported and understood.
- In a mental health crisis, don’t wait to feel “ready” for self-care. Your brain may resist rest, movement or joy, but these habits are the foundation of emotional resilience during hard times.
- Emotional resilience isn’t a fixed trait, it’s a practice. By accepting discomfort, checking in with yourself and giving your emotions space, you build the strength to rise again.
TRANSCRIPT
[00:00:02] Sabrina Pierotti: The thing about life is that it’s hard and it can be very scary at times. Things can either pop up out of nowhere that can totally derail your life, or it can be an accumulation of unprocessed emotions that can lead to a breaking point. I know for me personally, last year I went through a breast cancer scare where I literally thought I had breast cancer at 30. It was horrible and it was a months-long process of MRIs and biopsies. And at times it felt like I was never going to come out on the other side. And I don’t mean to quote Kelly Clarkson, but it is true. Through my life’s most challenging moments, I have grown the most. Because of my breast cancer scare, I now know what it means to really, really take care of my health. And I also have a huge why to stay motivated with my health goals and to get into the gym. It is in our darkest days is where resilience is built. Every time you fall, it is easier to get back up. So, my friend, face your life’s challenges with courage and your head held high. Acknowledge that, yeah, it is hard, but at the same time, know that you will become stronger because of it. Welcome back to Merging Into Life. I’m your host, Sabrina Pierotti. And today we’re talking about something that we all go through, but we rarely feel ready for, which is crisis. Whether it’s a job loss, a breakup, or just a slow unraveling of the plan we had for our lives, those curveballs can hit hard and they can be painful. But luckily, our guest today is Vassia. Vassia Sarantopoulou is a psychologist, an educator, and founder of AntiLoneliness. Her work focuses on helping individuals and communities address perfectionism, loneliness, emotional resilience, and burnout. So thank you so much, Vassia, for joining me, and I’m excited to jump in. So today we’re going to talk about something a little tough, which is personal crisis. So specifically starting and speaking to an emotional crisis, whether it’s mental health challenges or psychological challenges or emotional turmoil. What are some of the warning signs that someone might be in an emotional crisis or on their way to one?
[00:02:28] Vassia Sarantopoulou: Warning signs that can be signs of an emotional burnout, you don’t understand, but then one day you wake up and you feel, oh, I don’t like my job anymore. And last year, actually I loved it. But now I feel completely detached from my work and why I’m doing it. Also, the same thing happens with the joy and the meaning you feel in life. One day, suddenly you feel, nothing fulfills me. I am not happy with anything. Like I remember an example of a client that I had, and she came to me because she realized that at the end of the day, she would finish her project, but also her house chores, anything that fits under the umbrella of duty and responsibility, and then she would sit down to play with your children, and she would not feel anything. No connection, no joy. And she came to me in terror, like, oh my God, what is happening? Why I don’t feel any connection with my children anymore, and how I did not see that happening or coming to my life. So that was what her sign, the detachment, the disconnection, the not feeling joy or happiness with what used to give us joy. Another mental symptom can be that fog inside our head. We’re struggling to remember something. We’re struggling to finish a project. We know that we used to finish that in one hour, but why that now does it take five? Another sign can be the physical manifestation. Like you, even though you sleep, you wake up and you’re feeling tired still. And you wonder, but why I had 10 hours sleep and still I don’t feel rested? There are many clients that come with burnout, and they tell me, I think I’m in a burnout the last year. And then when I tell them the symptoms of burnout, they say, Oh, then probably I’m in a burnout for the last five years.
[00:04:32] Sabrina Pierotti: In addition to emotional burden, burnout, what are some of the other common challenges that your clients come to you with?
[00:04:38] Vassia Sarantopoulou: I think we go to therapy for everything that we haven’t learned at school and we should have. Like relationships. We didn’t learn anything about relationships at school. We go in adulthood, we meet our partner, we don’t know how to communicate, any kind of loss, like grief. We never know about grief, we never hear about grief. Only when we reach, I don’t know, an older age, when we start losing our friends or our partner or our parents, then we know of this concept. And in loss, everything loss, I think loss is a big umbrella. We’re talking about any kind of loss, like moving to a new country. Loneliness as well. We lose a friend or we lose a partner. People even felt shame to talk about loneliness.
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[00:05:26] Sabrina Pierotti: Why do you think there is so much shame around therapy?
[00:05:33] Vassia Sarantopoulou: So for my from my perspective, I think the projections and biases we carry from the previous generation. I mean, even now my mom doesn’t know what I’m doing. Every time she’s asking me, are you okay with money? Do you want me to send you some money? Because you’re a psychologist. Okay, mom. The value that we put on therapy is different between the generations and that’s one reason of this shame that we carry.
