Dr Zoe

Dr Zoe Clinical Consultant | Researcher | Speaker
Science-backed tools for messy modern life đź§ 

I’m Dr Zoe, a Clinical Social Worker and consultant passionate about wellbeing, trauma-informed care, and resilience. With over a decade of global experience, I support individuals, teams, and organisations in creating healthier, more sustainable ways of living and working.

Sometimes we learn far more about mental health from our pets than we ever could from a textbook.While humans love to ov...
20/06/2026

Sometimes we learn far more about mental health from our pets than we ever could from a textbook.

While humans love to overcomplicate wellbeing with endless optimisation strategies, Jaeger manages a perfectly regulated system simply by refusing to argue with his own biology. He protects his energy, ignores what doesn’t serve him, and never asks for permission to rest. These are the five lessons he accidentally teaches me every day just by being a cat.

I asked my mum, a retired psychologist, for her words of wisdom.There was no mention of manifestation, biohacking, or wa...
12/06/2026

I asked my mum, a retired psychologist, for her words of wisdom.

There was no mention of manifestation, biohacking, or waking up at 4am for an 18-step morning routine,

Her answers were surprisingly practical: find a sense of purpose, learn a language, get creative and care about others.

She has never been short on energy, opinions, or curiosity, and this was the advice she offered after a lifetime of studying human behaviour.

AI can help us work faster. But what happens when it removes the very work that taught us how to think?Many of the tasks...
05/06/2026

AI can help us work faster. But what happens when it removes the very work that taught us how to think?

Many of the tasks we’re eager to automate: drafting, researching, problem-solving, making sense of complexity aren’t just steps toward an outcome. They’re often where learning, judgment, and critical thinking are developed.

The question may not be whether AI can do these things for us.

It may be whether we’re paying enough attention to what we lose when we stop doing them ourselves.

I wrote an article at .co about AI, cognition, and the hidden value of effort. Read it here: https://e27.co/when-ai-removes-the-work-that-taught-us-how-to-think-20260602/

Have you ever asked AI what someone really meant?After a difficult moment at work, it is very tempting to paste the mess...
02/06/2026

Have you ever asked AI what someone really meant?

After a difficult moment at work, it is very tempting to paste the message into ChatGPT, Claude, or another tool and ask for a psychological translation.

And I get it.

When you are tense, confused, or replaying the exchange for the 47th time, AI gives you something fast, coherent and slightly too confident. Like a workplace mediator with a Canva account and no memory of the meeting.

The tricky part is that the language can get big very quickly.

Toxic.
Narcissistic.
Manipulative.
Gaslighting.

Sometimes those words are accurate. Sometimes they are the pop-psychology favourites of the internet being applied to a moment that actually needs more context, more care, and probably a conversation with a real human.

AI can help you write the message.

But it may also change how you read the person.

My latest article for e27 looks at what happens when AI starts shaping the way we interpret workplace conflict.

Full article here: https://e27.co/when-ai-becomes-the-office-therapist-20260520/

If you are used to operating at full capacity, a quiet afternoon can feel weirdly suspicious.Ambition takes real psychol...
31/05/2026

If you are used to operating at full capacity, a quiet afternoon can feel weirdly suspicious.

Ambition takes real psychological energy. When you spend long enough pushing towards the next goal, solving the next problem, or quietly auditioning for Employee of the Century in your own head, your nervous system starts treating high output as normal.

That is why rest can feel physically uncomfortable at first. Your brain has become used to intensity, movement, pressure, and reward. Stillness arrives and the system basically says, lovely, but where is the threat, the deadline, or the mildly unreasonable target?

Over time, your reward molecule can start needing bigger wins just to register satisfaction. Constant forward motion can train the brain to confuse quiet with failure, even when quiet is exactly what it needs.

High standards are much easier to sustain when your nervous system is allowed to clock off occasionally.

Read full article here: https://substack.com//p-199929160

Ambition gives the brain a lot to hold.By the time the workday ends, your mind may still be carrying unfinished decision...
26/05/2026

Ambition gives the brain a lot to hold.

By the time the workday ends, your mind may still be carrying unfinished decisions, half-formed plans, and the small unresolved details that never quite found a landing place.

That evening mental hum is often the residue of pace, load, expectation, and attention being pulled in too many directions for too long.

Creating distance from work takes practice. It becomes easier when the brain has clearer stopping points, fewer open loops, and repeated cues that the day has actually ended.

High performance needs recovery space, otherwise the mind keeps trying to finish the day long after the laptop is closed.

23/05/2026

Jeager’s post-filming routine is elite: quick snack, then a full cat nap like he’s closing his stress tabs.

Humans can borrow the same idea with NSDR (non-sleep deep rest). It’s a simple way to downshift your nervous system when you’re wired, overstimulated, or just need a reset without actually sleeping.

Think of it as a deliberate pause that helps your brain and body come back online a little calmer.

If you want to try it, you can check these out:

Dr Andrew Huberman NSDR: https:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKGrmY8OSHM

Ally Boothroyd NSDR:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
VehgbDhMUXHms

You are biologically wired to "catch" the moods and stress levels of the people around you ⬇️Through the activation of m...
20/05/2026

You are biologically wired to "catch" the moods and stress levels of the people around you ⬇️

Through the activation of mirror neurons, your brain automatically simulates the emotional and physiological states of those you interact with. This limbic resonance means your nervous system is perpetually co-regulating or co-stressing with your social environment at a metabolic level.

Recognizing this "emotional contagion" allows you to protect your own energy by being intentional about the signals you absorb and the ones you broadcast to others.

Have you noticed how quickly one person’s energy can shift the entire room?

Happy International Day for Families! Let’s have a look at the hidden architecture of your family conflict ⬇️Stress ofte...
15/05/2026

Happy International Day for Families! Let’s have a look at the hidden architecture of your family conflict ⬇️

Stress often pulls family members into predetermined cycles of communication, where the nervous system defaults to rigid roles like “the pusher” or “the peacemaker” to manage perceived tension.

Breaking these automatic loops requires a deliberate change in your own behavioral response to signal a new pattern to the group’s collective biology.

I’ve written more about this dynamic in my latest Substack article here: https://open.substack.com/pub/drzoewyatt/p/the-hidden-architecture-of-family?r=8a0t99&utm_medium=ios

The commute might have disappeared, but so did the part of the day that helped your brain change gears.Remote work can m...
13/05/2026

The commute might have disappeared, but so did the part of the day that helped your brain change gears.

Remote work can make the shift from “available” to “off” strangely difficult, because closing the laptop does not always tell your nervous system that the day is finished.

That missing buffer is sometimes called the third space: the transition between one role and the next.

When that transition disappears, the workday can stay mentally active long after the screen is closed. Tasks remain half-open in the mind and the body may be in the living room while attention is still caught somewhere between the inbox and the last meeting.

A small end-of-day ritual can help rebuild the boundary. A walk around the block, changing clothes, music, or a shower can all give the brain a clearer cue that work has ended and the rest of the day has begun.

I wrote more about this here: https://open.substack.com/pub/drzoewyatt/p/the-third-space?r=8a0t99&utm_medium=ios

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