Brooke Terry, MS, LPC
The Art and Downfall of Brute-Forcing Life
You’ve made it this far on willpower. You haven’t shied away from hard work, discipline, or whatever it took to get you past the finish line. If something feels hard or painful, you get more efficient, more organized, more productive.
And honestly? That approach works and is seen as a sign of commitment. You have the resume, the relationships, the life that looks good from the outside to prove it.
So why does it feel like something is starting to crack?
What Brute-Forcing Life Actually Looks Like
Brute-forcing life is not always obvious. It doesn’t always look like grinding or hustle culture or pulling all-nighters. Sometimes it looks polished. Organized. Ahead of schedule.
It can look like:
- Staying busy so you don’t have to sit with something uncomfortable
- Overthinking every decision until you land on the “right” answer
- Redoing work until it meets a standard no one else even set
- Pushing past exhaustion because slowing down feels scarier than burning out
- Using productivity as a way to feel okay about yourself
This is the territory of high-functioning anxiety. The anxiety doesn’t slow you down, it speeds you up. Your internal alarm system is stuck in the on position, and the way you cope is by doing more [1].
From the outside, it looks like drive. On the inside, it feels like running from something.
The Perfectionism Engine
Perfectionism is the fuel that keeps brute-forcing going. I think it’s worth knowing what perfectionism actually is because most people who have it don’t think of themselves as perfectionists.
Cambridge Dictionary defines perfectionism as, “a person who wants everything to be perfect and demands the highest standards possible” [7].
You might not care about having a spotless house. But do you redo emails until they say exactly the right thing? Do you judge yourself to the microscopic level? Do you feel like anything less than excellent is a kind of failure?
That’s perfectionism. And research is clear on what it does to you over time.
A large-scale meta-analysis published in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy reviewed 416 studies and found that perfectionism, particularly the concern-about-mistakes variety, had significant associations with anxiety, depression, and OCD symptoms across more than 113,000 participants [2]. The relationship between perfectionism and psychological distress is one of the most replicated findings in clinical psychology.
TLDR: perfectionism keeps anxiety going by telling you that you aren’t doing enough. The anxiety fuels a perfectionism pattern by making failure feel catastrophic [3]. The two feed each other in a loop that can run for years, sometimes decades, before something forces it to stop.
That something is usually a breaking point.
When Willpower Stops Working
Here’s what nobody tells high-achievers: willpower is not infinite.
Psychologist Roy Baumeister’s foundational research introduced the concept of ego depletion. His idea is that self-control operates more like a resource than a character trait. Every decision you make, every impulse you override, every emotion you manage in a professional or composed way draws from the same pool [4]. When that pool runs low, the system that’s been holding everything together starts to falter.
The updated version of this research is even more interesting. The brain may not literally run out of willpower, but it starts conserving what’s left. It shifts priorities toward rest and reward [5]. In other words, the breakdown isn’t a failure of character. It’s your nervous system making a rational decision about what it can no longer afford to sustain.
For people running on high-functioning anxiety and perfectionism, this depletion looks specific. It looks like:
- Snapping at people you love after a day of performing composure at work
- Binge-watching, scrolling, or eating in ways that feel completely out of character
- Suddenly losing motivation on things you used to care about
- Waking up exhausted even after a full night of sleep
- Feeling weirdly numb instead of anxious
You haven’t morally failed. You’ve begun to see the predictable end of an unsustainable strategy.
Where the Pattern Usually Comes From
Maybe by now you’re getting curious about where this comes from. I am happy to say brute-forcing life is rarely something you decided to do. It’s usually something you learned.
For many high-achieving adults, using performance and control as a coping mechanism started early. You may find it in homes where things were unpredictable, where love felt conditional on output, or where being “capable” was the safest way to be. If you just worked hard enough, stayed organized enough, anticipated every problem before it happened then you could manage the unmanageable.
Unfortunately, this lesson is a double-edged sword. The survival strategy you developed at ten is still running at thirty-five. And what protected you then is exhausting you now.
Psychologists increasingly recognize perfectionism not just as a personality trait, but as a transdiagnostic process. It operates across anxiety, depression, relational difficulties, and is deeply shaped by early environments [6]. In other words, your perfectionism isn’t a flaw in your character but a response to something that happened to you.
The Cost Nobody Calculates
The high cost of brute-forcing life tends to show up in the last places people look.
At first, you don’t see it in your productivity but in:
- Relationships: The person who brute-forces everything often controls, over-functions, or quietly resents the people around them who aren’t doing the same. Intimacy requires a kind of surrender that feels unsafe when control is your primary tool.
- The body: Chronic stress, emotional dysregulation, insomnia, tension headaches, a nervous system that doesn’t know how to downregulate. The body keeps score even when the mind is still convincing itself it’s fine [3].
- Identity: When performance is how you know you’re okay, what happens when you can’t perform? When you’re sick, or failing, or just… tired? The gap between who you need to be and who you are is where a lot of quiet despair lives.
High-functioning anxiety hides behind success. That’s what makes it so hard to catch and so exhausting to carry [1].
How Therapy Can Help
Therapy for perfectionism and high-functioning anxiety isn’t about lowering your standards or convincing you to care less. It’s about understanding why those standards are set at the level they are and what it would mean if you didn’t meet them.
Using EMDR-informed work, parts-based insight, and relational support, we can begin to explore:
- The parts of you that learned performance was the safest way to be loved
- What the anxiety is actually protecting and whether it still needs to
- How to build a relationship with rest that doesn’t feel like failure
- What identity looks like when it isn’t built entirely on output
The goal isn’t to stop being someone who works hard or holds high standards. It’s to give you access to a life that isn’t contingent on executing perfectly to feel okay.
So Am I A Lost Cause?
Absolutely not! Brute-force life has worked and has been the most rational option available. The anxiety kept you alert. Perfectionism keeps you from making mistakes. The willpower keeps things moving when everything else feels uncertain.
Those aren’t flaws. They’re adaptations. And they got you here.
You don’t have to keep running the same strategy forever. The fact that it’s starting to crack isn’t a sign that you’re falling apart, it’s a sign that your nervous system is finally asking for something different.
You’re allowed to build a life that doesn’t require you to override yourself every single day.
Ready to Do Something Different?
If this landed for you, I’d love to talk. I offer virtual therapy across Oregon for high-achieving adults who are exhausted from holding everything together through sheer force of will.
Blog References
[1] Mental Health Center (2025). High Functioning Anxiety: Signs and Coping Skills. https://www.mentalhealthctr.com/high-functioning-anxiety-signs-and-coping-skills/
[2] Callaghan, T. et al. (2024). The relationships between perfectionism and symptoms of depression, anxiety and OCD in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, 53(2), 121–132. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37955236/
[3] Mission Connection Healthcare (2026). What Is High Functioning Anxiety? Symptoms, Causes, and How to Manage It. https://missionconnectionhealthcare.com/mental-health/anxiety/high-functioning-anxiety/
[4] Reachlink (2026). Ego Depletion: What Happens When Willpower Runs Out. https://www.reachlink.com/advice/willpower/ego-depletion/
[5] ScienceInsights (2026). What Is Ego Depletion and How It Drains Willpower. https://scienceinsights.org/what-is-ego-depletion-and-how-it-drains-willpower/
[6] Frontiers in Psychology (2025). Perfectionism and psychological well-being in adolescents with high intellectual abilities. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1617755/full
[7] Cambridge Dictionary. (n.d.). Perfectionist. In Cambridge dictionary. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/perfectionist

