An Expert Explains How to Recover From Burnout and Chronic Stress – The National Interest

Posted: Published on March 13th, 2020

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

Even if you dont have a lot of time, its still important to carve out a little time for yourself to do something you find satisfying. Taking time to recover is shown to help people feel more engaged at work, and protects against the longer-term consequences of work stress and risk of burnout.

Its pretty likely youve heard of burnout and you may have even experienced it. Caused by chronic work stress, its characterised by signs such as emotional exhaustion, lack of energy, and loss of satisfaction with work and has been linked to a wide range of physical conditions such as cardiovascular diseases and musculoskeletal pain.

Work stress activates our hormonal, metabolic, immune and cardiovascular systems. If these bodily responses are triggered too frequently, or for too long, they fail to return to normal and may alter our bodys immune and inflammation responses. These changes may eventually cause other physical conditions such as coronary heart disease.

Although an overhaul of work conditions and culture is needed to address the rise in people experiencing burnout, there are still many things we can do ourselves to deal with it now. The most significant way we can prevent burnout is recovery.

Burnout is a consequence of chronic work stress over extended periods of time. It has three components:

Dealing with burnout is about recovering well from work, rather than focusing on being more productive or better at the work itself. Research continues to show how important it is to recover from work on a daily basis.

Recovery means finding time or space for yourself where you dont engage in things that are work-related or stressful. Recovery is about bringing physiological responses, such as cortisol (a key stress hormone), back down to baseline levels. Proper recovery helps you feel more energetic and enthusiastic to face another day at work. Recovery can take place both during the workday (internal recovery) and outside of work (external recovery).

Types of recovery

Internal recovery is about giving ourselves relief from stress by using short periods of time during work to reduce our bodys stress responses. This can include taking short breaks, doing breathing exercises, or switching tasks when youre feeling mentally or physically exhausted. So, if you have a few minutes spare at work between tasks or meetings, you may be better off trying to relax rather than checking your emails and experiencing new stressors.

After work, we have the opportunity for external recovery. These are things we do outside of work to help relieve stress. Instead of keeping on top of work and emails, external recovery may include doing any activities you enjoy. These might include watching TV, reading, or socialising as long as these activities dont encourage you to think (and stress) more about work.

The key to good recovery is choosing activities based on how they make you feel. If social media creates negative feelings, dont check it during your work breaks or after work. If socialising with certain people makes you feel drained, this isnt going to help you recover.

Daily recovery is also important. Research shows the energy gained from the previous days after-work activities helps manage the days work stress. But its important to know that its not the amount of time spent on recovering, but the quality of these activities.

Its important to do things that make you happy or content as you are doing them and doing them for yourself. Research has found that picking recovery activities you find personally satisfying and meaningful is more likely to help you feel recovered by the next morning.

Daily recovery activities

Thinking about what you do after work to recover and whether these activities really are helping you recover is key. There are four types of recovery experience that explain how and why recovery activities work:

Its important to note that psychological detachment is core to recovery but its not as easy to achieve as it sounds. For example, smartphone use after work can interfere with recovery because it blurs boundaries between work and home, stopping psychological detachment from work taking place. Similarly, meeting friends and socialising to relax will not allow psychological detachment if the conversation focuses on complaining about work.

Some recovery experiences are more suited to different people. For example, sports and exercise have been shown to be more effective for workaholics than non-workaholics, possibly because they make psychological detachment from work easier.

If you dont feel you have much control over your job, psychological detachment and mastery experiences have been shown to be the most effective for recovery. If you feel exhausted due to time pressures at work, relaxation is most protective. People can also personalise and pick the recovery activity that suits them and provides them with the best antidote to their particular form of work stress and burnout.

With burnout, emotional exhaustion typically happens before other stages. Its the easiest to identify, and easier to change than the other stages. So if you feel emotionally exhausted after work every night and dont recover by the morning your recovery is incomplete. If this is the case, it might be worth taking a closer look at the quality of the after-work activities youre doing.

Even if you dont have a lot of time, its still important to carve out a little time for yourself to do something you find satisfying. Taking time to recover is shown to help people feel more engaged at work, and protects against the longer-term consequences of work stress and risk of burnout.

Rajvinder Samra, Lecturer in Health, The Open University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Image: Reuters

More:
An Expert Explains How to Recover From Burnout and Chronic Stress - The National Interest

Related Posts
This entry was posted in Coronary Heart Diseases. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.