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A reflection on burnout, identity, and recovery — plus practical action steps
There's an addiction we rarely talk about because it looks like ambition.
It earns praise. Promotions. Respect. It hides behind phrases like "driven," "productive," and "hard-working."
But for many high achievers, work isn't just effort — it's a coping mechanism.
In this episode, Dawn shares her story of a "workaholic blackout" — the moment she realized work had become her drug. After years of recovery from substances, she found herself caught in a new cycle: overwork, anxiety, identity tied to productivity, and eventual burnout.
At one point, she drove home from work and had no memory of the drive. That was the moment everything shifted.
What followed was a diagnosis of extreme burnout and a realization that she wasn't just "busy" — she was addicted to working.
When Work Stops Being Healthy
One of the most powerful distinctions Dawn shared is this:
Working hard doesn't make someone a workaholic. External pressure doesn't equal addiction.
Workaholism comes from the inside.
It's marked by:
An internal compulsion to keep working
Self-worth tied to productivity
Constant thoughts about work
Anxiety or guilt when not working
Difficulty detaching — even during rest
You can meet deadlines, put in long hours, and still be healthy.
But when work becomes how you manage fear, grief, identity, or anxiety — it shifts from effort to escape.
Burnout Isn't Just Exhaustion
Burnout isn't just being tired.
It's a full-system collapse:
Physical
Emotional
Mental
Spiritual
For many high performers, burnout mirrors an addiction "bottom." You keep pushing… until your system can't.
And then something breaks.
Relationships suffer. Health declines. Meaning fades.
And the work that once energized you begins to feel like pressure, obligation, or proof of worth.
The Cultural Trap
Our culture celebrates overworking.
We glorify:
Hustle
Sacrifice
Endless productivity
"Grinding" for success
But we rarely talk about the cost:
Anxiety
Family strain
Loss of identity outside work
Chronic stress
Emotional detachment
Workaholism is often called "the respectable addiction" because it looks admirable from the outside.
Until it doesn't.
Recovery Isn't About Quitting Work
Unlike substances, you can't abstain from work.
Recovery is about boundaries, awareness, and redefining your relationship to productivity.
Dawn shared practices that helped her rebuild balance:
Under-scheduling instead of over-planning
Creating "top lines" (healthy behaviors to commit to)
Creating "bottom lines" (behaviors to avoid)
Protecting time for joy, relationships, and rest
Spiritual grounding and daily reflection
Detaching self-worth from output
It's less about doing less — and more about working from a different place.
Not fear. Not "not enough." Not urgency.
But intention.
Action Steps: Rebuilding a Healthy Relationship With Work
If this episode resonated, here are simple starting points.
1) Notice the fuel behind your productivityAsk yourself:
Am I working from joy… or fear?
Is this aligned… or avoidance?
Am I creating… or proving?
Not everything urgent is important. And not everything important feels urgent.
Pause before reacting.
3) Identify your "bottom lines"Examples:
No work after a certain hour
No phone during family time
No checking email first thing in the morning
Healthy commitments like:
Movement
Hydration
Connection
Rest
Creative time
Recovery often begins with:
Fewer commitments
Fewer calls
Fewer goals at once
Space allows clarity.
6) Detach identity from productivityPractice this reframe: "I am enough — with or without what I produce today."
7) Watch for the "self-care productivity trap"Even healing can become another project.
Self-care isn't something to optimize. It's something to experience.
Reflection Prompts
Where is my self-worth tied to achievement?
What am I avoiding by staying busy?
When do I feel most at peace — and why?
What would "enough" look like today?
Resources Mentioned
Workaholics Anonymous literature and tools
Journaling and recovery reflection practices
Byron Katie's "The Work" inquiry process
Anxiety and habit research (Dr. Judson Brewer)
Recovery communities and peer support spaces
(Referenced from episode transcript)
Final Thought
You don't have to burn out to change your relationship with work.
You don't have to earn rest. You don't have to prove your worth. You don't have to run on fear.
There is another way to work — one rooted in clarity, presence, and enoughness.
And it starts with one honest question:
What's really driving me right now?
Guest Contact Info:
👊🏼Need help applying this information to your own life?
Here are 3 ways to get started:
🎁Free Guide: 30 Tips for Your First 30 Days - With a printable PDF checklist
Grab your copy here: https://www.soberlifeschool.com
☎️Private Coaching: Make Sobriety Stick
https://www.makesobrietystick.com
Subscribe So You Don't Miss New Episodes!
Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Amazon Music, or you can stream it from my website HERE. You can also watch the interview on YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/@theonedayatatimepodcast?sub_confirmation=1
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-one-day-at-a-time-recovery-podcast/id1212504521
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4I23r7DBTpT8XwUUwHRNpB
Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/a8eb438c-5af1-493b-99c1-f218e5553aff/the-one-day-at-a-time-recovery-podcast
By Arlina Allen4.6
235235 ratings
A reflection on burnout, identity, and recovery — plus practical action steps
There's an addiction we rarely talk about because it looks like ambition.
