What One Person Can Do to Help with Burnout
Is there someone in your life who you think is on the verge of burnout? Maybe it’s a person you supervise or a friend or partner.
?How would you know?? The World Health Organization defines occupational burnout as a syndrome … resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed.
According to the WHO, burnout has three dimensions: 1) feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion; 2) increased mental distance from one’s job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one's job; and 3) a sense of ineffectiveness and lack of accomplishment.
Here is the story of Paula Davis that brings to life the three dimensions of burnout. After experiencing extreme burnout, Paula was able to get back on track and go on to share her wisdom with others. She is founder of the Stress & Resilience Institute, an organization that provides education on workplace resilience and burnout prevention. (Edited for brevity.)
“My burnout story starts back in 2008. If you had met me then, you would have seen a successful lawyer, on top of her game, closing several multi-million-dollar commercial real estate deals each month. You may have even thought, “She has it all.” But here’s what you would have missed.
First, I was exhausted, and it was a different kind of tired than I had ever experienced. Getting out of bed to go to work had become exceedingly difficult, if not emotionally painful…Weekends weren’t long enough to fully recover (even when I didn’t work), and vacations, when I actually took them, provided only temporary relief…
Second, I had become cynical, even by lawyer standards. People generally just started to bug me and rub me the wrong way…Disconnecting from people was unusual for me, and (yet) I just wanted to be left alone in my office.
Third, I started to feel ineffective. I never lost confidence in my ability to be a good lawyer, but I stopped seeing a clear path for myself through the legal profession…
As I discovered more than a year later, those three big warning signs – chronic exhaustion, cynicism and feeling ineffective – are the??three big dimensions of burnout.? Other warning signs include forgetfulness or impaired concentration and attention, getting sick more frequently, anger, anxiety, depression, pessimism, isolation, increased irritability and lack of productivity and poor performance.
Paula’s story is no exception. Spring 2024 data from the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) revealed that 44 percent of the 1,405 people surveyed in the U.S. felt burned out at work, 45 percent felt “emotionally drained” from their work, and 51 percent felt “used up” at the end of the workday.
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In 2022, the Surgeon General of the U.S., Dr. Vivek Murthy, released a Framework for Mental Health & Well-Being in the Workplace, recognizing the strong relationship between work and well-being. This is a powerful and practical guide for shifting workplace practices in a direction that better supports employee mental health and well-being.
Although the strong relationship between workplace conditions and burnout has become better understood, many of us are not in a position to directly influence workplace culture and practices. Are there actions we can take–or not take–to support people we care about who seem to be on the verge of burnout?
?My suggestions below draw from the extensive literature on burnout and build on my own experience as a coach. I’ve identified 4 actions that could help and 2 actions that could hurt.?
What could help:
What Not to Do:
?Okay, so maybe you can’t wave a magic wand and eliminate burnout once and for all. But there are concrete things you can do to support people you know to find their way out of the vicious cycle that burnout produces. Remember to listen more than you advise, avoid judgment, and be present, even when it feels challenging. These acts of support not only help the individual but also foster a culture of care and resilience. And that kind of culture goes a long way toward promoting resilience and wellbeing.
Please share your ideas in the Comments!