For artists, creatives and teams working in high-pressure environments, supporting performance, resilience and consistency, even at full pace.
You’re the one people see.
The one holding the performance, the visibility, the expectation.
And often, the pressure doesn’t stop when the lights go down.
Being part of the creative industries can be incredibly rewarding, but it also asks a lot of you.
There’s a pace to it that doesn’t always let your system settle. Long days, shifting schedules, travel, visibility, pressure to deliver — and often very little space in between to properly come back down. There can be real highs in it, but also moments that feel harder to make sense of, especially when everything on the outside looks like it’s going well.
Over time, that kind of environment can start to take its toll in quieter ways. Not always dramatically, but enough that things don’t feel quite as steady as they used to.
That’s usually the point where people begin to look for support.
You’re often holding more than people realise.
You see the shifts early — in mood, behaviour, energy.
At the same time, you’re managing pressure from multiple directions and keeping everything moving.
Some of what you’re seeing can be linked to what happens after high-intensity moments — which we speak to in more detail below.
You’re the ones keeping everything running.
Long hours, fast turnarounds, constant pressure — often without much space to pause.
You’re holding a lot, even if you’re not the one in the spotlight.
Over time, that cycle of intensity and reset can build — something we unpack further below.
There’s a part of this that people don’t always talk about.
Not the performance itself — but what happens afterwards.
When everything winds down.
When you’re back in the dressing room, the hotel, or on your own.
When the energy that was holding everything up just… drops away.
You can go from being completely “on” — focused, connected, running on adrenaline — to a kind of quiet that feels quite different.
For some people, that shift is barely noticeable.
For others, it’s where things feel the most unsettled.
You might feel wired but exhausted at the same time.
Or flat, when you expected to feel good.
Or restless, without really knowing why.
Sometimes it’s just hard to land.
And over time, it’s often in these in-between moments that habits form — ways of taking the edge off, switching off, or trying to regulate something that doesn’t feel great.
There’s nothing unusual about this. It’s a very human response to intensity.
But if it keeps happening without support, it can start to shape how you cope, how you recover, and how sustainable everything feels.
After being “on,” there can be a sudden absence of structure and connection.
What was holding you — the audience, the focus, the momentum — isn’t there in the same way.
That’s often where the drop happens, or where the pull towards something that helps you come down more quickly starts to kick in.
You may not always see this moment directly, but you often see what comes after it.
Changes in behaviour.
Shifts in communication.
Decisions that don’t quite track.
Understanding this part of the cycle gives context to what might otherwise feel unpredictable.
You’re moving from one high-pressure moment straight into the next, often without much space in between.
There’s rarely time to process what’s just happened before you’re onto the next thing.
Over time, that repeated cycle can build — physically and mentally.
We work with this part of the cycle directly not just preparing for performance, but supporting what happens afterwards, so the whole experience becomes more manageable and sustainable.
At Coming Home, we bring together two strands of work that complement each other.
Mel’s background is in trauma-informed nervous system work and integration, helping the body come out of overwhelm, shutdown or overdrive and return to something more balanced.
Mark’s work focuses on subconscious patterns — the beliefs, identities and internal narratives that shape how we respond under pressure, particularly during periods of growth or visibility.
Working together allows us to support both what’s happening in the body and what’s sitting underneath it.
We often organise the work across three areas:
Helping your system settle so you’re not constantly operating from stress or urgency
Working through patterns that feel ingrained or protective, and making sense of where they come from
Supporting you as things expand, so that growth feels manageable rather than overwhelming
Everything is shaped around your reality, whether that’s touring, recording, travelling, or navigating a particularly full period.
It needs to work alongside your life, not interrupt it.
There are moments where it’s helpful to do this work in the environment where things are actually happening.
For some people, that means being supported in real time, not constantly, but at key points where it can make a difference.
This might include:
It allows us to respond to what’s real in the moment, rather than trying to recreate it afterwards.
Everything is handled quietly and respectfully.
Over time, people tend to notice:
A greater sense of steadiness, even during busy or high-pressure periods
Faster recovery after intense moments or performances
More consistent access to creativity
Clearer thinking and decision-making
Less reliance on coping mechanisms that don’t really support them
Relationships feeling less strained or reactive
It’s not about everything becoming easy, but it does tend to feel more manageable, and less like something you have to push through.
We usually start with a conversation to understand what’s going on and what might be helpful.
From there, we can shape something that fits around your work and your timing.
Everything is confidential, and handled with care.