A common ailment is going around, and you probably know someone plagued
by it. Caused in part by social media, the 24-hour news cycle and the
pressure to check work email outside of office hours, it could hit you,
too — especially if you don’t know how to nip it in the bud.
Burnout is everywhere.
Books are being published about it, high-powered medical groups are raising alarms and ordinary people are feeling it. A recent report from
Harvard and Massachusetts medical organizations declared physician
burnout a public health crisis. It pointed out the problem not only
harms doctors but also patients.
“Burnout is associated with increasing medical errors,” the paper said.
Ninety-five percent of human resource leaders say burnout is sabotaging
workplace retention, often because of overly heavy workloads, one survey found. Poor management contributes to the burnout epidemic.
“Organizations typically reward employees who are putting in longer
hours and replace workers who aren’t taking on an increased workload,
which is a systematic problem that causes burnout in the first place,”
says Dan Schawbel, research director of Future Workplace, the firm that
conducted the survey along with Kronos.
"Mommy Burnout," a book published last year by psychologist Sheryl
Ziegler, resonated with women who had run themselves into the ground
trying to be super mom (and dads made it clear they were burned out,
too).
A new book, “Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle,” by
sisters Emily Nagoski (a health educator) and Amelia Nagoski (a choral
conductor who was hospitalized for burnout) aims to help women, in
particular, live a more balanced life.
Burnout is a term easily tossed around, the way somebody might claim to
be starving when they’re simply hungry, or freezing when cold. That’s
harmless if a person is describing a tired day or week.
But somebody who is actually burned out should be prepared to take
serious action because it’s a condition that needs attention.
Amelia Nagoski was juggling the demands of a doctoral program when she
experienced such severe abdominal pain she was hospitalized. Doctors
concluded it was “just stress” and told her to relax. Turns out, she had
stress-induced inflammation from burnout.
Ziegler defines burnout as “chronic stress gone awry.” The big three
symptoms are emotional exhaustion, cynicism and feeling ineffective,
according to the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI),
a survey designed to measure employee burnout in the workforce. Other
symptoms can include frequent colds or sicknesses, insomnia and a
tendency to alleviate stress in unhealthy ways, such as with too much
alcohol or online shopping.
Part of the difficulty of pinpointing true burnout may be because
burnout is a nonmedical term — at least in the United States. The
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders doesn’t list it as
an illness. But other countries including
France, Denmark and Sweden, do recognize burnout syndrome and consider
it to be a legitimate reason to take a sick day from work.
“Everybody intuitively recognizes what burnout feels like in their
bodies and their feelings and their thoughts,” Emily Nagoski says. “It’s
like art: You know it when you see it.”
Even without an official diagnosis — or agreed upon definition —
American researchers have studied burnout for decades. Psychologist Herbert Freudenberger popularized
the term in the 1970s, basing it on his work with drug addicts where he
witnessed their veins burn out from needle injections and their
cigarettes burn down. Soon after, psychologist Christina Maslach
developed the MBI.
Burnout is caused by chronic stress, not stressors, the Nagoskis say in
their book. It’s important to differentiate the two. Stressors are
external: to-do lists, financial problems or anxiety about the future.
Stress, on the other hand, “is the neurological and physiological shift
that happens in your body when you encounter [stressors],” the Nagoskis
write.
To fix burnout, people need to address the stress itself. They must
allow their body to complete its stress response cycle. Instead, people
tend to focus on stressors. “They assume their stress will go away if
they’re on top of things, if they’re accomplishing things and constantly
checking things off their to-do list,” Emily Nagoski says.
That’s a lesson Paula Davis-Laack learned the hard way.
Davis-Laack practiced commercial real estate law before the Great
Recession of the late 2000s. The fast-paced environment gave her a
constant adrenaline high as she closed deals and kept so busy that she
barely left time to grab a handful of peanuts for lunch. Her frequent
headaches, stomach aches and colds threatened to drag her down, but no
doctor could give her a diagnosis.
One day, drafting a document in her office, she says she felt like she
couldn’t breathe. She bolted out of her chair and raced to a nearby
health clinic. “Help me!” she gasped. She was having a panic attack.
After two more medical crises landed her in the emergency room, she
feared a mental or physical collapse if she kept going. She decided to
walk away from the law.
“It was like a 50,000-pound weight lifted off my shoulders,” she says.
Still unsure of what was wrong, she poked around the Internet doing
research of her own when she came across information on burnout. “I was
like, ‘Oh my God, this is exactly what happened to me!’ ”
Davis-Laack traces the beginning of her burnout back to her teenage years.
“There were a lot of messages to be a high achiever,” she says. “Those
check-the-box matrix measurements were important to me. I internalized
them.”
The messages took an even stronger hold once she started working.
She returned to graduate school to study well-being, the effects of
stress and their effect on the workplace. In 2013, she opened the Davis Laack Stress & Resilience Institute in Wisconsin. She now teaches workshops on burnout.
