Recently, I posted on Facebook asking whether young women have felt burnout at work, and let’s just say the response was swift.
“Lol yes!” one friend commented. Raised hands emoji, another posted.
I’m
not surprised: I’m only two years into my current job, but I’ve
definitely felt it too. I often shrug it off. “I don’t deserve to feel
overwhelmed,” I’ll say. “I’m not even that far into my career — I don’t
have the right to be stressed.”
Whether we admit it or not, women are burning
out. A study showed women account for 53 percent of corporate
entry-level positions, but they make up less than half of midmanagement
jobs and vice president and senior management positions. Only 11 percent
of women are leaving jobs to have children, so other factors like
career satisfaction, always-plugged-in environments, and high
expectations make up the rest of the disparity.
The word burnout gets thrown around a lot, so it’d be easy to assume it’s just a catchall term for stress and exhaustion, but it’s more than that. And what does it actually feel like?
According
to the American Psychological Association, burnout is an actual
disorder, with diagnosable symptoms. Emilie Aries, 29, founded Bossed
Up in 2013 to help women beat burnout and build sustainable success
after she experienced it herself. Those symptoms? They could look like
physical and emotional exhaustion, cynicism and detachment, or feelings
of ineffectiveness and lack of accomplishment.
“Then
lay that over with systemic racism and systemic gender bias, and that’s
where women begin to feel a real lack of agency,” Aries says.
Even
the things that are supposed to help us decompress are stressing us
out. A recent survey by the U.S. Travel Association’s Project Time
Off even found that 51 percent of millennial men used their vacation
time, compared with 44 percent of women; even though women said taking
time off is “extremely” important to them, high stress and workload,
coupled with the fear of seeming less committed to their job prevented
women from actually taking time off.
Aries
believes there are key triggers that could lead to burnout symptoms:
lack of rest, an absence of community (or people that support you in
your life), a lack of agency (feeling like you are not in control of
your life), and a lack of purpose.
“It’s important to ask yourself: What is triggering my burnout and what do I need to set myself up for sustainable success?”
Burnout is beatable
In her first job out of college
as the youngest state director for a national Democratic advocacy group
in her country, Aries burned out. She felt like she was never doing
enough and that she had to prove herself worthy of her job. That led to
behaviours like “having my Blackberry and phone in my hand before my
feet hit the floor every morning. When you come to work every day with
fragile self-worth, you set yourself up to burnout.”
“I
was hustling across the Rhode Island on behalf of newly elected
President Obama, hosting events every night. I went from being a college
athlete to not stepping into a gym for about three years,” she says.
Aries’
low point was when she was driving through her alma mater’s campus.
Exhausted and hunched over the steering wheel, she was mad at herself
for feeling tired. She saw students lugging their bags home for Thanksgiving break and felt incredible envy.
“I
thought, if I want to have a sustainable career, I’m going to have to
change,” she says. “Because the way I was working was not working.”
For Aries, that meant having zero work-life boundaries
and a toxic relationship holding her back. She left that job, ended the
relationship, and decided to put herself first. Soon after, she
negotiated a high-paying job in Washington, D.C., that allowed her to
leave work at work every day, and that gave her the freedom to pursue
side gigs.
That flexibility led her to work on
starting her own company four years ago and helping other women plan for
success. She’s now a nationally recognised speaker and provides
training programs for women navigating career transition; she also co-hosts HowStuffWorks’ feminist podcast Stuff Mom Never Told You.
“I
had this newfound swagger that I could do whatever needed to be done. I
took my life back in a very physical way,” Aries says.
Claudia
C., 26, was working full-time at a law firm while in law school when
she started feeling burned out. It was her first job in the legal field,
and she felt pressure to perform — even doing administrative tasks that
were out of her job description. She ended up working over 20 hours a
week while balancing school, preventing her from studying for the bar
exam.
“I’m incredibly hardworking, but since I
was working full-time, I was at the bottom of my class,” she says. She
ended up not passing the exam.
“I’d get home crying some days,” she says. “It got to a point where I said, ‘There is nothing better out there.’”
But she started sending out applications.
She got hired at another firm; Claudia told her new boss up front that
she’d need to work less to study for the upcoming bar and take a few
weeks off before the exam.
“It’s super important to set your boundaries at work,” she says. “You don’t have to be superwoman every day to keep your job.”
For Bridget
Todd, 32, a digital manager at Planned Parenthood, her burnout breaking
point came after collapsing in an elevator at work. She was working as a
social media editor on the night shift at a major news organisation in
New York City, coming home at midnight or later every night, and eating
fast food for dinner. Because of the nature of her job, she was chained
to the 24-hour news cycle. “I probably have never been more sad or
depressed in my life,” she says.
As a black
woman in media, Todd struggled with feeling like she needed to prove her
worth twice as much as her white counterparts and had to stay silent
about how she was feeling.
“I had this idea in
my head that I was lucky my employer was even taking a chance on me,”
says Todd. “There aren’t that many women of colour in media, and I
didn’t want my white bosses to think, When you hire black women, they
complain about the hours. I thought, if I sound the alarm, then I’m
going to get pegged as the problem.”
The day
she fainted in the elevator, Todd was fighting through a cold. When the
nurses at her office evaluated her, they told her that she fainted from exhaustion and dehydration.
“That was a huge turning point because I realised you don’t have to kill yourself to make a good living,” Todd says.
Todd left her job a few months later. Her schedule is more balanced now, but she does still battle stress.
“I have to go to a yoga twice a week or my life falls apart,” Todd
says. “Identify what keeps you sane, whether it’s meditation, or vegging
out in front of the TV, and stick to that no matter what.”
Todd cohosts Stuff Mom Never Told You with Aries, where they’ve discussed how to avoid burnout, and she’s spoken on panels about burnout and women in politics.
“I
want women to know that you’re not a loser, you’re not lazy,” she says.
“It’s OK to feel overwhelmed. It’s OK to say, ‘Gee, I don’t want to be
working 24/7.’”
So what if you can’t leave your job?
You can’t always leave a job to cure burnout. But Aries says the first step to take control is to identify stresses — both big and small.
“It’s harder than it sounds,” she says. “But is it the Monday morning meeting that makes you feel deprived of family time? Is it the fact that you’re checking email until midnight every night? What is happening in your life to make you feel this way?”
Erin
Olivo, stress expert, author and licensed clinical psychologist, says,
the things that actually help us manage stress are the first to go:
exercise, rest, and healthy eating. So how can we keep thriving through
the stress?
“My number-one tip for burnout is get more sleep,” says Olivo. “It sounds so simplistic and ridiculous, and yet it is this restorative time that we often deprive ourselves of.”
Olivo recommends another easy remedy: more exercise.
We’re not talking SoulCycle five times a week. Olivo says even
incorporating small acts of movement in your day can tackle burnout:
getting off at an earlier train or bus stop to walk to work, or parking
further away from your building.
One of my favourites? Every day stop and write down something that was good in your life, she says.
“If
you don’t have a lot to say, then the next day make sure you do
something that’s going to change that,” Olivo says. “We get to choose if
today is good. If you actively make that choice, you start to realise
your own agency in making yourself feel good.”
Peace out, burnout.
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