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Burnout: When Exhaustion Becomes a Way of Life

When you live in a world where being productive and staying busy is often encouraged, burnout can develop gradually. What starts off as motivation or having goals may slowly turn into exhaustion, frustration, and even a sense of disconnection from your life.

It may feel like you’re always on, but somehow getting less done. Or like even the smallest tasks require an overwhelming amount of energy. Eventually, it can feel like you’re running on empty with no chance to refill.

While burnout is often associated with being tired, it is actually a deeper sense of emotional, mental, and even physical exhaustion.

What Is Burnout?

Burnout is a condition of exhaustion resulting from prolonged periods of stress, often related to work, school, caregiving, or ongoing responsibility. It can show up as fatigue, lack of motivation, irritability, or feeling disconnected from things that once brought you joy.

It is not a weakness or a lack of discipline. Burnout often happens to people who are passionate, responsible, and highly motivated. The difference is that they have not had enough opportunity to rest, recover, or take care of themselves.

Essentially, burnout is your mind and body telling you that something needs to change.

What Contributes to Burnout?

Several things may contribute to or increase the risk of burnout over time:

  • Chronic stress: Going too long without adequate rest or recovery.
  • Lack of boundaries: Difficulty separating work, school, or responsibilities from personal time.
  • High expectations: Pressure to always be “on,” perform, or meet impossible standards.
  • Lack of support: Feeling like you have to carry everything on your own.

What It Looks Like in Everyday Life

Burnout may show up in ways like:

  • Feeling exhausted all the time, even after trying to rest.
  • Losing interest in things you used to enjoy.
  • Having trouble concentrating or getting things done.
  • Feeling irritable, distant, or disconnected from others.
  • Feeling overwhelmed by responsibilities that once felt manageable.

What Can Help

Recovering from burnout is usually gradual. Small steps can begin to make a meaningful difference:

  • Rest intentionally: Give yourself permission to rest without guilt.
  • Set boundaries: Be honest about what you can and cannot take on.
  • Simplify priorities: Focus on what matters most and let go of what is not essential.
  • Reconnect with yourself: Make space for things that bring you joy, meaning, or relief.
  • Reach out: Talk to someone when things feel overwhelming.

How ShareWell Supports Burnout Recovery

At ShareWell, we provide a space where you don’t have to carry everything on your own. Sharing experiences with others who understand can help reduce the isolation that often comes with burnout.

We believe rest is not something you have to earn. It’s something you deserve. With the right support and space to pause, it’s possible to regain energy, reconnect with yourself, and move forward in a way that feels more balanced and sustainable.

If you’d like support recovering from burnout in a caring community, join a peer support group today.

To view our sessions related to burnout, click here.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is burnout?

Burnout is a state of emotional, mental, and physical exhaustion caused by ongoing stress and overwhelm. It can leave someone feeling drained, disconnected, unmotivated, and unable to recover with short breaks alone.

What are common signs of burnout?

Common signs of burnout include constant exhaustion, irritability, trouble concentrating, feeling emotionally numb, losing interest in things you used to care about, and feeling overwhelmed by everyday responsibilities.

What causes burnout?

Burnout is often caused by prolonged stress without enough recovery. It can be linked to work, school, caregiving, family pressure, lack of boundaries, high expectations, or feeling like you have to carry too much on your own.

How is burnout different from everyday stress?

Everyday stress usually comes and goes, while burnout tends to build over time and feels more persistent. Instead of just feeling pressured, someone experiencing burnout may feel depleted, detached, and unable to recharge.

What can help with burnout?

Helpful steps can include resting intentionally, setting clearer boundaries, reducing overload where possible, reconnecting with supportive people, and making space for recovery without guilt. Burnout often improves through consistent support and realistic changes over time.