The Happya Life with Clare Deacon

Wellbeing Without the Wellness Industry

Clare Deacon | Trauma-Informed Therapist, Positive Psychology Coach & Author of Blooming Happya Season 3 Episode 78

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If you’ve ever felt disconnected, irritated, or quietly resistant to mainstream wellness culture, this episode is for you.

In this episode of The Happya Life Podcast, Clare Deacon explores what wellbeing really means once you strip away the noise, pressure, and performance of the wellness industry.

This is a grounded, psychologically informed conversation about why so many intelligent, capable women feel alienated by wellness trends and why that reaction makes sense.

Clare unpacks:

  • Why the wellness industry often increases pressure rather than reducing it
  • How wellbeing has been turned into another form of self-optimisation
  • The difference between wellbeing, performance, and coping
  • Why “doing more” isn’t the answer for a tired nervous system
  • How positive psychology and nervous system science define wellbeing differently
  • What wellbeing looks like after long periods of survival and responsibility

This episode is not about rejecting wellbeing it’s about reclaiming it.

If you’ve tried the routines, read the books, and still feel like something doesn’t fit, you’re not failing. You’re likely ready for a more honest, sustainable conversation about wellbeing that respects your life, your nervous system, and your intelligence.

For further resources around identity, self-worth, and wellbeing beyond survival, visit:
 👉 https://happyacoach.com/explore/self



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Hello and welcome back to The Happya Life Podcast. I’m Clare Deacon.

Over the last few episodes, we’ve been talking about permission, about the cost of holding it all together, and about what happens when the roles you’ve lived inside for years start to loosen.

Today, I want to talk about something that often enters the conversation at this point  sometimes helpfully, sometimes not.

Wellbeing.

Or more accurately, the version of wellbeing we’re constantly being sold.

Because if you’re at a stage where you’re questioning who you are, how you’ve been living, and what you actually need now, it’s very likely that the wellness industry has opinions about that.

Lots of them.

And if you’ve ever found yourself feeling vaguely irritated, sceptical, or quietly resistant to most of what’s labelled “wellness”, there’s probably a very good reason.

This episode is about wellbeing without the wellness industry.

Not because wellbeing isn’t important it absolutely is.

But because many intelligent, capable people have been made to feel that if they’re not finding answers in green smoothies, morning routines, or the latest trend, they must be doing something wrong.

And that simply isn’t true.

For many of you listening, the problem isn’t that you don’t care about your wellbeing.

It’s that the way wellbeing is presented doesn’t reflect your life, your nervous system, or your level of responsibility.

You’ve likely tried the things.

You’ve read the books.
 Listened to the podcasts.
 Done the practices or at least attempted them.

And yet, instead of feeling supported, you’ve felt subtly judged.

As if wellbeing is something you should be able to optimise, perfect, or perform just like everything else.

And if you can’t sustain it, that must be a personal failure.

That framing is deeply unhelpful.

Because wellbeing isn’t a lifestyle aesthetic.

It’s not a collection of habits.
 It’s not a moral achievement.
 And it’s certainly not something you earn by being disciplined enough.

From a psychological perspective, wellbeing is contextual.

It’s shaped by your nervous system, your life history, your responsibilities, your losses, your relationships, and the stage of life you’re in.

You cannot talk about wellbeing without talking about reality.

One of the biggest issues with the wellness industry is that it often ignores context.

It assumes a level of time, capacity, and internal safety that many people simply don’t have especially those who’ve spent years coping, holding things together, and functioning under pressure.

So when someone already stretched is told that wellbeing is about doing more more practices, more routines, more optimisation it doesn’t land as care.

It lands as pressure.

And pressure is not conducive to wellbeing.

In fact, from a nervous system point of view, pressure activates threat.

Which means that the very thing that’s supposed to support you can end up reinforcing the problem.

This is why so many people feel worse after trying to “do wellbeing properly”.

They’re already operating from effort and containment and then they’re given a model of wellbeing that requires even more effort.

That’s not healing.

That’s over-functioning with a different label.

Wellbeing, in its truest sense, is not about adding more.

It’s about reducing unnecessary strain.

It’s about increasing internal safety, not external performance.

Positive psychology has always understood wellbeing as more than happiness or productivity.

At its core, it’s about vitality, meaning, connection, and the ability to respond flexibly to life not to control it.

And yet, much of the wellness industry has turned wellbeing into something transactional.

If you do this, you’ll feel better.
 If you buy this, you’ll be calmer.
 If you follow this routine, you’ll be healed.

That logic mirrors the very systems many people are already exhausted by.

Which is why it doesn’t work.

Especially for those of you who are already competent, driven, and self-aware.

You don’t need another system to manage.

You need permission to relate to yourself differently.

For many people at this stage, real wellbeing begins when they stop trying to fix themselves.

When they stop assuming that discomfort means failure.

When they stop outsourcing their internal authority to trends, experts, or algorithms.

This doesn’t mean rejecting support or insight.

It means becoming more discerning.

It means recognising that wellbeing is not one-size-fits-all and that what supports one nervous system may overwhelm another.

I’ve seen this repeatedly.

People who are deeply reflective, capable, and conscientious often struggle most with mainstream wellness culture, because they try to do it properly.

They take it seriously.

And when it doesn’t work, they internalise that as another shortcoming.

But the issue isn’t their commitment.

It’s the model.

Wellbeing that’s built on self-surveillance, self-improvement, and constant monitoring is not sustainable.

It keeps you focused on what’s wrong, what’s missing, what needs adjusting.

And over time, that erodes self-trust.

True wellbeing is quieter than that.

It’s less performative.

It often looks like fewer rules, not more.

From a nervous system perspective, wellbeing is about safety, regulation, and capacity.

It’s about whether your system feels able to rest, respond, and recover not whether you’re following the right protocol.

From a positive psychology perspective, it’s about meaning, autonomy, and engagement, not perfection.

And this is where many people feel a sense of relief when they step away from the noise of the wellness industry.

They realise they don’t need to become a different person to be well.

They don’t need to optimise themselves into worthiness.

They need to feel at home in themselves again.

That often begins with subtraction.

Less striving.
 Less self-critique.
 Less comparison.

And more honesty.

Honesty about what your life actually looks like.
 What your system can realistically hold.
 What you need now not what you “should” need.

This is especially important if you’ve spent years in survival mode.

Because wellbeing after survival looks different.

It’s not about peak performance.

It’s about stability, softness, and gradual reconnection.

And that doesn’t always photograph well.

Which is perhaps why it’s rarely promoted.

If you’ve found yourself feeling resistant to wellness trends, it may not be because you’re cynical or closed off.

It may be because you’re discerning.

Because somewhere in you, you know that wellbeing cannot be rushed, packaged, or prescribed.

It has to be lived.

And it has to be personal.

At Happya, when we talk about wellbeing, we’re not talking about fixing, optimising, or improving you.

We’re talking about supporting you to move from survival to something more sustainable.

To reconnect with yourself in a way that feels honest, grounded, and kind.

That’s slower work.

But it’s real.

If this conversation resonates, and you’re looking for a more grounded, psychologically informed approach to wellbeing one that respects your intelligence and your life you’ll find resources on my website focused on you, your identity, and how you show up in the world.

You can explore those at happyacoach.com/explore/self.

And if you’ve been feeling quietly alienated by the wellness industry, let me say this clearly:

You’re not failing at wellbeing.

You’re just ready for a different conversation.

Until next time.