Case Two: Annie and the Quiet Anger
Annie was, by any reasonable external measure, succeeding. Her career had accelerated over the past few years in ways she once hoped it might but never quite expected. She held a senior role, managed a capable team, and was regularly recognised for her competence and strategic thinking. Her inbox carried the tone of respect. Her calendar was full because she was needed. Promotions had not been handed to her; she had earned them. When colleagues described her, they used words like driven, reliable, formidable. The outside world reflected back an image of a woman doing precisely what modern success is supposed to look like. At home, she told herself the intensity was temporary. The late evenings, the reopened laptop after dinner, the quick goodnight kisses before returning to a half-finished report—these were part of a building phase. She was securing something. Stability. Opportunity. Choice. The narrative made sense, and it was one that many around her affirmed. This is the season of growth, they would say. The children will understand. Later, things will ease. But later has a way of receding. The friction did not begin dramatically. It began as irritation in moments that should have been neutral. A school email requesting parent volunteers felt like another demand from an already overloaded system. A forgotten PE kit felt like incompetence. A child interrupting a conference call felt not innocent, but intrusive. Her responses were not explosive, but they were sharp. She heard the tone sometimes, even as she justified it. I am under pressure. I cannot be everywhere at once. I am carrying more than anyone sees. All of that was true. What unsettled her, though she did not linger on it, was how frequently the irritation surfaced in the quiet spaces. It appeared in the car after a late meeting, when she realised she had missed another assembly. It appeared when her partner sent photos of a school event she had promised to attend but could not. Instead of sadness, what rose first was annoyance. Why was it scheduled during working hours? Why was everything organised so poorly? Why did it always seem to collide with something critical?