High-functioning anxiety and emotional disconnect concept for therapy and counseling in Mount Pleasant SC

When You’re Functioning… But Not Okay

There’s a version of struggling that doesn’t look the way people expect it to. It doesn’t interrupt your life in obvious ways, and it doesn’t always come with breakdowns or moments where everything stops. Most of the time, it looks like you’re doing exactly what you’re supposed to be doing—waking up, moving through your day, responding to messages, taking care of responsibilities, showing up for the people who count on you. From the outside, nothing seems wrong. If anything, it looks like you’re handling life well.

But somewhere underneath all of that, something feels off. There’s a quiet distance between you and your own life, a kind of tired that doesn’t go away with rest, moments that should feel meaningful but don’t quite land the way they used to. You might notice yourself getting irritated more easily, pulling back from conversations, or moving through the day on autopilot—present, but not fully there.

And because everything still “works,” it’s easy to explain it away. You tell yourself it’s just stress, that it’ll pass, that other people have it worse. So you keep moving, because you know how to. That’s what you’ve always done. But that quiet disconnection doesn’t tend to resolve on its own—it settles in, becomes familiar, and over time starts to shape how you experience everything around you. What once felt temporary begins to feel like your baseline.

This is often where burnout begins to take hold, where anxiety shifts from something occasional to something constant, where even small decisions start to feel heavier than they should. And what makes this especially difficult is that the very qualities that allow you to keep going—your discipline, your reliability, your resilience—are the same ones that make it easier to overlook what’s happening underneath. You’ve learned how to carry things well, but carrying something isn’t the same as understanding it, and it isn’t the same as healing it.

At some point, the gap between how you’re functioning and how you’re actually feeling starts to matter. Not in a dramatic way, but in a quiet, steady way that’s easy to ignore and harder to live with. That’s where therapy becomes meaningful—not as a last step when everything falls apart, but as a place where things can finally slow down. A place where you don’t have to perform or keep it all together, where you can begin to notice what’s been sitting underneath all along, put words to experiences that haven’t fully made sense yet, and recognize patterns you’ve been living in without realizing it.

Because more often than not, there’s nothing “wrong” with you—there’s just something within you that hasn’t been given the space to be heard. And when that begins to shift, when you start to feel more present, more clear, more like yourself again, it doesn’t come from pushing harder. It comes from allowing yourself to pause.

You don’t have to wait until things get worse to take that step. If something in you has been feeling off, distant, or heavier than it should be, that’s already enough. That’s worth paying attention to. Because the goal isn’t just to keep functioning—it’s to feel like you’re actually living your life again.

Questions, Support or Guidance

Angela Ordyniec, MA/LISW-CP

Clinical Social Worker

Angi was drawn to become a therapist by her desire to walk alongside people as they navigate life’s twists and turns. Her approach is authentic, dynamic, and uplifting, and she never loses sight of each individual’s capacity to persevere, create, and transform.

With 20 years of experience working with individuals from diverse and complex backgrounds in both non-profit and private practice settings, Angi brings a warm, relational style to her work—often sprinkled with humor. She specializes in supporting adults through life transitions, grief and loss, relationship challenges, and symptoms of anxiety and depression.

Angi integrates various therapeutic approaches, including Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). She is also passionate about the connection between nutrition and mental health, having earned a certificate in Nutrition and Integrative Medicine for Mental Health from Adelphi University.

She embraces working with people from all backgrounds, religions, orientations, cultures, and ideologies. In her free time, Angi enjoys cooking savory meals, relaxing at the beach, reading, connecting with loved ones, and maintaining a balanced self-care routine.