My Burnout Coach Gave Me Homework
Filed on July 23, 2025
Dear Dr. Doctrine,
I hired a burnout coach after my manager suggested I “find better tools” for handling stress. It’s been… okay. But after our last session, the coach gave me homework — actual assignments — to “process my overwhelm and create new internal systems.”
The tasks included building a “personal recovery workflow” and scheduling time to “document emotional fatigue metrics.”
I left the session more exhausted than when I walked in.
Am I the problem, or is this just what healing looks like under capitalism?
— System Crash
Dr. Doctrine, PhD
Licensed in Emotional Overreaction
Dear System,
When burnout recovery feels like a team-building retreat hosted by a sentient Excel sheet, it’s safe to say something has gone wrong.
Let’s be clear: you are not the problem. The problem is a culture that expects your coping mechanisms to be as productive as your pain. Somewhere along the way, rest became a deliverable, healing became a workflow, and burnout became an aesthetic.
Your coach isn’t necessarily malicious — but they are participating in a system where recovery gets monetized and exhaustion gets “optimized.” That’s not healing. That’s project management with candles.
You don’t need a personal fatigue dashboard. You need permission to unplug without feeling like a bad employee or a failed adult. And that permission doesn’t come from a task list.
You are not broken. You are reacting appropriately to a system that demands too much and gaslights you for collapsing.
With unapologetically unbillable concern,
— Dr. Doctrine
Ricky Machismo
Look, burnout’s real. I once trained so hard I blacked out mid-squat and woke up hugging a resistance band like it was my childhood dog.
But you don’t fix burnout with homework. That’s just burnout with bullet points.
You want a recovery plan? Here it is:
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Hit the gym.
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Drink water.
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Cry in your car if you have to, but keep it under five minutes and don’t tell Chad.
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Delete anyone who says “vibe audit” in a professional setting.
You’re not weak. You’re just tired of pretending “hustle” is a personality.
Rest hard. Come back louder.
— Ricky