[00:05:57] Sabrina Pierotti: So what would you say to somebody who’s listening that has been considering therapy for a while and they are just for all the concerns and fears and narratives that you just said, that’s the reason that’s holding them back from signing up for therapy. What would you say to that person?
[00:06:17] Vassia Sarantopoulou: Find a format and the person that suits you. You know, because when you’re 40, 50, 60, you don’t want to go to a therapist who is 25. You know, you feel like even life experience is different. So find somebody who is at your own age. Who they know your own struggles. And connection is more important than mental health per se for you. So choose whatever format or person that chooses that you feel more aligned and suits your style. I think that’s the first tip that I would give to them. But also it takes a little bit of discomfort in the beginning because it’s very new. All these self-perceptions, I’m not strong enough, I’m not strong enough, or I’m taking somebody else’s place. Because I’ve heard that also, you know, you have other people who struggle more. I don’t want to take their slot. All this self-abandonment and sacrifice is very much this pattern of this generation.
[00:07:17] Sabrina Pierotti: So I actually had a therapist for the, she was my very first therapist for the first like six months. And we were just not clicking. Like I knew right away I was not really looking forward to going to therapy to see her. Like there were just signs along the way. And then a therapist like literally like popped into my life that was so exactly what I needed.
[00:07:43] Vassia Sarantopoulou: Just because you had one negative experience or not an aligned experience with a therapist, it doesn’t mean that everybody’s like that or every experience that you will have is like that. There’s so many different styles, different therapeutic approaches, modalities, personalities. Every therapist has their own personality.
[00:08:00] Sabrina Pierotti: Now, say somebody finds that perfect therapist and they’re super happy. When it comes to actually healing, it can take a while. So what does it actually look like when you’re in a therapy session?
[00:08:15] Vassia Sarantopoulou: What we do before we get into therapy is automatically we learn or we tend to escape the discomfort. You’re feeling sad, but you don’t want to feel sad, so immediately you call your friends, you go out and party. We think that these are negative feelings. We name them negative feelings, as if they are the bad and we should have the good. But in reality, they’re not negative or positive, they’re just uncomfortable feelings. And what we don’t know is how to sit with them because we feel scared. What if I sit with my sadness? And then I’m going to feel even more sad. However, the price we pay is that this escaping and pushing out of these feelings comes with loss of energy. Like when you push yourself to be happy while you’re really, really sad, that’s double the energy you need in order to go through your day. How can you be happy when you’re grieving, when you just broke up, when you lost a friend? You’re not happy, but you pretend to be happy. Your whole body is putting a performance, and that performance is costing energy. So how to stay with that discomfort? It means, first of all, taking the negative connotation out of this feeling. It’s not bad. It’s not going to make you worse. So first take out the fear of the feelings. And stop pushing and spending the energy that I can change that feeling. What I also explain to my clients is that your feeling comes from inside you. It’s a part of you. So when you say, I don’t want that feeling, actually, it’s like saying you don’t want a part of you. And we don’t do that. We love every part of you. Every single part of you is loved, worthy of love, worthy of attention, worthy of care. You shout at your partner or whatever you’re doing, well, that’s what we need to change, but not your anger. The anger is fantastic. We love it. What we need to do at that moment is to make sure that we’re not stepping into negative assumptions, self-criticism. Oh, I’m lonely. Maybe because I am a terrible friend. Yeah, I mean, if I was a good friend, maybe I would have friends by now, and probably my loneliness says that I am a very unimportant, boring or terrible person. So then that’s a different thing than the loneliness per se. Loneliness is the feeling that says, hey, we need connection. Thank God we have loneliness that send us this message.
[00:11:12] Sabrina Pierotti: And you’ve referred to a loneliness before as the pandemic of our era. What do you think people often misunderstand about loneliness and why do people feel lonely even when they’re physically surrounded by people?
[00:11:27] Vassia Sarantopoulou: So we have feeling lonely and being alone. One is a feeling, the other one is being. And we sometimes misunderstand these two. So the reality though is that you can be surrounded by people and feel lonely. You can be all by yourself and feel very much connected and not lonely at all. That’s the paradox. So it’s about feeling unseen, feeling disconnected. You can be sitting with your partner on the couch, watching a movie, and normally somebody would say, Oh, they’re so connected. But you might feel very, very deeply disconnected and lonely in there, because there’s something in that connection that doesn’t work or hasn’t been working for a long time. So that’s the main misunderstanding about loneliness.
