How We Recover From Burnout
If you are burnt out and exhausted from doing everything right, here is the short version: burnout recovery does not start with more discipline or a better routine. It starts with seeing the unspoken rules you have been following for years, naming them, and recognizing that you never actually chose them. That awareness is the first real step out. Now let me explain why. Why does burnout happen to high-achieving people who seem to be coping? For most high performers, burnout does not arrive because we lack resilience. It arrives because we have been performing resilience for decades without even realizing it. We learned early how to adapt, endure, and override ourselves to stay safe, be accepted, and succeed. The strategy works until it does not. And when it stops working, the first conclusion most of us reach is that something is wrong with us. We look at the people beside us. They appear to be managing fine. So the problem must be personal, right? It is not personal. It is structural. And it started long before your current job, your role, or the season of life you are in. The hidden curriculum no one hands you There is a curriculum no one gives you on paper, but everyone expects you to follow: * Work harder than you need to in order to prove your value. * Be confident, but not intimidating. * Be likable, but not emotional. * Be ambitious, but grateful. * Be capable, but never inconvenient. No one says these rules out loud. They get enforced quietly, through the feedback you receive, through silence, through the way a tone shifts, through a stalled promotion, through subtle penalties that teach you over time when to shrink and when to soften. The people who are best at reading the room eventually stop feeling the rules at all. They just feel pressure, tension, and fatigue, plus a quiet sense that success keeps moving further away no matter how much they achieve. That is not because you are doing it wrong. It is because the rules were never designed to be sustainable. What is the Goldilocks Dilemma? From a young age, many of us are conditioned to seek love, validation, and acceptance. We learn to read the room, anticipate needs, and adjust ourselves accordingly, and we get praised for it. In professional environments, that early conditioning collides with what I call the Goldilocks Dilemma: * Be too warm, and you are not taken seriously. * Be direct, and you are difficult. * Be authentic, and you risk your credibility. * Be guarded, and you feel disconnected. There is never a right version. The zone keeps shifting. So you keep calibrating, managing perceptions, always performing, always monitoring. Am I being too much? Am I not enough? Is this safe to say? Will this cost me? That constant internal calculation is exhausting, and it is not random. It is a learned pattern, the direct output of years of being rewarded for managing yourself and penalized for being yourself. Where does burnout actually come from? Burnout does not come from workload. It comes from suppression, the constant overriding of the internal signals you run in order to stay acceptable. Burnout is not a sign that you lack discipline. It happens when discipline becomes self-erasure. Every time you override your own needs, you teach yourself to say yes when your body says no, and to push through discomfort instead of listening to it. That ability probably helped you build everything you have. It did for me. But it also quietly trains your nervous system to tie your worth to what you can endure. It teaches you to treat rest as something you have to earn. It makes you believe that saying no is a risk, and that being fully yourself is conditional on the approval of the room. Are these symptoms a failure or a message? At some point, this stops working, and your body starts sending stronger signals: fatigue, irritability, brain fog, resentment, anxiety, numbness. These are not failures. This is feedback. Burnout is not your body betraying you. It is your body refusing to be ignored any longer. How do you actually start recovering from burnout? This brings me back to something Viktor Frankl wrote, words I keep coming back to: When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves. Most people read that and feel only pressure. Another thing to fix. Another way they are falling short. But that is not what it means. What it means is that your agency does not live in the situation. It lives in you. In your capacity to see what is actually happening, clearly and honestly, and to choose something different. You cannot change the situation by pushing harder through it. What you can change is your relationship with the story running underneath it. That is where your agency lives: in the naming, in the seeing, in the moment you recognize the script you were handed for the first time and understand that yes, it was given to you, but you did not choose it. Recovery from burnout begins when you stop confusing your endurance with excellence. Journal prompts to start seeing your script You do not have to fix anything today. Just notice the rules you are following and ask, maybe for the first time, whether you ever actually chose them. Once you see the story, you cannot unsee it. And a story you can see is a story you can change. Sit with these: * What rules am I still following that no longer serve me? * What expectations are quietly shaping my decisions? * What parts of myself have I been editing out just to stay safe? You do not need answers right away. Just let the questions work on you. That is the whole job for now: building self-awareness, naming the script, and seeing it clearly. Those are the steps you need to take before you can rewrite it. You will recover from burnout. Stacey Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Thanks for reading Stacey Stevens | How We Recover From Burnout! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit staceylstevens.substack.com [https://staceylstevens.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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