Category: Burnout
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The Drift Away From Purpose
It wasn’t a sudden loss. Purpose didn’t disappear—it loosened slowly, until one day I realized I was no longer oriented toward anything I could feel.
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When I Stayed Because Nothing Was “Wrong Enough”
Nothing was broken. Nothing was failing. And because there was no clear problem to point to, staying kept feeling more reasonable than leaving.
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When I Stopped Caring About Outcomes
The results still mattered on paper. What changed was that they no longer stayed with me once the work was done.
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How I Turned Waiting Into a Strategy
At some point, waiting stopped feeling passive. I started treating it like a plan—something deliberate, even wise—rather than the absence of a decision.
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How Significance Quietly Left the Room
Nothing dramatic happened. The work continued, the conversations sounded the same, but the sense that any of it carried significance slowly slipped away without drawing attention to itself.
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The Long Pause After Realization
The moment of realization didn’t lead anywhere right away. It was followed by a long, quiet pause where nothing changed, even though everything had already been decided internally.
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When I Was Engaged but Not Invested
I was present, responsive, and doing everything asked of me. What was missing wasn’t engagement—it was the feeling that any of it had a personal stake anymore.
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When Leaving Felt Like Overreacting
Nothing was exploding. Nothing was failing. And because everything looked “fine,” leaving started to feel excessive—like a response that was bigger than the situation allowed.
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The Moment Meaning Stopped Showing Up
There wasn’t a dramatic turning point. Just a quiet realization that meaning had stopped arriving with the work, even though everything else continued exactly as before.
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How I Learned to Tolerate the Wrong Fit
I didn’t convince myself it was right. I just learned how to live with it being wrong without letting that wrongness interrupt my days.