The Burned Out B: Dear Teachers
The podcast for educators who are done being gaslit by a system that runs on guilt, glitter, and unpaid labor.
Hosted by Nicole—a former classroom teacher, curriculum designer, healer, and lifelong loudmouth with a soft spot for the overworked—Burned Out B is your weekly permission slip to tell the truth, feel the rage, and start healing.
This is not professional development.
This is personal resurrection.
We talk burnout, nervous system collapse, institutional gaslighting, “toxic positivity,” and the spiritual cost of being the one who always shows up. You’ll laugh. You might cry. You’ll definitely stop blaming yourself.
Because you were never supposed to burn out.
And it’s time we stopped pretending otherwise.
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🔥 Join the rebellion, reclaim your wholeness, and let’s burn the system down—not ourselves.
The Burned Out B: Dear Teachers
The Three-Day Burnout - One Teacher's Story
What happens when a classroom spirals into chaos just three days into the semester, complete with violence, threats, and disruption—even with administrators present? The system's response is painfully predictable: blame the teacher. "Maybe you need stronger classroom management." Sound familiar?
The Burned Out B pulls back the curtain on education's most destructive pattern. This isn't about teachers lacking skills or passion—it's about a systematic cycle of institutional failure followed by teacher blame. When assistant principals, nurses, and school resource officers together cannot maintain order, how can we reasonably expect a single teacher to do so? Yet that's exactly what happens in schools nationwide.
Through raw personal stories, including a devastating account of principal betrayal, we expose the psychological impact of being celebrated as exemplary one day, then publicly humiliated the next. This emotional whiplash explains why so many educators find themselves crying in their cars before or after work. The burden isn't just challenging student behaviors—it's the isolation of being expected to absorb and fix systemic problems single-handedly.
The revolution in education starts when we recognize this truth: You are not broken. The system is. Teachers were meant to inspire and guide, not serve as scapegoats for institutional collapse. If you've been told to "reflect on your practice" while your classroom burns, know this—you're not crazy, incompetent, or the problem. Real change begins when we collectively refuse to believe the lies and speak truth without apology. Join us in reclaiming the heart of teaching and remember: you weren't meant to be a martyr with a lanyard. You were meant to rise.
Thanks for listening!
Connect with me on instagram: @theburnedoutb
I'd love for you to message me what you thought, what it made you think about, your reflections, and of course I want to know what's been coming up for you in the classroom! I will never name names...unless you ask me to!
Welcome to the Burned Out Bee, dear teachers, the podcast for educators who are two seconds away from flipping a desk but still somehow remember to take attendance. Or maybe you didn't. I'm Nicole, the Burned Out Bee, who's a former classroom teacher, curriculum builder, interrupter of bullshit, and professional wearer of the I'm fine mask. Around here, we say the quiet parts out loud. We call out the systems that run on guilt, glitter, and unpaid labor. And we absolutely do not accept toxic positivity as a wellness plan. Grab your lukewarm coffee, lock your classroom door, and take a breath. You're home. Three days. I told you that we would be deconstructing real teacher stories from the classroom on this podcast, and this is our first one. Three days is all it took for one teacher to feel completely burnt out this semester. Three days in, and here's what she reported: multiple school shooting jokes, at least one fight in the classroom, a girl bullied to tears, a weapons threat, kids screaming loud enough that other teachers had to step in, a student openly refusing to do the work and just asking for a zero instead. We've had that, you've had that, I've had that. Can I just can you just put a zero in the gradebook now and like let's skip the middleman? Yeah, that happens. And kids destroying medical supplies, tampering with CPR mannequins, and stealing laser pointers. And get this. When the assistant, principal, the nurse, and even the school resource officer were in the room. Yeah, these kids still refuse to settle. The teacher ended up screaming just to get two seconds of quiet. Three days into the year, and they're already overwhelmed and burnt out. And yet we know exactly what the system tells the teacher. Maybe you need some stronger classroom management. You know, remember that PD that we took over the summer? You should reflect on your practice. Let me translate that for you. This is your fault. Friends, this here is the root of the problem. This is the root of teachers' suffering. It's not a lack of grit, it's not a lack of skills, and it's not because you don't love the kids enough. It's because of a cycle, a pattern that every single teacher gets trapped in. And here's how it goes the system fails to create safety. The teacher is left holding the bag. The teacher is told that it's their fault, and the teacher burns out. That's it. That's the whole playbook. And when you cry out, when you say this is not sustainable, you don't get support, you get