When I Forgot What It Felt Like to Not Be “On Duty”
Being off wasn’t a state — it was a memory.
In the early days of practice, there were weekends, evenings, moments of silence that felt unconnected to work. I could be present without tracking performance, progress, or outcomes. But over time that subtle sense of separation slipped away, and I began to feel as though I was always “on duty,” even when I wasn’t at my desk.
Off was once a place — now it felt like a concept from memory.
I forgot what it felt like to simply be.
When Even Free Time Felt Like a Duty
Weekends used to feel like breaks in the rhythm of work, stillness that didn’t carry an agenda. But after years of internalizing obligations — like the way deadlines started echoing outside calendars in “When I Started Hearing Deadlines Everywhere” — free time began to carry its own tension. Even rest had to be planned, scheduled, anticipated.
Rest became another task rather than a state.
Free time didn’t feel free — it felt assigned.
When I Felt Always Available Inside My Mind
Even when I wasn’t at work, I found my mind scanning for what could come next: emails to answer, tasks to prepare for, obligations I had yet to meet. This wasn’t because I was physically on the clock — but because I felt internally as though I was still needed, still expected. The way inner pressure followed me reminded me of the way silence became urgent in “When I Started Hearing Urgency in Every Silence”.
I was always on — even when no one was calling.
Availability became a default — not a choice.
When “Off Duty” Felt Foreign
There were moments when I’d pause — during a walk, at a meal, early in the morning — and notice a tiny, hesitant thought: “Should I be doing something?” The alertness was so ingrained that quiet moments felt incomplete without the sense of obligation attached. The way my calendar once began to feel like a cage in that article was familiar here: the job had shaped not just what I did, but how I existed.
Off duty was a place I barely remembered entering.
Being off felt like stepping into unfamiliar ground.
Did I ever feel off duty again?
Occasionally. Brief moments surface when I notice the mental urge to “do something” fade.
Was this related to burnout?
Not exactly burnout in the dramatic sense, but it was certainly a sign that the job’s rhythm had become internalized into every hour.
Is it possible to reclaim that feeling?
Sometimes — I notice it first in small moments when I permit myself not to prepare, not to plan, not to expect.
Being “off duty” didn’t vanish — I just forgot how it felt.

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