The Two Burnouts — Overload And Boreout
Scorri per mostrare il menu
Everyone knows burnout from overwork. Too much, too long, you crash. Classic story.
Here's the version nobody talks about. Burnout from being underused. It's called boreout, named in 2007 by Swiss consultants Werder and Rothlin. Earlier research called it "underchallenged burnout."
The mechanics are the opposite of overload but the result is the same — exhaustion, cynicism, loss of meaning, physical illness.
James
James is a senior engineer at a big tech company. Paid well. Flexible hours. Reports to a disorganized manager. He's been in meaningless meetings for two years. His Jira tickets are bullshit. He works 4 hours a day, hates every minute, and feels just as broken as his friend who works 12.
Most productivity advice assumes you're overloaded. So it tells you to do less, set boundaries, work on focus. If you're actually underused, that advice makes things worse — you double down on doing less of meaningless work.
The Diagnostic
Two questions. Brutal honesty:
- Are you exhausted by too much? → overload burnout. Solutions: fewer commitments, deeper focus, real recovery (most of this course);
- Are you exhausted by not enough? → boreout. Solutions: find something that uses you. Even outside the job. Even unpaid. A side project, volunteer work, learning something hard. Sometimes — the answer is changing the job.
Wrong diagnosis means the productivity tools make it worse. Get the diagnosis right first.
This course primarily addresses overload. If after honest reflection you realize you're underused — close this tab and have a difficult conversation with yourself about what you actually want to do with your time. No productivity system fixes a job that doesn't use you.
1. What are the two types of burnout discussed in this chapter?
2. What is a recommended solution if you are experiencing boreout according to the chapter
Grazie per i tuoi commenti!
Chieda ad AI
Chieda ad AI
Chieda pure quello che desidera o provi una delle domande suggerite per iniziare la nostra conversazione