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In the last six months, have you noticed that:
- You used to love your work, but now it exhausts you emotionally
or physically?
- You feel you're accomplishing much less compared with your past
performance?
- Your work always comes first, but no one seems to appreciate your
efforts or commitment?
- You feel increasingly cynical about your work, your employer, or
your clients?
- You believe that only you can do the work you do as well as you
do it, and that your clients and colleagues would be irreparably
harmed if you quit?
- You're no longer interested in the hobbies or pastimes you used
to enjoy?
- Nothing much matters to you?
- You're increasingly forgetful about appointments, or find yourself
misplacing possessions or overlooking deadlines?
- You need more time alone than you used to?
- You're more irritable now when driving in traffic or waiting in
lines?
- You're getting unexplained headaches or stomachaches or backaches?
- You find yourself frequently feeling angry or striking out at others?
If you answer "yes" to any of these questions, you're exhibiting
at least one symptom of burnout.
What is burnout? Burnout is more than simple fatigue. Much more.
It's an unacknowledged state of exhaustion that occurs when you consistently
make choices for the benefit of others at the expense of your own
needs.
Who gets burned out? According to Dr. Herbert
J. Freudenberger, who first coined the term "burnout," victims of burnout
are "dynamic, charismatic, goal-oriented people" or "determined
idealists." Burnout, he says, "usually has its roots in
the area of your life that seems to hold the most promise." For
most professionals, that area is work.
What causes burnout? Burnout among professionals can result from
consistently working too much to meet the demands of your superiors,
or from being expected to perform in a way that goes against your
sense of right and wrong. It can also follow months of being pulled
between bosses clamoring for your time and attention, or from never
getting any praise from your superiors no matter how impressive your
work.
More commonly, though, burnout is caused by a work style that's
almost required in today's workplace: One where you feel under constant
pressure to succeed and are frantically juggling constantly shifting
priorities. In order to cope with the demands, you take yourself
and your work role very seriously. Eventually, you come to identify
so closely with your activities that, whenever they fail, you fall
apart.
Can burnout be cured? The solution for burn out is simple, but not
easy: serious introspection, and the development of supportive relationships
with those who have developed a sense of peace about their work.
But don't expect instant results from your self-exploration. In fact,
you may feel even more confused as you examine your relationship
with your work. Insight develops gradually; recovery occurs in spiraling
circles. But they will happen.
Adapted from What Can You Do with a Law Degree?
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