Burnout - /adv/ (#33355578) [Archived: 428 hours ago]

Anonymous
7/13/2025, 7:34:50 AM No.33355578
1457770977191
1457770977191
md5: 6df59bc4a4dd3680d00293dc317d982b🔍
How can I just never experience burnout ever?
The very concept of it feels weird. Like it almost feels like an excuse for lazyness.
>I've worked consistently towards my goals for 2 days bro, I'm burnt out.
Its something arbitrary that it feels like you can feel whenever the fuck. I went 12 weeks treating my skills I want to develop like a job. Yet now I just feel tired and don't want to keep doing them, but at the same time I do.
Replies: >>33355604 >>33356717 >>33356804
Anonymous
7/13/2025, 7:42:57 AM No.33355604
>>33355578 (OP)
Coke
Anonymous
7/13/2025, 2:31:08 PM No.33356717
>>33355578 (OP)
>How can I just never experience burnout ever?
Scheduling. For example, if you were an idiot you might sit all day and end up with pressure sores on your arse and maybe thrombosis in the legs. But being undense (btw, a cool new word I found) you take a break every so often, maybe 30 minutes, to move around. Well, generalize that principle to other settings and activities: learn what the threshold is and structure changes in activity that stay within those limits. And, of course, adopt a time structure that scales like a fractal, with suitable breaks at each scale. That's why one might move every thirty minutes instead of continuing to sit, takes some fluids every couple of hours, get regular sleep each day, have a day off each week, go on vacation each year, change careers every 10-20 years, get rejuvenated every 50 years, move to a different planet every couple of centuries, and so on. I'm sure you can adapt this to your own situation.
Anonymous
7/13/2025, 2:54:13 PM No.33356804
>>33355578 (OP)
Burnout is something that takes years or even decades to happen. You'll find out.