Atlas / Shrink Recovering / Cognitive Performance
SC-0004Evidence: strongShrink Recoveringapplied

Burnout

Burnout is rarely caused by one difficult day. It's usually created by too many unrecovered days.

Shrink Definition

Burnout is a state of persistent physical, emotional, and cognitive exhaustion that develops when demands repeatedly exceed recovery over time.

Plain language

Burnout happens when your recovery never catches up with your workload.

Shrink Insight

Recovery isn't the reward for productivity. Recovery is one of the requirements for sustainable productivity.

Why it matters

Burnout affects: Thinking Memory Motivation Relationships Empathy Decision-making Creativity Sleep Physical health Professional performance It's particularly common among physicians, executives, entrepreneurs, caregivers, and other people exposed to prolonged high demand.

Common misunderstanding

People often think burnout means working too many hours. Hours matter. But recovery matters just as much. Someone working sixty hours with adequate recovery may function better than someone working forty hours with none.

Shrink Perspective

The question isn't: "How much work do I have?" The better question is: "How much recovery have I had?"

Shrink Reflection

Where in your life has recovery become optional instead of essential?

Shrink Journal

Describe one area where your energy keeps leaving faster than it returns.

Shrink Step

Protect one recovery period this week as intentionally as you protect an important meeting.

Shrink Minute

Burnout is often less about today's workload and more about months of insufficient recovery.

Shrink Takeaway

Capacity shrinks when recovery disappears.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Burnout has been extensively studied in occupational health, organizational psychology, and medicine. It's generally understood as a response to chronic workplace or caregiving stress that hasn't been successfully managed. Educational discussions should distinguish burnout from clinical depression while recognizing that the two can coexist.

Sources

Maslach (Maslach Burnout Inventory); World Health Organization ICD-11 (occupational phenomenon); American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: landmark attributed