6 Signs You’re Burnt Out, Not Lazy6 Signs You’re Burnt Out, Not Lazy6 Signs You’re Burnt Out, Not Lazy6 Signs You’re Burnt Out, Not Lazy6 Signs You’re Burnt Out, Not Lazy

6 Signs You’re Burnt Out, Not Lazy

There’s actually a lot of overlap between laziness and burnout that can make it difficult to differentiate between the two.

Why does it seem like you spend most of your time in bed lying down and not doing much lately? Are you someone who easily gets tired and doesn’t feel like doing anything? Do you label this kind of behavior as mere laziness and nothing more? There's actually a lot of overlap between laziness and burnout that can make it difficult to differentiate between the two.

Burnout is a negative state of emotional, physical, and mental exhaustion caused by excessive stress and inability to cope with it. And as of 2010, a survey reported that approximately 75% of adults in the United States alone have experienced symptoms of burnout, with over 40% of cases being more severe. Now, more than ever, it’s become imperative to educate and better understand the nature of burnout.

So with that set, here are six telltale signs that what you're experiencing right now isn’t actually laziness, but burnout.

1. You feel disconnected from everything.

Are you going through the motions of every day as if on autopilot? Is there a persistent feeling of being detached from your own self? If you’re suffering from burnout, one of the things you might be experiencing, but don’t quite realize or understand, is deep depersonalization.

People experiencing deep depersonalization are most commonly those struggling with trauma. Reports describe feeling a strange sort of emotional numbness or emptiness as if they were watching life from outside of themselves. They don’t feel like themselves anymore. They don’t feel engaged by anything, and they constantly struggle with the overwhelming sense of helplessness and inability to take back control of their lives.

2. You used to be motivated.

Laziness is a character trait. And character traits tend to remain stable over time.

A lazy person never feels like exerting effort or applying themselves to things. But if you used to be self-motivated and high-achieving, often excelling in certain areas, and have only recently become exhausted, apathetic, and unmotivated, then it’s more likely that you’re suffering from burnout and not laziness like most people would think.

3. You used to be passionate.

A clear difference between someone who’s burnt out and someone who’s lazy is that the former used to have things they were passionate about but may now be struggling to find interest or enjoyment in anymore. Whether it’s a talent, a sport, or just your academic or professional performance in general, burnout can make it hard for you to do the things you once loved or felt passionate about.

You might even come to hate or resent it because of how much you overworked yourself and pushed yourself to the brink because of it.

4. You've become moody and irritable.

Do you suddenly find yourself snappy and easily irritated? Do you often feel emotionally out of control nowadays and don’t know why? Moodiness and irritability are common, but often overlooked signs of burnout.

So if you start to have trouble controlling your emotions, especially when it never used to be a problem for you. This might be the reason why. Lazy people, on the other hand, are a stark contrast to this. Because they’re often very relaxed, laid back, placid and unaffected by things.

5. You’ve neglected your self care.

One of the most distressing warning signs that someone may be emotionally and physically burnt out is if you start neglecting your self-care and socially withdraw from others. There are concerning changes in your eating and/or sleeping patterns. You stop making an effort to groom yourself or look good. And you tend to spend most of your time by yourself doing nothing. Because you’re so easily exhausted by even the simplest of tasks.

6. These changes happened gradually.

The difference between being burnt out and laziness are starkly in the fact that you weren’t always this way. Finally but perhaps most importantly, something you should know about burnout is that it develops in stages. So all the points mentioned before, losing in ties to motivation, especially in things we used to love feeling detached from yourself and disconnected from everything around you, socially withdrawing and neglecting your self-care won’t just have happened overnight.

Studies show that there are actually 5 major stages of burnout, each with increasing degrees of severity. The honeymoon phase, the onset of stress, chronic stress, burnout and habitual burnout.

Many people begin to experience symptoms as early as the second phase. when there is still a modern amount of stress, but optimism, interest, motivation and performance start declining.

And by the time you reach the fifth and final stage, burnout has already become so embedded in your life. That the persistent mental and physical fatigue become more intense and harder to treat making you more vulnerable to developing depression and anxiety.

Spotting the signs of burnout early makes it all the more easier for you to get help and recover from it. That’s why it’s so important to raise awareness about burnout instead of simply dismissing it as laziness like most people tend to do.

