How We Recover From Burnout
I read something James Clear wrote recently, and I have not been able to stop thinking about it. He said that if you want a plant to grow, you can fuss over it every day, watering it, weeding it, turning it toward the sun. Or you can place it in the right soil and let nature do most of the work. His point was simple. A seed planted in the right spot thrives on its own. Just like we do. Progress is not only about how hard you work. It is also about where you decide to work. Then he asked a question I want to bring to you today. Where is your energy better spent right now: pushing harder, or planting yourself in better ground? The question most high-achievers have quietly stopped asking Most of the women I work with are not asking that question. Not because they have never heard it, but because somewhere along the way, they decided the answer did not apply to them. The wrong soil became their soil. That is just the way it is, they tell themselves. That is just what the job demands. I am only doing what I have to do. So I want to talk about what it costs when you stop questioning the ground you are standing on. And to be clear, I am not talking about someone who is lazy, or someone who has given up, or someone who has checked out. I am talking about the person who has adapted. The one who learned to function in conditions that were never designed to help her grow. She has been growing so efficiently, for so long, that she has stopped noticing the soil is simply wrong for her. The exhaustion that used to feel alarming is just another Tuesday. The disconnection that once troubled her has become so familiar that she calls it part of her personality. The hollow feeling underneath the success gets filed under, “This is just what it costs to perform at this level.” That filing system is the most dangerous thing that happens when we are burned out. It is not the exhaustion itself. It is the moment we start to accept that our exhaustion is inevitable, that it is simply the price we pay, as if it were no big deal at all. What accepting burnout as your fate actually does to you Once we accept the wrong soil as the right soil, we stop looking for better ground. We pour all of our energy into surviving exactly where we are. We try to adapt more efficiently. We try to get better at managing what is genuinely unmanageable. And then we give it a label. We call it resilience. Dedication. Hard work. But it is not resilience. It is surrender dressed up in professional language. Why your body stops sounding the alarm Here is what happens inside your system when burnout becomes your new normal. Your nervous system recalibrates, because it is deeply adaptive. When a threat is persistent and feels unavoidable, your body stops treating it as an emergency and starts treating it as your baseline. The things that were once signals, like exhaustion, disconnection, resentment, irritability, and that quiet sense that something is off, fade into background noise. And background noise does not move us to act. It does not push us to fix anything. It simply accumulates. So the woman who once felt the wrongness of the soil clearly begins to feel it less. Not because anything has improved, but because she has adjusted to it. The gap between who she is and who she could be shrinks, not because she is growing into her potential, but because she has stopped believing it is possible to grow differently. The real cost is your vision of what is possible This is what sitting in burnout and calling it your fate actually does. It costs you far more than energy. It costs you the vision of what is possible. And without that vision, you have nothing left to move toward. Accepting that the level of stress and pressure you carry every single day is “just part of the job” or “just who I am” is not strength. It is not resilience. It is an old story making one final argument that this is all there is. But it is not all there is. Acceptance is honest. Resignation is a trap. I want to make one distinction here, because it matters. There is a difference between accepting what has happened and resigning yourself to what continues. If you accept what happened, meaning the years in the wrong soil, the adaptations your nervous system made, and the version of yourself you became while living in those conditions, that is not weakness. That is honesty. The past happened. It could not have happened any other way. You could not have known what you did not know, and you could not have chosen differently before you had the language to see the choice. Resignation is different. Resignation uses the past as evidence that your future is fixed. It is the old story making its final argument: this is just how it is for someone like you, this is just what it costs, this is just who you are now. That argument feels true. It has years of evidence behind it. But when your evidence comes from the wrong soil, the soil can only tell you what grows in wrong soil. It tells you nothing about what becomes possible when the conditions change. How to recover from burnout: stop adapting and start moving So let me bring James Clear’s question back, but ask it a little differently. Not, “Where is your energy better spent?” We all have things we could be doing that would use our energy more wisely. But we also have to work. We have responsibilities. There are things we simply need to do. So here is the better question: How much longer are you going to stay in soil you already know is wrong? I am not talking about quitting your job, leaving your family, or walking away from your responsibilities. The wrong soil is not always the building you work in. Often, the wrong soil is the nervous system that has adapted to you being burned out, and the story that keeps you there. A few honest starting points: * Name what you have been filing away. Notice the exhaustion, disconnection, and resentment you have been calling “normal,” and let it become a signal again instead of background noise. * Separate acceptance from resignation. Accept what has happened to you. Refuse to accept that it dictates what comes next. * Identify your actual soil. Ask which conditions you have adapted to, and which of them you have the power to change, even slightly. * Protect your vision. Before you decide what is realistic, let yourself remember what is possible. Moving is not easy. Better ground is not always obvious or immediately available. But I can tell you this. Every day you spend adapting to conditions that were never designed for you is a day the real version of you does not get to grow. And let us be honest. We were never built to grow in the wrong soil. We were built for something else entirely. Not because of who the conditions made us, but because of who we are when the conditions finally match who we were always meant to be. I’m Stacey Stevens, and this is how we recover from burnout. Frequently asked questions about recovering from burnout Is burnout just part of a demanding career? No. Burnout can feel inevitable in high-pressure professions, but it is not the price of ambition. It is what happens when you keep operating by rules and conditions that were never designed to support you. Naming it as a problem rather than a personality trait is the first step to recovery. What is the difference between acceptance and resignation in burnout? Acceptance is acknowledging what has already happened to you without blaming yourself for it. Resignation is treating that past as proof that your future cannot change. Acceptance frees you to move. Resignation keeps you stuck. Can you recover from burnout without quitting your job? Often, yes. The wrong soil is not always your workplace. Frequently it is the conditioned nervous system response and the internal story that keep you surviving instead of growing. Shifting those can change your experience long before you change anything external. Why does burnout start to feel normal? Because the nervous system is adaptive. When stress is constant and feels unavoidable, your body stops treating it as an emergency and resets it as your baseline. The warning signals fade into background noise, which is why so many high-achievers stop noticing how depleted they have become. If this resonated, subscribe so the next piece lands in your inbox, and follow me on LinkedIn to keep the conversation going. You will recover from burnout, Stacey 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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