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Possible Duplicates:
What causes developer burnout?
How do you pull yourself out of a programming ‘slump’?

After the dotcom bust I was pretty disillusioned, but I still liked what I did so I kept on working for the few clients I had left. The contracts dwindled and I took on new clients who treated me like an idiot because they could - my industry was awash with people who, most of the time, professed to a lot more knowledge than they had.

I finally took a job in a large company (no - not MS) and that sealed the deal. After a year there I decided to move to Hawaii and drive boats (not kidding). Once here I realized all I needed was a break and a change of surroundings.

I felt that same flame-out on the horizon recently - I'll save the details for a blog post - but the short part is that I knew it was coming, so I dropped my routines (and my job) and am trying something different.

Edit -- I'm digging what I'm doing now... no worries :)

This, however, is a very destructive pattern and I'm wondering what others do when they feel the flames of burnout heating up.

What do you do to avoid burning up?

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Suggestion: stackoverflow.com/search?q=burnout – derobert Sep 12 at 3:43
Another good one: stackoverflow.com/questions/273299/… – derobert Sep 12 at 4:42

closed as exact duplicate by Michael Haren, Brian, musicfreak, fbrereto, sth Sep 12 at 12:13

25 Answers

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Do other stuff.

Over the years I've had numerous side projects that I work off and on, on. Sometimes I go months without working on them, but they're always there. As you've noted it's important to have other things to do, and for that end I run other business, and spend a lot of time inventing things.

With work I think the trick is to remember it's only work, and not your life.

For me the most important thing is to have lots of varying projects that I can work on, incase I get bored with one. They are all of a totally different type, but fall into the domains of:

  • Art
  • Design
  • Construction (building inventions from wood)
  • Electronics (i'm terrible at it, but it's required for some inventions)
  • Games (can't get away from playing some guitar hero)
  • Programming (but lots; at the moment I have no less than 5 side projects I can work on, but am currently focusing on one)
  • Magazines (writing my own)
  • Fashion
  • Music (piano, guitar)
  • Writing (tv shows, fiction)
  • Inventing in general
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Plenty of hard exercise. The only sure-proven way to get rid of stress hormones.

(It actually works that way, either kill or escape the tiger, and your body shifts back to non-stressed mode afterwards.)

I did a lot of Filipino Martial Arts (2-3 times/week) + 2x10 km bike every day (work<->home when working many stressful hours at a previous job. It was the only way to keep sane. Luckily, I'm at another place now. :)

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  • Get a wife
  • Stop saving money
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The last year was very stresfull for me, i'm 18 and still visiting school, will be finishing my exams next year and everything i did the last year and will be doing this year accounts for it (im in germany if you wonder). I was pretty engaged in sports (rowing) and had managed my way into thr German squad and was hoping to qualify for world championships. For 9 months, i usually trained 9 times a week, accounting for about 1000mins of pure exercise per week. Add to that all the training camps and competitions on the weekends.

Besides that i took a job to develop a special accounting software 2 years ago. There formerly was another programmer who should instruct me, however it was no longer than one month and he left. So i was solely responsible for design and implementation of a software that is not the usual kid project size (data integration with 6 parties, 8 users at two different offices, and a business volume just below 7 digits). I'm happy it's in production now.

What i learned from that experience was not only how to organize myself and spent my time effeciently, but also how to deal with a huge amount of stress (in sports) and how to calm down, when you have to. What o did for myself was:

  • Don't be too hard with yourself
  • Don't worry too much about your work when your home
  • I plan for a "non-programming" day every week, which i usually spend with my girlfriend
  • If thats no longer sufficient take a small vacation ("long weekend")and i mean really off of programming, no tech books
  • spend that time with your family, friends
  • Doing sports (i go running, biking, rowing)
  • to motivate myself again it usually helps me to read a tech book, but only if i feel like it
  • Plan for some freetime in which you can spontaneously decide what to do

Doing a non-sport day was only an option for regeneration the day after competitions. Another thing that really helped me to relax was when i went hiking with my dad a month ago. We did a 4 day trip, far away from civilisation. An inspiring experience.

