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Heather Stewart on the Silent Saboteur: How Apathy Fuels the Mental Health Crisis
Heather Stewart on the Silent Saboteur: How Apathy Fuels the Mental Health Crisis

Entrepreneur

time13-05-2025

  • Business
  • Entrepreneur

Heather Stewart on the Silent Saboteur: How Apathy Fuels the Mental Health Crisis

You're reading Entrepreneur United Kingdom, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. Unknown to many, another force usually slips under the radar. Heather Stewart, a seasoned real life coach and a wellness expert, believes that apathy is a driver that deepens despair and keeps people stuck in lives they no longer recognize or enjoy. Stewart has over two decades of experience in the wellness industry, serving as a yoga instructor, massage therapist, meditation facilitator, and personal trainer. Her work has helped people reconnect with themselves physically, mentally, and emotionally. Before her journey in this field, Stewart spent 15 years in corporate finance as a chartered accountant. This diverse experience gives Stewart's insights weight. She's lived on both sides of the spectrum, anchored in stability yet longing for purpose, and now thriving with intention. Her clients benefit from this breadth of perspective. Stewart's experience has also made her realize that apathy is one of the most significant barriers to mental and emotional well-being. Beyond the lack of motivation, apathy is a creeping indifference that tells people they shouldn't want more, or worse, that they can't have it. "People settle," she says. "They believe their unhappiness is just how life is and give up before they even try." This defeatist mindset manifests early. Stewart explains that even young people say, "Well, that's just how the world works." She pushes back against that narrative. "It doesn't have to be that way," she adds. "It will stay that way if you don't do something different." The problem is that many don't know what "different" looks like. Stewart notes that either they can't see the possibilities or see them and believe they're out of reach. "Maybe you dreamed of becoming an Olympic sprinter, but now you're too old. That doesn't mean you can't chase something as exhilarating," she states. Stewart's idea isn't to chase the exact childhood fantasy but to rekindle the permission to dream and adapt it into an achievable reality. "People narrow their ideas of happiness," she says. "They don't see options. And worse, the culture around them reinforces the message to settle." The real life coach adds that gratitude is also misunderstood. Stewart teaches gratitude as a foundational tool but not an excuse for stagnation. "Gratitude is just the first step," she says. "Be grateful for what you have, yes. But don't use that gratitude to justify staying stuck. You're allowed to want more. You're allowed to pursue what makes you happy." In addition, Stewart is critical of how wellness culture reduces gratitude to a simplistic mantra, omitting the call to action and self-respect it should inspire. Her perspective on gratitude is to acknowledge the present while still reaching for the future. These philosophies are embedded in The Thriving Life Method, her signature coaching service. It's for people overwhelmed by the demands of modern life. The program offers multiple paths depending on where someone is in their journey. They could test the waters with the free Pathfinder tier or dive deep into a personalized transformation with the Visionary level. Essentially, Stewart provides structured, compassionate guidance. Her platform is also intentionally free from social media distractions, offering a private space for authentic growth. It contrasts with the numbing effects of doom-scrolling and curated perfection that dominate online culture. It's worth emphasizing that The Thriving Life Method isn't a quick fix. It's a lifestyle reorientation. Stewart helps her clients uncover what's holding them back (e.g., exhaustion, fear, or codependent tendencies). She understands that the first step can feel enormous, especially when someone's energy is depleted. "If you're drained all the time, even small actions feel impossible," she says. "You can't force someone to change. They have to be ready." Being the lighthouse and not the lifeboat is a philosophy that Stewart learned early in her coaching journey. "I can light the path, but I can't walk it for you," she says. Like a personal trainer who can teach you how to do a push-up but can't do the reps for you, Stewart provides tools, encouragement, and accountability. The real life coach advises people stuck in apathy: "Start imagining again. Go back to what you wanted as a kid. Who did you want to be? What lit you up? What have you given up on, not because it was impossible, but because you were told it was unrealistic?" She urges people to re-examine their choices with curiosity. Stewart herself wanted to be an artist and a veterinarian. She became an accountant instead because it was considered practical. Years later, she reclaimed those passions in her own way, through her career in wellness. Heather Stewart invites everyone to step out of autopilot. Her holistic approach integrates physical health, emotional resilience, and self-discovery to help people feel more aligned and less depleted. With emotional numbing and cultural indifference becoming more rampant, her message rings loud and clear. Apathy can be dangerous, as it keeps people disconnected from their power, purpose, and potential. However, change is possible. It starts with curiosity, grows through support, and is sustained by action.

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