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Homecoming's avatar

The hidden shame of burnout isn't exhaustion. It's self-erasure" — this stopped me. Because exhaustion we know how to name. Self-erasure we've spent years calling something else entirely.

What strikes me most is that self-erasure rarely feels like losing yourself in the moment. It feels like devotion. Like being a good partner, a committed employee, a reliable friend.

And I think that's what makes it so hard to catch — because a lot of it is actually a protection strategy. If you give everything, no one can say you didn't care enough. If you disappear into the role completely, there's no "real you" left to be rejected.

The grind doesn't just exhaust you. It gives you a very convincing reason to keep going.

Cat Howland's avatar

Great point: “When you carry that tension through your front door, the people who love you begin to absorb it. Partners of people experiencing burnout can develop symptoms themselves. The grind doesn’t just take you. It reaches for the people standing closest to you.”

The same is true when people are thriving. Data shows they are more likely to have thriving family members and other positive ripple effects in the community. Career well-being is a huge component of thriving. Work has a huge impact on quality of life and that’s too often ignored.

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