The Incomplete Script

Reflections on burnout, disillusionment, and questioning the stories we were told

A publication of first-person essays naming what work feels like — without hero framing. These are lived reflections, not advice.

Empty office conference table with notebook, papers, and laptop in a subdued modern workplace

The Hollow Space After Doing Everything Right

There is a quiet moment when you realize you did exactly what was asked, and there is still nothing solid waiting on the other side.

I noticed it during an ordinary pause, the kind that usually comes with relief. The checklist was complete. The expectations had been met.

Instead of satisfaction, there was a hollow stillness, like the space had been cleared without anything replacing it.

When following the rules leads nowhere

I had done what was outlined. Each step led cleanly to the next.

Nothing felt wrong—just strangely unfinished.

The absence wasn’t dramatic enough to protest. It simply sat there, quiet and unresolved.

How the hollow space forms

For a long time, effort itself filled the space. There was always another task, another benchmark.

Once those were exhausted, the space they had been occupying became visible.

Why this feels confusing

Doing everything right is supposed to close the loop.

When it doesn’t, it feels unreasonable to question the result.

The confusion wasn’t about what I had done—it was about why it hadn’t landed anywhere internally.

What became visible

Over time, I could see how much meaning I had outsourced to correct execution.

This sits squarely within Achievement Without Fulfillment: when doing everything right still leaves an empty center.

For some, this hollow space quietly overlaps with the loss of meaning, when correctness replaces connection.

Letting the space exist

I didn’t need to fill the hollow space immediately.

Recognizing it as real was enough to understand why the sequence no longer felt sufficient.

Sometimes doing everything right leaves a hollow space because correctness was never meant to be fulfilling.

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