She’s tired. Tired of carrying everyone’s weight. Tired of giving too much, staying too long, and apologizing for simply existing.
She’s Tired of Being Tired is a raw and healing collection of reflections and poetic prose for the woman who feels drained, overlooked, and unappreciated. These pages will remind you of your worth, your strength, and your right to rest without guilt. Gentle words you needed to hear on your hard days.
✨ Perfect for readers of self-love poetry, women’s empowerment, and healing prose. ✨ A powerful gift for any woman learning to let go, choose herself, and begin again.
If you’ve ever whispered, “I’m just so tired,” this book is for you.
Vishakha Jain is a writer whose words offer a gentle refuge for those navigating the quieter, heavier seasons of life.
Through her books — Sometimes: 101 Days of Healing Through Words, She Is Me, and She’s Tired of Being Tired — she explores the tender spaces between heartbreak and healing, reminding readers that softness and strength can coexist.
Her work blends poetry, reflections, and self-worth reminders that speak to anyone learning to let go, begin again, and honor the beautiful messiness of becoming — one quiet day at a time.
J’ai adoré ! L’anglais est très accessible. Je l’ai lu via l’abonnement Kindle. Ce qui me permettait, sur ma liseuse de traduire des mots que je ne connaissais pas.
Ce recueil de poème, est plutôt pour moi un recueil de conseil pour toutes ses personnes qui sont entrain de guérir d’avoir trop aimée, trop donnée et qui sont dans un processus de reconnection à soi. Vishakha fait du bien avec ses mots, elle déculpabilise, elle rend normal toutes ses émotions qui nous paraissent trop alors qu’on est seulement entier. Elle m’a vraiment fait du bien à un moment de ma vie charnière. Elle a mis des mots sur des pensées que j’avais et m’a permise de savoir que j’allais dans la bonne direction.
This book felt like walking through exhaustion and into rebuilding. It gently but honestly explores the wounded inner child, the habit of shrinking ourselves, and the courage it takes to unlearn what no longer serves us. What resonated most with me was the reminder that growth is possible at any stage of life. The idea of overcoming what was meant to break you carries a quiet strength. I saw myself in those pages… in enduring the storms, holding tightly to faith, and rising anyway. There is power in knowing you made it through.