September 9, 2024

Avoiding Burnout

by Our content team
livecal / © iStockphoto
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Learn to avoid burnout in your career.

It's the beginning of the week, and Mia is already longing for the weekend.

For the past few months she's been feeling out of sorts at work, and she's not quite sure why. For instance, she's always tired, she feels disengaged and unmotivated most days, and she's constantly checking how long it is until she can go home.

Mia is also snapping at her colleagues (something she never used to do), and she feels that there's never enough time to get everything done. This leaves her feeling perpetually behind and demoralized.

Mia is showing classic signs of burnout. In this article, we'll look at what burnout is, what its consequences are, and how you can avoid burnout in your career.

What Is Burnout?

Two important definitions of burnout are:

  • "A state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion caused by long term involvement in emotionally demanding situations." – Ayala Pines and Elliot Aronson.
  • "A state of fatigue or frustration brought about by devotion to a cause, way of life, or relationship that failed to produce the expected reward." – Herbert J. Freudenberger.

Between them, these definitions embrace the essence of burnout, with the first stressing the part that exhaustion plays in it, and the second focusing on the sense of disillusionment that is at its core.

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