Rethinking Burnout (Part One)

A client recently came to me feeling completely drained. He had spent years building a career he once loved — yet lately, he felt exhausted, irritable, and disconnected. Even hobbies and time with friends felt meaningless.

As we worked together, something surprising emerged: his job wasn’t the real problem. The burnout had deeper roots — in the routines, habits, and patterns that had quietly taken over his days.


Burnout Isn’t Always About Work

We often assume burnout comes from a stressful workplace or too many responsibilities. But I see it appear in many different contexts — parents juggling family life, students striving for academic success, and professionals chasing constant achievement.

Burnout doesn’t arise solely from doing too much. More often, it comes from living in ways that no longer fit who we are — or who we are becoming. When your daily routine stops reflecting your values and growth, dissonance builds. Over time, that misalignment turns into exhaustion.


What Doesn’t Work

When burnout hits, our impulse is often to go against the nature.

Here are a few common traps:

  1. Pushing through — working harder to compensate, hoping it will pass.
  2. Denying the burnout — in a culture that glorifies success, it’s easy to ignore what’s really happening inside.
  3. Avoiding alternatives — not allowing yourself to consider different options or approaches.
  4. Dwelling on burnout — letting it grow until it becomes something bigger, such as blame, whether directed at yourself or others: What did I do wrong? What went wrong?

Unfortunately, these reactions deepen burnout instead of resolving it.

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