Burnout Detection System
You are not just tired. You are functionally brittle. Burnout is not a badge of honor — it is thermal throttling for your brain.
If you are asking “Am I burnt out?” — the answer is yes. Healthy systems do not query their own critical failure status. If you are reading this, you are already in the Crispy Zone.
Does chewing make you want to fight? Are clothing tags suddenly unbearable? Your input buffer is full. The nervous system has no remaining capacity for processing sensory data.
Forgetting words? Reading the same email four times? This is a RAM leak. You are not losing intelligence — you are losing bandwidth. The working memory system has no resources left.
Are you annoyed by people you love? Detached? Cynical about things you usually care about? That is depletion — not who you are now. The output system is throttling to conserve resources.
The Wired-Tired Paradox
You are exhausted all day, but at night you get a second wind of anxious energy. You doomscroll until 2 AM because you do not want the day to end without having done something for yourself.
Should Paralysis
Basic tasks — dishes, emails, showering — feel like climbing Everest. You spend more energy dreading the task than doing it. You create phantom work by thinking about it constantly while doing none of it.
Radical Subtraction
Remove load from the system immediately. Not later. Now.
- Cancel one thing this week. One. That’s it.
- Order food. Do not cook.
- Paper plates. No dishes.
- Let the laundry sit. It will not kill you.
Sensory Dark Mode
Lower the input voltage to the brain. Every stimulus costs bandwidth you do not have.
- Noise-cancelling headphones. Silence. No podcast.
- Low lights only — lamps, no overheads.
- Phone in greyscale mode.
- Lie on the floor for five minutes. No phone.
Use the full audit to map your current burnout load and identify the first subtraction.
Download Burnout Audit (PDF)Note: This is a detection and stabilization tool, not a recovery plan. If you are in active burnout, the goal is not to bounce back — it is to stop making it worse. Recovery comes after the bleeding stops.