The 3 Degrees of Burn Out

The 3 Degrees of Burn Out

How do you know if you are starting to burnout??

The difficulty can be that ‘burnout’ sounds very black and white. You are either burned out or you aren’t. But in our interviews with successful people who burned out, we heard that the experience was more like a progression. The stories we heard suggested there were ‘three degrees of burn’.

1st degree burn - heavy period of stress, feelings of overwhelm, but continuing to work effectively

2nd degree burn - chronic stress, feelings of fatigue along with decreasing motivation and effectiveness. Moving into ‘survival’ mode

3rd degree burn - full experience of burnout, mind and body start to shut down, simple tasks become unmanageable, emotions become unpredictable and hard to control

The level of burn you are experiencing is important to know because the solutions required at each degree of burn are different. Your company’s meditation app is helpful at 1st degree burn but hopeless at 3rd degree. In the interviews we were able to learn from people what type of interventions had proved most effective for different degrees of burnout (note, below are the individual level interventions, I will share org level interventions in a different post):

Individual level interventions

For 1st degree burn – Rest and recovery

Increase self-care, take more breaks, avoid work in the evenings, find an activity which recharges you such as yoga, exercise, gardening, take a vacation to replenish, then return to work

For 2nd degree burn – Changes to work and mindset

Establish firmer boundaries, learn to separate identity from work, say ‘no’ more often, prioritise and protect time for activities and hobbies outside of work. Check values alignment with current role and career. Use a coach to help support your changes and new habits

For 3rd degree burnDeep life changes

Stop work for an extended period, work with a counsellor/ therapist, deeply examine your self-talk, beliefs and values, consider a change in job, company or career. Rest is necessary, but not sufficient. There must be true change or the burnout pattern will repeat. This path though arduous, often leads to post traumatic growth, and a happier more aligned career and life?

It seems to me that ‘burnout’ is too broad a term. We need to provide more nuance so people can better identify what they are experiencing and the depth of intervention they might need to undertake. In the interviews we heard many stories of organizations offering 1st degree interventions, ("Take a few days off") to 3rd degree burnout. It doesn't work.

?I’ll leave you with a few comments from interviewees which informed the above. I found them helpful and you might too.

“I starting doing all the usual stupid shit, yoga at lunch, using a meditation app for 10 mins. Looking back, it was all just Band-Aids. I needed true interventions.”?

“Don’t underestimate the impact of sustained stress. There comes a point where you can’t bring yourself back. Once the pot turns black you can’t bring it back.”

“What was weird was I really wish someone would have said to me, ‘You’re burning out’. But no one did because burnout was not talked about at our work. It had a stigma. Don’t wait to be rescued, people might not tell you what they are seeing. Take action.”

“People in our organization never shared that they’d burned out. They just disappeared and were not seen again. We need to start talking about this topic more.”

“I got a coach and counsellor. You think you are alone and are the only person who has experienced this. You are not. It really helped to share. I wish I had of reached out earlier.”

You can read more about our research project and key insights here - https://www.nicholaspetrie.com/general-8

Thanks to our research team on the Perform/Grow/ Thrive Project for uncovering these insights and more to come:?Ryan Bricker ,?Mitchell Stallard ,?Michael Campbell ,?Lisa Mackay ,?Meera Craston ,?Iain Cleland ,?Dr Cherrie Daley ,?Matt Bartlett-Bond ,?Karrie Wainscott ,?Dana Mix, ?Dr. Pylin Chuapetcharasopon ,?Asher James ,?Melissa Muirhead ,?Ruth Prendergast ,?Simone Falkenstein

Lizzie Rhodes James

I enable leaders to have ??Confidence to deliver ??Communicate with impact ?? Resilient whatever the context ??Lower stress levels ??Greater career momentum ??Increased energy ??and the balance they deserve

1 年

simple, clear and practical - what is the bets question we should be asking ourselves each day?

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Melanie Eyres

Facilitator, Consultant & Certified Organisational Coach, Level Two, IECL, Everything DiSC Accredited Facilitator, Accredited Adeption coach for GPS Indicator

1 年

Nick this is such great stuff! I showed it to few people this week and every one of them found this resonated for them. Can't wait to catch up on the rest of your research here - it will help so many! Thank you ??

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Dr Natasha Sayer

Chartered Consultant Clinical Psychologist | Executive Coach

1 年

Very helpful, particularly around which professions are the best supports at each stage. Thank you.

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Ric Kelly Ph.D

Author / Company Founder / Leadership and Organisational Development Specialist and Coach

1 年

Thanks, Nick! This is a valuable spectrum to help you self-identify where you are burning.

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