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The most dangerous kind of burnout doesn't look like burnout from the outside. It looks like competence. The work gets done, the standards are met, the performance is maintained — and somewhere underneath all of it, the engine is running on empty. This episode is the most personal in the series. It doesn't lecture. It doesn't optimize. It sits with the specific, hard-to-name experience of being functionally fine and genuinely hollow — and names what's actually happening. Covering the World Health Organization's burnout framework, Christina Maslach's research on why high achievers are disproportionately vulnerable, and the five signs that are easy to miss when you've trained yourself to push through everything. For the people who are still delivering, and wondering why they feel nothing about it.
By Joeli CollingsThe most dangerous kind of burnout doesn't look like burnout from the outside. It looks like competence. The work gets done, the standards are met, the performance is maintained — and somewhere underneath all of it, the engine is running on empty. This episode is the most personal in the series. It doesn't lecture. It doesn't optimize. It sits with the specific, hard-to-name experience of being functionally fine and genuinely hollow — and names what's actually happening. Covering the World Health Organization's burnout framework, Christina Maslach's research on why high achievers are disproportionately vulnerable, and the five signs that are easy to miss when you've trained yourself to push through everything. For the people who are still delivering, and wondering why they feel nothing about it.