For those who suspect they might be on the road to burnout, there are
practical tools to mitigate it. Among others: physical exercise, sleep
and positive social connection (the real kind, not the Facebook kind).
The importance of balance and self-care to prevent burnout likely isn’t
surprising to most.
“There’s nothing fancy about what it would take to turn things around,”
says Ziegler, the “Mommy Burnout” author. “But it’s a huge shift in the
cultural mind-set. That’s the challenge.”
Plus, fixing burnout can feel like adding more stressors. An employee
who takes a lunch break in a park (time in nature reduces stress) might
feel pressured to stay late at the end of the day. A yoga class or walk
is another item to squeeze into the calendar. A mom can’t quit her
parenting job. To address time-management issues, the Nagoskis provide
work sheets in their book to help readers reprioritize activities.
Ziegler suggests setting boundaries with social media. Use the Internet
for help, such as ordering groceries, but limit scrolling to 10 minutes a
day. Also, it’s okay to remove activities from the calendar (or quit
them completely) so you can exercise.
Gender might play a role in burnout, too.
Researchers from the University of Montreal questioned 2,026 people, half women, in 63 different workplaces. Their work, published in the Annals of Work Exposure and Health, found that women reported higher levels of burnout.
One reason was because women have more work-and-family conflicts. The
women’s rights movement was “supposed to give women choices,” Ziegler
says. “Sounds awesome, but it became you need to do it all. You need to
run your house and be the perfect wife and mom and work. The stress on
women got higher.”
Other studies have shown that rates of burnout are more or less equal
among genders, although males and females experience it differently. A
study published in BMC Public Health showed
that female physicians are susceptible to burnout from emotional
exhaustion while male physicians to burnout because of cynicism.
Steven Manning remembers the night he realized he had become pessimistic
about practicing medicine. One Wednesday at his family care practice in
Williamston, N.C., he worked on electronic medical records well past 9
p.m. His wife and kids waited for him at home. He had seen about 30
patients that day but felt he hadn’t given a single one the highest
level of care because the appointment times were too short. Yet the
hospital and insurance companies kept pressuring him to see more
patients a day, not fewer.
“I began to think, ‘I’m burned out. How did I get to this point? I don’t
enjoy coming into work.’ ” It wasn’t too late to make a change. Within a
year, Manning started a direct primary care practice, a model where
patients pay a membership fee, negating the need for insurance billing.
Without mounds of paperwork, he had time to do what he truly wanted:
help patients.
“It brought back the joy of medicine I felt I was missing,” he says.
“Before, I barely had time to address my patients’ diabetes,
hypertension and heart failure, let alone spend time taking a mental and
spiritual inventory.”
Now, he talks with patients about depression, anxiety and stress and
notices many patients are burned out, especially mothers of young kids.
Lawyer and mom Anna Swain knows the feeling.
She poured her heart and soul into fixing the troubled lives of
criminals who had messed up with drugs and violence only to wind up
devastated when her hard work seemed pointless.
“I’d call my mom every day on my way home from the office crying,” she
says. “I was either sad over a client who was having her third
meth-addicted baby or crying over a shockingly rude email by opposing
counsel.” When she added motherhood to the mix, her feelings of failure
increased. “I didn’t know what I was doing. Nobody does with a first
child.”
Burned out on “doing the next thing I was supposed to do to be a good
girl and get ahead,” she knew she needed downtime, but she was afraid to
take a step back from the hamster wheel. “Boredom goes against
everything we’re told to do to succeed, achieve and be proactive,” Swain
says. “Even when I clean the house, I think, ‘Well, I should take the
opportunity to listen to a podcast. Maybe I can grow as a person.’
Honestly, I’d grow more if I chose to be in silence and let my mind
wander.”
She tried it. Rocking her baby to sleep, she wanted to watch the TV
series “Game of Thrones” or scroll through her phone. But she couldn’t.
One wrong move — or the glow of a screen — would wake her baby up. At
first, Swain felt angry and resentful at the lack of distractions, but
the stillness gave her an opportunity to daydream. That opened the door
to creativity.
“I started creating little poems and rhymes in my head. I felt
exhilarated,” she says. Eventually, Swain wrote a children’s book. “I
felt a sense of purpose again,” she says.
The Nagoskis agree that daydreaming during low-demand tasks, having a
creative outlet and engaging with something larger are three more keys
to preventing burnout. They suggest writing your own obituary to find
out what is meaningful to you.
“It sounds dark,” Amelia Nagoski says. “But it makes you think about who you are and what’s important to you.”
Making space in our lives so we’re not so hurried and harried isn’t
easy, especially in a culture that shames slow living, Amelia Nagoski
says. Preventing burnout requires hard decisions. Everyone has the same
amount of time in a day: 24 hours. To rest — whether with a walk, an
extra hour of sleep or a talk with a friend — means something else drops
off the schedule.
At first, you might panic that you’re not “accomplishing” something. But
before long, you may notice you’ve moved farther away from a breaking
point. Your downward spiral will change directions.