It earns praise. Promotions. Respect. It hides behind phrases like "driven," "productive," and "hard-working."
But for many high achievers, work isn't just effort — it's a coping mechanism.
In this episode, Dawn shares her story of a "workaholic blackout" — the moment she realized work had become her drug. After years of recovery from substances, she found herself caught in a new cycle: overwork, anxiety, identity tied to productivity, and eventual burnout.
At one point, she drove home from work and had no memory of the drive. That was the moment everything shifted.
What followed was a diagnosis of extreme burnout and a realization that she wasn't just "busy" — she was addicted to working.
When Work Stops Being Healthy
One of the most powerful distinctions Dawn shared is this:
Working hard doesn't make someone a workaholic. External pressure doesn't equal addiction.
Workaholism comes from the inside.
It's marked by:
An internal compulsion to keep working
Self-worth tied to productivity
Constant thoughts about work
Anxiety or guilt when not working
Difficulty detaching — even during rest
You can meet deadlines, put in long hours, and still be healthy.
But when work becomes how you manage fear, grief, identity, or anxiety — it shifts from effort to escape.
Burnout Isn't Just Exhaustion
Burnout isn't just being tired.
It's a full-system collapse:
Physical
Emotional
Mental
Spiritual
For many high performers, burnout mirrors an addiction "bottom." You keep pushing… until your system can't.
And then something breaks.
Relationships suffer. Health declines. Meaning fades.
And the work that once energized you begins to feel like pressure, obligation, or proof of worth.
The Cultural Trap
Our culture celebrates overworking.
We glorify:
Hustle
Sacrifice
Endless productivity
"Grinding" for success
But we rarely talk about the cost:
Anxiety
Family strain
Loss of identity outside work
Chronic stress
Emotional detachment
Workaholism is often called "the respectable addiction" because it looks admirable from the outside.
Until it doesn't.
Recovery Isn't About Quitting Work
Unlike substances, you can't abstain from work.
Recovery is about boundaries, awareness, and redefining your relationship to productivity.
Dawn shared practices that helped her rebuild balance:
Under-scheduling instead of over-planning
Creating "top lines" (healthy behaviors to commit to)
Creating "bottom lines" (behaviors to avoid)
Protecting time for joy, relationships, and rest
Spiritual grounding and daily reflection
Detaching self-worth from output
It's less about doing less — and more about working from a different place.
Not fear. Not "not enough." Not urgency.
But intention.
Action Steps: Rebuilding a Healthy Relationship With Work
If this episode resonated, here are simple starting points.
1) Notice the fuel behind your productivityAsk yourself:
Am I working from joy… or fear?
Is this aligned… or avoidance?
Am I creating… or proving?
Not everything urgent is important. And not everything important feels urgent.
Pause before reacting.
3) Identify your "bottom lines"Examples:
No work after a certain hour
No phone during family time
No checking email first thing in the morning
Healthy commitments like:
Movement
Hydration
Connection
Rest
Creative time
Recovery often begins with:
Fewer commitments
Fewer calls
Fewer goals at once
Space allows clarity.
6) Detach identity from productivityPractice this reframe: "I am enough — with or without what I produce today."
7) Watch for the "self-care productivity trap"Even healing can become another project.
Self-care isn't something to optimize. It's something to experience.
Reflection Prompts
Where is my self-worth tied to achievement?
What am I avoiding by staying busy?
When do I feel most at peace — and why?
What would "enough" look like today?
Resources Mentioned
Workaholics Anonymous literature and tools
Journaling and recovery reflection practices
Byron Katie's "The Work" inquiry process
Anxiety and habit research (Dr. Judson Brewer)
Recovery communities and peer support spaces
(Referenced from episode transcript)
Final Thought
You don't have to burn out to change your relationship with work.
You don't have to earn rest. You don't have to prove your worth. You don't have to run on fear.
There is another way to work — one rooted in clarity, presence, and enoughness.
And it starts with one honest question:
What's really driving me right now?
Guest Contact Info:
👊🏼Need help applying this information to your own life?
Here are 3 ways to get started:
🎁Free Guide: 30 Tips for Your First 30 Days - With a printable PDF checklist
Grab your copy here: https://www.soberlifeschool.com
☎️Private Coaching: Make Sobriety Stick
https://www.makesobrietystick.com
Subscribe So You Don't Miss New Episodes!
Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Amazon Music, or you can stream it from my website HERE. You can also watch the interview on YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/@theonedayatatimepodcast?sub_confirmation=1
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-one-day-at-a-time-recovery-podcast/id1212504521
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4I23r7DBTpT8XwUUwHRNpB
Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/a8eb438c-5af1-493b-99c1-f218e5553aff/the-one-day-at-a-time-recovery-podcast

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