Từ vựng nổi bật

Dưới đây là danh sách từ vựng bạn cần nắm rõ để hiểu nội dung bài đọc:

Từ vựng

Phiên âm

Loại từ

Nghĩa

label

/ˈleɪ.bəl/

(v)

gán cho, dán nhãn

overlap

/ˌəʊ.vəˈlæp/

(n, v)

sự chồng chéo; chồng chéo lên nhau

differentiate

/ˌdɪf.əˈren.ʃi.eɪt/

(v)

phân biệt

exhaustion

/ɪɡˈzɔːs.tʃən/

(n)

sự kiệt sức

cope with

/kəʊp wɪð/

(phr.)

đối phó với, đương đầu với

imperative

/ɪmˈper.ə.tɪv/

(a)

cấp bách, quan trọng

telltale

/ˈtel.teɪl/

(a)

rõ ràng, dễ nhận biết

disconnected

/ˌdɪs.kəˈnek.tɪd/

(a)

mất kết nối, tách biệt

autopilot

/ˈɔː.təʊˌpaɪ.lət/

(n)

chế độ tự động

detached

/dɪˈtætʃt/

(a)

tách biệt, thờ ơ

depersonalization

/ˌdiːˌpɜː.sən.əl.aɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/

(n)

sự mất cảm giác về bản thân

numbness

/ˈnʌm.nəs/

(n)

sự tê liệt, mất cảm giác

emptiness

/ˈemp.ti.nəs/

(n)

sự trống rỗng

take back control

/teɪk bæk kənˈtrəʊl/

(phr.)

giành lại quyền kiểm soát

character trait

/ˈkær.ək.tər treɪt/

(n)

đặc điểm tính cách

self-motivated

/ˌselfˈməʊ.tɪ.veɪ.tɪd/

(a)

có động lực nội tại

high-achieving

/ˌhaɪ əˈtʃiː.vɪŋ/

(a)

có thành tích cao

apathetic

/ˌæp.əˈθet.ɪk/

(a)

thờ ơ, hờ hững

resent

/rɪˈzent/

(v)

oán giận, bực bội

push oneself to the brink

/pʊʃ wʌnˈself tu ðə brɪŋk/

(phr.)

tự ép bản thân đến giới hạn

moody

/ˈmuː.di/

(a)

tâm trạng thất thường

irritable

/ˈɪr.ɪ.tə.bəl/

(a)

dễ cáu kỉnh

snappy

/ˈsnæpi/

(a)

cáu kỉnh, dễ bực tức

stark contrast

/stɑːrk ˈkɒntræst/

(phr.)

sự đối lập rõ rệt

overlooked

/ˌoʊvərˈlʊkt/

(a)

bị bỏ qua, không được chú ý đến

laid back

(phr.)

thư thái, thoải mái

 

placid

/ˈplæsɪd/

(a)

điềm tĩnh, bình thản

neglect

/nɪˈɡlekt/

(v)

xao nhãng, bỏ bê

distressing

/dɪˈstrɛsɪŋ/

(a)

gây lo lắng, đau buồn

withdraw from

/wɪðˈdrɔː frɒm/

(phr.)

rút lui khỏi

concerning

/kənˈsɜrnɪŋ/

(a)

đáng lo ngại

groom

/ɡruːm/

(v)

chăm sóc ngoại hình

starkly

/ˈstɑːrkli/

(adv)

một cách rõ rệt

onset

/ˈɒn.sɛt/

(n)

sự khởi đầu (thường là của một điều tiêu cực)

chronic

/ˈkrɒnɪk/

(a)

kéo dài, mãn tính

habitual

/həˈbɪtʃuəl/

(a)

theo thói quen, thường xuyên

embedded

/ɪmˈbɛdɪd/

(a)

ăn sâu vào, gắn chặt vào

fatigue

/fəˈtiːɡ/

(n)

sự mệt mỏi

vulnerable to

/ˈvʌlnərəbl tu/

(phr.)

dễ bị tổn thương bởi

dismiss

/dɪsˈmɪs/

(v)

gạt bỏ, xem nhẹ

lose ties

/luːz taɪz/

(phr.)

mất kết nối xã hội