The Simple Word That Might Save You From Burnout

When did you last say “no” to a request? A real no — not a “just let me check my calendar” or a “sure, give me a few days” that you already knew was a yes wearing a disguise?

If you’re struggling to remember, you may be running what I’ve come to think of as the Eternal Yes: a lifestyle in which your time, energy, and last remaining reserves of goodwill are available to everyone except, notably, you. You’re not lazy or a pushover. You’re probably someone who cares a great deal about doing right by other people. Unfortunately, burnout has absolutely no interest in your intentions.

One catastrophic decision rarely causes burnout. Instead, it’s the accumulated burden of every small yes uttered, when a simple no was the honest answer. It’s every meeting attended that could have been an email, every favor taken on because it felt easier than the awkwardness of declining, and every version of yourself that you set aside so that someone else’s version of you could show up instead.

Burnout happens when you confuse your value with your accessibility. You aren’t a resource; you’re a person.

The word that interrupts this pattern is simple but widely regarded as one of the most difficult things a functioning adult can say without immediately apologizing for it — no.

The difficulty of saying it isn’t a personality defect. It’s a documented mental phenomenon with several overlapping causes.

The Research On Saying No

Aaron Beck’s work in cognitive behavioral therapy identifies the thought pattern underlying most boundary failures: “If I say no, people won’t like me.” And so we attend the meeting, take on the project, agree to review the document, and wonder if this is what it feels like to lose your mind.

Kristin Neff’s research on self-compassion suggests that we’re usually kinder to others than we are to ourselves. For example, if a friend told you she was overloaded with obligations, you wouldn’t tell her to say yes to three more things and hope for the best. You would tell her to remove everything unnecessary from her plate. And yet, we’re unable to do that for ourselves.

Demerouti and Bakker’s Job Demands-Resources model (2001) frames burnout as what happens when demands consistently outpace resources, such as energy, time, autonomy, and support. Every unearned yes is a demand, while every declined request is a resource reclaimed. The math isn’t complicated. The complication arises when we bump up against a culture that treats availability as a virtue and rest as something you earn.

Research regularly shows that the people most likely to burn out aren’t the uncommitted or the careless. They’re the people who care too much to say no and have been doing it for too long.

If that describes you, what follows are three practical ways for starting small. Each is progressively larger, and none requires you to become a different person overnight.

1. Decline Something You Said Yes To

​Decline one thing this week that you’d normally or have already said yes to out of obligation rather than actual willingness. Keep your major commitments. Start with something small enough that the worst-case scenario is mild discomfort rather than professional consequences.

A few examples include a non-essential meeting or a social obligation you agreed to four weeks ago when it sounded manageable. The event you decide to decline doesn’t matter. What matters is the practice of noticing that the world continues afterward. Your friends, family, or co-workers will adjust. You don’t owe everyone everything all the time.

Try this: Look at your calendar for the next seven days and find one commitment that’s draining rather than energizing — something you said yes to on autopilot. Decline it, reschedule it, or shorten it by half. You don’t need a dramatic reason. “I’m not going to be able to make it” or “I have a conflict” is reason enough.

2. Assess How You Spend Your Time

Get specific about where your yeses are actually going. Most chronic overcommitters don’t experience their schedule as a series of choices. They experience it as a series of things that just somehow happened to them, like the weather. When you can see where your time is going, you can start to notice which commitments coincide with something you actually value and which are just there because no one ever asked you if you wanted them there.

Try this: Write down everything you’ve agreed to in the last two weeks. Include all your commitments: work, personal, social, etc. Sort them into two categories: “I chose this” or “This just happened.” The second category shows where your boundaries aren’t working. Do you see any patterns? Is there anything you can adjust?

3. Reframe Your Boundaries

Somewhere along the way, most of us absorbed the idea that saying no is a form of withholding, a small cruelty, a failure of generosity, evidence of selfishness. Instead, a boundary is information. It tells the people around you what you can actually sustain. An unconditional yes from a person who never says no is a liability. They’re running toward a wall they can’t see yet.

Try this: The next time you feel the pull to say yes when you mean no, pause and ask: “If I say yes to this, what am I saying no to?” Usually, it’s rest, focus, or time for the things that actually restore you. Before you automatically say yes, acknowledge what you’re giving up.

Choose Your Signposts

You don’t need to be that person who flips a table and announces that they’re done being available. At the same time, the goal isn’t a complete personality overhaul. It’s a small recalibration toward the version of you that has enough left at the end of the day for the things that matter.

Burnout doesn’t build overnight, and it doesn’t reverse overnight either, but it can reverse. Usually, it happens in the same way it arrived: through a series of small decisions, made consistently, in one direction.


Author Bio

Sarah Oelschig is a human resources leader, certified professional coach, and trained counselor whose career has centered on helping people navigate workplace exhaustion, transitions, and the inner critic. She holds an M.A. in Counseling Psychology from the University of San Francisco and a Professional Coaching for Life and Work Certificate from UC Davis. Her new book is Unburned: A Slightly Messy, Mostly Honest Guide to Life After Burnout. Learn more at sarahoelschigcoaching.com.



Source link

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest Articles