Category: Burnout
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When I Treated Misalignment as Manageable
I didn’t deny that something was wrong. I just convinced myself it was small enough to live with, quiet enough to absorb, and manageable enough to ignore.
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The Day I Realized Purpose Was Gone
There wasn’t a breakdown or a decision. It was simply the day I noticed that purpose was no longer part of what I was doing — and hadn’t been for some time.
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The Day I Realized I’d Been Waiting Too Long
There wasn’t a dramatic moment. Just a quiet recognition that the waiting I thought was temporary had already taken more than I meant to give.
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When Work Felt Directionless
I was still moving through full days of work, but I could no longer tell what any of that movement was oriented toward.
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When I Stayed Out of Momentum
I didn’t actively decide to keep going. I just stayed because everything was already in motion, and stopping it felt harder than letting it continue.
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How Meaning Was Diluted Over Time
Nothing took meaning away all at once. It thinned gradually, diluted by repetition and continuity, until it was still present but no longer concentrated enough to be felt.
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How I Learned to Live in the Pause
I didn’t move forward, and I didn’t turn back. I learned how to stay suspended in between—and called that stability.
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When I Didn’t Feel Connected to the Outcome
I still cared about doing things correctly. What disappeared was the sense that the outcome belonged to me in any meaningful way once the work was done.
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When Leaving Felt Like Too Much
I didn’t stay because leaving was impossible. I stayed because leaving felt heavier than I knew how to carry all at once.
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The Loss of Purpose Without Drama
Nothing collapsed or demanded a response. Purpose faded quietly, and the absence of drama made it easy to keep going without noticing what was gone.