The Day It Got a Name

For a long time, I avoided the word burnout.

Not intentionally I just didn’t know it belonged to me.

I had other words.
Better words.
Kinder words.

Fatigue.
Mental fatigue.
Overextended.
An unsustainable pace.
Functioning, not living.

Those felt accurate. Respectable, even.
They explained why I could still perform, still deliver, still show up —but felt strangely absent while doing it.

Then one day, I was talking to a friend.

He described a numbness I recognized instantly. Not sadness. Not depression. Just… flat. Disconnected. Like life was happening one pane of glass away. I wanted to help him, so I did what I always do —I researched.

Articles. Checklists. Personal stories.

And halfway through, something uncomfortable happened.

I stopped reading about him
and started reading about me.

The symptoms lined up too cleanly to ignore. The exhaustion that sleep didn’t fix. The irritability without a clear cause. The loss of joy in things that once mattered. The constant sense of responsibility paired with a growing emptiness underneath it.

And there it was.

A word.

Burnout.

Not as an accusation.
Not as a failure.
But as a shared human experience.

That was the eureka moment —not the diagnosis, but the relief.
If it had a name, it meant I wasn’t alone.
If others were going through it, it meant there were paths forward.
If it was studied, discussed, written about —then maybe it wasn’t something to power through in silence.

I didn’t suddenly feel better that day.

But for the first time, I felt seen —by strangers, by research, by language itself.

And that changed everything.

“Sometimes you don’t know what you’re feeling until you feel something different.”
Lost in Translation (2003)

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