Burnout

A tired Caucasian man at a desk, showing signs of exhaustion and stress, exemplifying workplace burnout.

Burnout Happens When There Is Never Enough Time and Energy for What Matters

Burnout does not start with collapse. It starts with math that never works.

There are only twenty four hours in a day. Limited energy. Limited focus. And a growing list of things that must get done.

Work tasks that come with deadlines and expectations. Family responsibilities that do not pause when you are tired. Messages that sit unanswered and quietly pull at your attention. Appointments you have to remember because if you do not, something falls apart. Problems that are now your responsibility to solve. Emergencies that were never planned but somehow still land on your plate. The list refreshes every day. Sometimes every hour.

You cross things off, but more appears. Some of it matters deeply. Some of it feels pointless. Most of it feels urgent in one way or another.

 

Urgent versus Important

Burnout settles in when the urgent always wins and the important keeps getting postponed.

You are always choosing what gets done and what gets dropped. And no matter what you choose, something important loses.

Urgent tasks demand immediate attention. Emails marked urgent. Last minute requests. Small fires that need to be put out right now. You handle the urgent things because they shout the loudest. 

The important things are quieter. The things that would actually make life feel more fulfilling. Rest. Health. Self-Care. Relationships. Creativity. Presence. Adventure. Balance. 

When burnout sets in, urgent tasks consume all available time and energy. Important things get postponed again and again.

Not because they do not matter, but because there is never enough left for them.

Over time, this creates exhaustion and resentment toward a life that feels reactive instead of intentional.

Burnout and Living in Survival Mode

When you are burned out, life feels like constant resistance. Always trying to keep your head barely above water while swimming upstream. There is no true finish line. No moment where everything is done and you can finally rest without guilt. Even rest becomes something you have to earn, schedule, or justify. Rest feels unproductive. You cannot simply enjoy the presence of a quiet moment without feeling the urge to do something productive. There is no stillness. 

So you stay tense. You move fast. You live slightly ahead of yourself, always preparing for the next thing. Burnout lives there. In the constant push to do more, faster, and better. In the feeling that no matter how hard you try, it is never enough.

It is what happens when human limits meet endless demand.

And until the weight of constant demand is met with honesty and compassion, burnout will keep growing quietly.

Living in a Fast-Paced, Comparison-Driven World

We live in a world that never slows down. It is impossible not to notice those who “do it all” — the people who work tirelessly, achieve remarkable things, and somehow keep their relationships, family, and personal life not only intact but thriving. It is tempting to compare yourself to them, to measure your worth against their accomplishments.

In reality, everyone has limits, everyone makes trade-offs, and everyone only has twenty four hours in a day. Yet the pressure to keep up quietly wears on us, making even small setbacks feel like personal failures.

present moment

Early Signs of Burnout to Pay Attention To

Burnout rarely hits all at once. It often starts subtly, showing up in ways you might dismiss at first. Constant fatigue, irritability, and difficulty concentrating are common. You might notice a loss of motivation, feeling emotionally flat, or that things you once enjoyed no longer bring satisfaction.

Sleep can feel unrefreshing, or you may struggle to fall asleep or stay asleep. Anxiety, work stress, or a sense of dread can creep in, making even small tasks feel heavy. You might become more reactive, snapping at people or feeling unusually sensitive.

Tasks that used to be simple start to take longer, and procrastination or avoidance becomes common. Even when you try to rest, it feels unproductive, and moments meant for calm seem overshadowed by what still needs to be done. Appetite changes, headaches, muscle tension, or other unexplained physical symptoms can appear.

Burnout and the Fear of Slowing Down

One of the hardest parts of burnout is that slowing down feels risky.

People worry that if they stop, everything will fall apart. That they will disappoint others. That they will lose control.

So they keep going, even when they are exhausted. Healing begins when you start questioning which urgencies are real and which ones have simply become habits.

Ask yourself which tasks truly need your attention and which are fueled by habit, expectation, or fear. Not every email, meeting, or errand is urgent. Not every moment of stress requires action. Sometimes, the real danger is pretending everything is a crisis when it is not.

For perfectionists, people-pleasers and high achievers, this pressure is often amplified. You are conditioned to aim for flawless work, to be the first to respond, to outperform your own standards and everyone else’s. Success and self-worth are tied to achievement, and slowing down feels foreign. Even small mistakes or pauses trigger guilt and anxiety. The drive that has brought accomplishment also keeps you in constant motion, leaving little room to breathe.

The drive to do everything, to excel, to be admired, often hides a fear that you are not enough as you are. You push forward because stillness feels like weakness, because slowing down feels like losing yourself.

If you recognize yourself in these words, know that you do not have to face burnout alone. Asking for support is not a sign of failure; it is a step toward living a life that feels human, sustainable, and worth showing up for.

 

Registered Clinical Counsellor, Registered Psychotherapist, RCC, RP, ICBC counsellor, ICBC counselling

About the Author

Jessica Miskiewicz is a Canadian Registered Clinical Counsellor, Psychotherapist and Owner of Journey Therapy. She provides virtual therapy sessions across Canada, helping clients build resilience, self-awareness, and lasting emotional growth. Click here to learn more. 

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