Tag: BurnoutRe

  • Burned out? What To Do If Your Company Doesn’t Help

    Burned out? What To Do If Your Company Doesn’t Help

    You’ve hit that point where “just push through” isn’t working anymore. You’re exhausted, disengaged, maybe even resentful. But when you look around, no one at your company seems to notice.

    This is the situation one of my clients described this week.

    How about you? If you’ve tried raising the issue and been met with silence, surface-level wellness programs, or the classic “we’re all stressed” response… I see you. Burnout isn’t a lack of resilience. It’s a sign of chronic misalignment between you and the environment you’re working in.

    1. Understand What’s Really Happening

    When things feel off, it’s tempting to blame yourself. But burnout is rarely just about the individual. Dr. Christina Maslach’s research on the Six Areas of Worklife offers a map to understand where that misalignment lives:

    • Workload: You have too much to do and not enough recovery time.
    • Control: You lack autonomy over priorities or how work gets done.
    • Reward: Effort isn’t recognized or meaningfully rewarded.
    • Community: Relationships feel strained or disconnected.
    • Fairness: There’s inequity in how work, credit, or opportunity is distributed.
    • Values: What matters to you no longer aligns with what’s valued around you.

    Take a moment to reflect:

    Which two or three areas feel most out of sync right now?

    Naming it helps you see the problem as systemic, not personal failure.

    2. Rebuild From the Inside Out

    Even if your company isn’t addressing burnout, you can start rebuilding your foundation. Your body and brain are your most important assets. Remember, both need repair time.

    Start small and consistent:

    • Prioritize real rest and quality sleep. A consistent sleep schedule is a good starting point.
    • Reconnect with movement that restores energy, not drains it. A daily walk in nature is restorative on many levels.
    • Rebuild nutrition habits that stabilize mood and focus. Sugar hijacks thinking and behavior.

    These are not luxuries. They are preconditions for clarity, resilience, and good decision-making.

    3. Strengthen Your Emotional Intelligence

    When you’re operating in a high-stress or unsupportive environment, emotional intelligence becomes your most powerful ally.

    It begins with self-awareness – the ability to notice your own physical, emotional, and mental state before reacting. That’s often where burnout starts to reveal itself: irritability, brain fog, cynicism, or emotional detachment.

    In those moments, pause… Take one slow breath in and one slow breath out… Ask yourself… “What’s happening in me right now?”

    That short pause regulates your nervous system and creates just enough space to respond rather than react.

    From there, emotional intelligence expands into social awareness; that is, reading the cues of others and the energy in the room. You start to see dynamics more clearly: who’s escalating, who’s checked out, where your influence actually lies.

    And finally, it extends to self-management. This is choosing how to adjust your tone, pace, or words to meet the moment without losing yourself.

    This isn’t just emotional control. It’s leadership in action. Because when you can regulate your inner state, you regain access to calm, clarity, and choice – the very things burnout tries to take away.

    4. Decide: Heal Here or Move On

    Once you understand the misalignment, you face a choice: can you heal within this system, or choose to move on.

    If you stay, you may need to renegotiate workload, boundaries, or support. If you go, you’re not “giving up.” You’re choosing alignment over depletion.

    Either way, the goal is the same: reclaim your agency. Use the Six Areas of Worklife to assess future opportunities. You don’t want to fall into burnout again.

    5. You Don’t Have to Figure It Out Alone

    Burnout recovery is not just about bouncing back. It’s about building something stronger and more sustainable.

    If you’d like a framework to guide that process, contact me for a free copy of my eBook, Your Personal Guide to Burnout and Recovery. It walks you through the steps to rebuild your energy, clarity, and sense of purpose.

    Because when your company doesn’t address burnout, you still have a choice:

    • To protect your energy.
    • To rebuild your foundation of health and wellbeing
    • To lead yourself back to alignment with what matters most to you.

    Thinking about the Six Areas of Worklife, which one is most important for you to address right now?

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    I wrote an article on Nine Ways to Recognize Burnout.