Why "Rest More" Is the Wrong Advice for Burned-Out Founders
Those who follow me know I’ve been talking about a strategic pause.
Some people hear “pause” and translate it as rest.
But I am a founder myself. I know the late nights that blur into early mornings.
When I say pause, I don’t mean rest.
I mean: give yourself space to find out who you are when you’re not performing as the founder.
Rest is cute, rest is necessary, but it’s not the actual cause of burnout, nor the recipe. So I want to talk about the identity crisis that most burnout founders are experiencing.
Science Calls It Depersonalization. Founders Call It “I don’t know what happened to me.”
I realized that rest alone wasn’t enough to recover from burnout when I returned from my vacation and found all my stress piling up just as before, but social psychologist Christina Maslach has thoroughly researched this topic and grounded it in scientific evidence. [1]
She identified three core dimensions of burnout:
* Exhaustion
* Depersonalization
* Reduced personal accomplishment.
Notice what’s at the center: a growing estrangement from yourself and your work.
A week in Bodrum won’t fix estrangement.
What Actually Happens When Founders Burnout
The standard burnout narrative goes like this: you work too hard, you deplete your resources, you need to recharge.
A founders’ life goes beyond just working hard.
They fuse their identity with their company.
Their startup, which is the result of what they do, becomes who they are.
That means when the company struggles, they feel it as an existential problem.
Psychologist Patricia Linville’s research on self-complexity explains the mechanism: people whose sense of self is concentrated in a single domain experience more extreme emotional swings when that domain is threatened.
A founder whose entire identity lives inside their company has no psychological buffer. Every business setback hits at full force because there’s nothing else to absorb the impact.
When your startup has a brutal day, you need other “buckets” to pour into. If you can leave the office and still feel like a “great marathon runner,” a “present father,” or a “skilled painter,” those roles act as emotional shock absorbers.
Consider getting back into that hobby you used to love but gave up :)
Three Questions That Actually Do Something
I can hear you asking, “Beliz, so what should we do in concrete?”
Start here 👇
* Who were you before this company?
Don’t think of your CV or origin story for pitch decks. Tell me about the actual human underneath.
* What do you value that has nothing to do with performance?
When pushed to your limits, you can realize that your entire value system has been overtaken by metrics.
* What would you choose to build if outcome were irrelevant?
This question tends to produce either silence or tears. Both are useful data.
Research by Amy Wrzesniewski at Yale on “job crafting” shows that people who sustain long-term engagement in demanding work are those who maintain a clear connection between their daily actions and their core values. [2]
Identity coherence predicts resilience.
The Conversation Everyone Avoids
Telling a burned-out founder to rest is, in some ways, a kindness that protects everyone from a more confronting conversation.
Because the questions like who are you, and is this still the life you’re choosing? is uncomfortable. For the founder. For the people around them who depend on their momentum.
But it’s the only question that actually leads somewhere.
Rest will make you functional again. An identity reset will make you intentional again.
Those are very different things.
This is the kind of thing I wish someone had said to me earlier. We’ll figure it out together.
I ran this essay through an AI podcast generator. Two AI voices picked it apart and added a few angles I hadn’t thought about. If you want to hear it discussed rather than read it, the link is below.
🎧 Listen to the Deep Dive [https://open.substack.com/pub/beliz/p/rest-doesnt-fix-burnout?r=273gn7&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web]
References
* Linville, P. W. (1987). Self-complexity as a cognitive buffer against stress-related illness and depression. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 52(4), 663–676. Link [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3572732/]
* Wrzesniewski, A., & Dutton, J. E. (2001). Crafting a Job: Revisioning Employees as Active Crafters of Their Work. Academy of Management Review, 26(2), 179–201. Link [https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/amr.2001.4378011]
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