
Moonshot Mentor with Laverne McKinnon How Do I Get My Work Energy Back? 🔋
Most of us are gonna hit turbulence at one point or another in our careers. A faceplant. A missed opportunity. A project that goes sideways. A job that ends in a way that feels unfair or messy.
The painful part is not just what happened. It’s what happens inside of you afterward.
When a professional failure goes unprocessed, it turns inward. It shows up as imposter thoughts, burnout, low confidence, and that weird dread that kicks up when it’s time to take the next risk.
Sometimes it even pushes people to abandon dreams they still care about, not because the dream stopped mattering, but because their internal capacity got depleted.
That internal capacity to weather tough times is resilience. And when resilience is low, you don’t have the energy to keep going.
What resilience means, for real
Resilience is your capacity to recover after something knocks you off course.
I think of it like the elasticity in a pair of Spanx – they bounce back to their natural shape after having been stretched to their full capacity. I’m wearing Spanx under this dress and it’s like a modern day miracle how it bounces back!
When our resilience runs low, rigidity kicks in because we have no energy to be supple and nimble. It’s like the shoes I wore with the dress. They had no give what-so-ever. They looked lovely and solid, but fell apart that night. They broke under pressure.
In your work, rigidity might sound like I’m going to keep doing things the same way despite market contractions or expansions, new responsibilities, or that the tools of the trade have changed.
Elasticity sounds like: I’m adjusting my approach because the market has altered, I have new challenges or I need to close a skills gap.
One more thing that matters here.
Resilience is not an endless spring of water. It’s a well. It gets drained by stress, disappointment, and unprocessed emotion. It gets refilled by rest, pleasure, community, and by taking the time to metabolize the turbulence that knocked you off your path.
So yes, self-care helps.
But processing is how you stop the leak.
Seven steps to refill your resilience after a failure
Before you start re-filling with these steps, regulate your nervous system. If you try to do this work while you’re activated, your brain will turn it into a courtroom.
Take a walk. Breathe slowly. Put on a favorite song and move your body. Do something that helps you feel grounded enough to think.
Then walk through these steps.
1. Name what happened: What failed. What went off track. What didn’t get done. Say it plainly, with as few adjectives as possible. Think: incident report, not inner monologue.
2. Separate facts from story: Write down what you know is true, and what data supports it. Facts do not start with “I think” or “I feel.” Facts are observable. Then write down the story your brain added and notice how you are describing yourself and your part in what happened.
3. Name the impact: What did this cost you. Time. money. reputation. confidence. belonging. a sense of safety. Motivation. This matters because resilience gets drained when the impact is real and unnamed.
4. Own your part without blame: What was within your control that you would do differently next time. This is not the same as fault. It’s agency. Blame collapses. Agency mobilizes.
5. Identify what changed: This is where elasticity comes in. What shifted that made your old approach less effective. Market conditions. leadership. resources. technology. expectations. Timing. If you skip this step, you’ll default to pushing harder at a strategy that no longer fits reality.
6. Choose one course correction that matches your values: One small step. Not a life overhaul. Something you can do this week that aligns with who you want to be, even under pressure. A conversation you need to have. A boundary you need to set. A skill to update. A decision to stop discounting yourself. A new way of measuring progress.
7. Close the loop with a refill: This is the part most people skip. You faced something tender. You told the truth. You chose agency. Now refill the well on purpose. Do something that signals to your system: the danger has passed. Rest. laughter. prayer. art. a meal. a long shower. calling a friend. sitting in the sun.
Processing builds resilience because it reduces emotional drag. Refilling builds resilience because it restores capacity.
Both matter.
Case Study: Heather
Heather built a solid business as a copywriter. Then the last few years of AI advancement hit, and the work started drying up. Fewer gigs. Smaller budgets. Clients asking for “a quick rewrite” when what they really wanted was an entire campaign.
It was devastating. Not just financially, but emotionally. She had built something she was proud of, and it felt like it was slipping out of her hands for reasons she couldn’t control.
It also brought up shame.
Her self-talk sounded like: I’m stupid. I should have seen this coming. I waited too long. I don’t know what I’m doing.
When Heather and I started working together, we did not start with a pivot. We started with resilience.
First, we named the facts. The marketplace had changed. Her clients were using AI tools to generate first drafts and they were hiring humans differently. They still needed thinking, positioning, voice, and editorial judgment, but they were no longer paying the same way for pure execution.
Then we named the story. Heather had turned a market shift into an identity verdict that she should have seen this coming. So she was “naive” and “not cut out for this.”
Next, we owned her part without shame. She had been trying to solve the problem by hustling harder, discounting her work, and saying yes to low value assignments because she was scared. That was the leak.
Once she could see that clearly, she could see a course correction that matched her values: stop racing to the bottom, and start moving toward roles where her real advantage was still language, but at a higher altitude.
Heather did a deep dive into how AI actually works in content workflows. The thing that felt like the enemy became a tool she could direct.
She pivoted into content strategy and operations, helping a small team build an AI assisted content system that turns one strong idea into a smart set of assets across channels, without losing voice, clarity, or credibility.
And here’s the quiet truth of that pivot.
Heather did not abandon who she was. She carried her strengths forward and put them in a role that needed them.
That’s elasticity.
Bottom Line
Resilience is not about pretending something didn’t hurt.
It’s the ability to recover your capacity after it did.
When you process what happened with honesty and without turning it into a verdict about you, you stop bleeding energy. When you add intentional refilling, you restore enough internal room to make your next decision from clarity instead of fear.
That’s how you get your resilience back.
If you’re reading this and thinking, “Okay, but I still feel wrung out,” Solid Ground is for that. It’s my paid membership space for rebuilding capacity after career heartbreak so you can feel more like yourself again and get unstuck without white knuckling it. Monthly lessons and worksheets, live coaching, journal prompts, and guided meditations.
If someone came to mind while you were reading this—please send it their way. You never know the impact a well-timed message can have.
Related Content
* Is There Something Wrong With Me?
* How Perfectionism Leads To Imposter Syndrome
* Is Expertise Really All It’s Cracked Up To Be?
Longing To Feel Lighter?
Professional heartbreak can leave you spinning. You replay what happened, question your judgment, get stuck in indecision, and worry you’ll never get your mojo back.
Solid Ground is the paid member program inside the Moonshot Mentor Substack community that helps you move from spinning to forward motion.
Paid members tell me they feel less weighed down. Empowered. Relaxed for the first time in a long time. Here’s the thing. It’s not because they got a pep talk. It’s because they finally got an accurate explanation for what’s happening and a way through it.
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Become a paid member to access Solid Ground, stop misdiagnosing yourself as broken, and start moving again.
Journal Prompts
Here are 5 journal prompts for Solid Ground members. Use these to rebuild resilience after a recent professional hit, without turning it into a story about who you are.