gaslit, and you get told to fix yourself. I can identify with this teacher because I will never forget the moment that my own principal screamed at me in public. And this was the same principal who had paraded me around as a model teacher who brought other staff and even visiting boards from other states into my classroom to watch me teach. And then one day a student started a literal petition to get me fired because I told him to quiet down during lecture. Like, hey, don't talk while I'm talking. It doesn't actually seem like an unreasonable request, right? Don't talk when I'm like trying to teach your whole class, your whole class of peers that, by the way, is really trying hard to prepare to pass an AP exam, even if you don't care, maybe some respect for them would be like appreciated. Anyway, the day after this happened, which by the way, knocked me on my ass. I didn't think that I had that relationship with any of my students. I thought I had excellent relationships. And to be fair, only one other student signed the petition and it was his best buddy. So maybe I was in line with believing that my relationships were respectful with my students. The very next day, that principal marched down the hall, red faced, screaming at me in front of my peers. Nicole, what the actual fuck is going on in your classroom? Do you know what that does to a human nervous system? To be both celebrated as a shining example one day and then publicly humiliated the next? It shattered me. And it wasn't because I was doing anything wrong. My door was open, and she knew that. She could walk in at any point, any day, any hour, and see exactly what was going on in my room. And I was proud of that. I was proud of the work that I did. I was proud of the effort. I was proud of the engagement. What happened was that the system needed a scapegoat for its lack of safety, its lack of support, and its lack of courage to tell the truth. And that day, that scapegoat was me. And this is why so many teachers sit in their cars crying after work. It's why some of them sit in their cars crying before work. It's not just the behaviors or the violence or the kids pushing boundaries, though all of that is real and all of that is heavy. We knew that going in. It's the fact that when those things don't happen, that the teacher is the only one expected to absorb it, to manage it, and then to magically fix it. So let's call it what it is. It's systemic gaslighting. And the message here is always the same. If you were good enough, if you were strong enough, if you paid attention to those trainings enough, you'd be able to handle this. But let's go back to today's teacher's story. If the assistant principal, the nurse, and the school resource officer can't make a room safe, then how is one teacher supposed to? But as long as teachers believe that it's them, as long as we're running ourselves ragged to cover for systemic collapse, nothing changes. If you've ever been told that you just need to try harder, sit through more PD or reflect more deeply while the world around you is on literal fire, it's not you. You're not crazy, you're not incompetent, you're not the problem. The problem is a system that expects one human being to hold the weight of institutional collapse and then blames them when they break. Take a breath with me right now. But the kind of breath that goes all the way to your belly. Most of us breathe through our shoulders, and that keeps your nervous system in a heightened state. So, you know, task number one is breathe into your belly. Like, even think about, you know, if you see a baby laying on their back on the floor, how it's not their shoulders that move with their breath, it's their stomach. That's the breath you're looking for. Ready? In hell. Where have you believed the system's lie about yourself? Where have you taken responsibility for something that wasn't yours to carry? Maybe it was a kid who refused to work. Maybe it was a class that spiraled out of control. And maybe it was an administrator who humiliated you in public. Take one moment right now to tell yourself the truth. This was not my failure. Say it with me. This was not my failure. This was the system's failure. Anchor into that because the revolution starts the moment that we stop believing their lies. Teachers, you were never supposed to burn out. You were supposed to teach, you were supposed to inspire, and you were supposed to guide. But you can't do that in a system that keeps whole you holding the bag for its own collapse. The root of your suffering isn't you. It's a system that fails to create safety, that abandons you when things fall apart, and then that has the audacity to tell you that it's your fault. So if you are at your breaking point, let this be your reminder. You are not broken. And the real change starts when you gather the audacity of your own to tell the truth. Loudly, collectively, and without apology. You've got the speeds, and I got you. If this episode dragged any skeletons out of your filing cabinet, just know. Thanks for listening to the Burned Out Bee, dear teachers. If it hit you in the soul or in the sarcasm plan, send it to your teacher bestie. You know the one. Follow the show, smash that subscribe button like it's a broken coffee machine. And come hang out on Instagram at theBurned OutBe, where the real talk continues. And remember, you weren't meant to be a martyr with a lanyard. You were meant to rise. See you next time, B.