What If Burnout Is A Meaning Problem
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Burnout isn’t always about doing too much. Sometimes it’s the hollow kind, where you’re busy, tired, and still feel disconnected from your own life. Mark Walker starts from a raw social media post: a young guy stuck in a numb loop of eat, work, scroll, sleep. People pile on with labels like “lazy,” but I take it somewhere more useful and more compassionate: what if the real issue is awareness and meaning, not discipline?
From there I share a moment that changed the way I hold time. I was in hospice with my friend as he took his final breaths just days before his 66th birthday. It’s heavy, and it’s real, and it cuts through the story we hide talk about all the time. Most of us can read about impermanence, listen to podcasts about mortality, and still keep it at arm’s length. Sitting with it makes it tangible, and that tangibility can wake us up.
We also connect ancient wisdom practices and modern research on mortality awareness, including work I found through the Greater Good Science Center at Berkeley and perspectives from Tibetan Buddhist practice. The point isn’t to scare ourselves or get morbid. It’s to stop outsourcing our lives to the next app, the next system, or the next thing to blame, and to use impermanence as a lever that pulls us back into the present. I’ll leave you with simple questions you can try today, plus small actions that rebuild purpose without pretending everything is easy.
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