[00:12:22] Sabrina Pierotti: Why is social connection imperative for personal healing? And how can we push through that reluctance to connect when we’re going through a really dark time?
[00:12:32] Vassia Sarantopoulou: I think when we’re going through a dark time, we both need me time and connection time. We do need to stay by ourselves. We need to figure out who we are. Because actually, the first step of recovering or healing from loneliness is not again connection with others, is connection with ourselves first. First, I have to get to know myself, because there are many people who live for decades without knowing who they are. So, first, I have to get to know myself, introduce to myself again, become my best friend, and then I can go out and water all these relationships that I have in my life, start new, or go back, revisit some of the old relationships. We are social beings. We’re wired for connection. We cannot live without connection. It doesn’t mean that we always need a partner. That’s far away from that, but we need to be seen. So we definitely need to be seen to belong in order to have this healthy perspective of life. But especially in, as you said, the dark places of our life, we need both. We need to go and be by ourselves and then go out, meet our friends and then come back. Kind of do do this dual process of in and out, both.
[00:14:04] Sabrina Pierotti: How can we best prepare ourselves for these big life changes without getting swept away by the emotions of everything?
[00:14:13] Vassia Sarantopoulou: We talked about acceptance. So accepting that it’s not going to be glamorous. It’s not going to be smooth. Maybe we will learn new parts of ourselves in there. We’re going to be challenged. That’s part of the game. That’s not a malicious plan, you know, of the universe against us. It’s not. It’s just the human experience. And we just roll with it. So having this reminder, this acceptance, what we said before that maybe there’s a lesson for me to learn there and keep in mind also to be connected with yourself. It can be very overwhelming. So come back to yourself, have a me time, a review time once a week, once a month, or both, where you can say, how was that week? How did I feel? What did I want it to do, but then I didn’t want? I didn’t do it, for example. Keep in touch with your own desires and needs, your own hobbies, your own values. You want to be a better father, for example? Have this review meeting with yourself and be like, oh, what kind of father was I? Why was I not present? Yeah, maybe because too much work, or maybe I’m a perfectionist. I want to do everything perfect. So have this review meeting with with yourself. Journaling helps. Asking for help. And when we get really overwhelmed, our brain goes into fight or flight mode. And in that mode, it convinces us that we don’t have energy for self-care. Your therapist, for example, said, you have to go and walk every day, yeah? That’s important. But then your brain, because you are in a survival mode, will say, Oh, I’m so tired today. Even though you didn’t do anything, you were just sitting the whole day and behind a computer. No, no physical strain, nothing. But it’s the brain because it thinks that we need energy in case things go worse, because we are in the fight or flight. It protects your energy. So don’t listen to your brain and continue with these habits of self-care. That’s your sleep, that’s your diet, your exercise, breath work.
[00:16:32] Sabrina Pierotti: thank you so, so much for sitting with me and chatting with me. I am so glad and grateful for this conversation. Like, I love the society that we’re in where like mental health is a lot more open. However, we still have a lot of work to do in terms of really just normalizing it even more. So, and I have a feeling this episode and this chat together really did wonders in accelerating that. So thank you so much. You are such a joy to talk to.
[00:17:04] Vassia Sarantopoulou: Thank you so much for the invitation. And I have a special gift for your listeners because I know how overthinking can take over. Sometimes and we are just in a loop, ruminating, ruminating, and we cannot stop. So I have just a one pager that they can print and they can have next to them with seven ways to stop overthinking.
[00:17:23] Sabrina Pierotti: Thank you. Oh my gosh. I will definitely be using that, printing it out, putting it on the side of my desk.
[00:17:30] Vassia Sarantopoulou: We all need it. We all need it.
[00:17:32] Sabrina Pierotti: We sure do. Thank you so much, Vassia.
[00:17:34] Vassia Sarantopoulou: Thank you.
[00:17:37] Sabrina Pierotti: We covered a lot today, from identifying what crises look like to learning how to sit with it and sit with those painful emotions. And most importantly, how to move forward with resilience. These are topics that don’t always get space in everyday conversations, but they’re at the core of how we build emotional resilience and move forward when life doesn’t go as planned. If you’re enjoying the show, do us a quick favor. Hit that like button, leave a review, and share it with a friend who’d love it too. It helps more than you know and keeps the good stuff coming your way. Thanks for being part of the ride. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are not necessarily the views of AAA Northeast, AAA, and or its affiliates.
RESOURCES
Vassia Sarantopoulou’s Overthinking Coping Kit
What Causes Burnout and How to Prevent It
Revive Your Mental and Emotional Health in the New Year
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*The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are not necessarily the views of AAA Northeast, AAA and/or its affiliates.