After all your on Hawaii, why don't spend some time on the beach learning surfing :-)

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I just take a momentarily break and reflect upon what I am doing. Spend some time away from computers and pursue some of the things I always longed for like (not in any particular order though)..

  • Spend some time with the family (though this should be a regular activity)
  • Take pencil and scribble (as i like cartooning)
  • Go for a short walk to place where I had never been (depends on time)
  • Watch some of the old movies which I always used to love to watch
  • Have a drink :)
  • Learn juggling (as I always longed for)
  • Trying to learn meditation
  • Huh... read a book (non-technical ofcourse)
  • Write your thoughts down (may be a personal blog)

The activities may differ from person to person.

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Rob, I left the business after 9/11 and moved to AZ. I went to culinary school(ACI) and worked my but off as a pastry chef. The best medicine for burnout is, total emersion in something other than programming, that will get your creative side going. For me it was chocolate cakes and hazelnut tarts. Now that I am back in consulting I call my time as a Pastry Chef a sabbatical.

Yes white chocolate is real chocolate without the good stuff. Plus it looks great drizzled all Jackson Pollock style over a dark chocolate cake.

A Wolf

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That's exactly what I wish to do in the coming years - but really one needs great courage to do that ! For how many years did your chef work last? – techzen Sep 12 at 15:06
School and intern took 9 months, was the perfect relief from the dot com bust. – Adam J Wolf Sep 12 at 15:24
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Ironically when i get burned out, I learn a new language, or finally prototype that new idea. For some reason it helps since it is my hobby and also my job. I am lucky enough to create my own work even through the company I work for, has not always been like that. I have a very good family life balance and work on open source projects and all things together keep me inspired and whole. I think the key is to be inspired by what you do as much of the time as you can. Right now my one of my inspirations is figuring out how to write iphone apps in C# with Monotouch.

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I almost never work more than 8 hours in a day. I do karate 3 days a week, I spend time playing with my daughter, and I do woodworking (even though I suck at it) every chance I get.

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I play music. I get out on our boat and cruise the St. John's River (old Florida) or tow my wife around some nearby clear lakes. I also go sailing twice a year in the Gulf of Mexico with some buddies on 35+ foot bare-boat charters. That is the biggest recharge of all.

As for how to keep it going at work, I don't have an answer other than keep other work-related interests going outside - challenges that will contribute to your skillset. Just don't overdue it. Slow and steady wins the race.

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I practice meditation and it really helps me breath without the software running in my head in the daemon mode all the time... stop debugging inside :) and do a chmod.

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http://www.thinkgeek.com/caffeine/

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Change your patterns in your job. Try focusing on different important aspects within your role. Instead of giving all of your energy to blogging (for instance) try focusing on performance of a key application.

Routine will burn you out so keep things changing. Keep challenging yourself. Maybe even explore a completely different role in the company if you enjoy being there and the people you work with.

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I try to carve out an hour to go somewhere quiet and pray/meditate. Completely blank out the mind and try to push away every and any thought for the whole time. Try it... very hard to do. We work our brains thinking and thinking and thinking then we fill the non-thinking time with noise, noise, noise (internet, tv, reading, socializing, etc...). The brain is an awesome organ but it needs targeted rest... especially as programmers, IMHO.

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Doing some inline-skating. I found that getting software development out of my head for a while really helps. Even my hobby projects have to go out of my head, as much as I love them.

No Twitter, No Development, just me, some friends, and a pair of skates for a week.

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Burn out is a myth ;-) Really though it's all about pace. From a pure work point of view I've found it's best to switch off the project I'd been working on, get a breath of fresh code, and really just make sure that the work wasn't taking time from my wife and girls. I know as soon as I start getting complaints they don't see me enough the burn is just around the corner. So it's leaving on time, and not getting into work two hours early and an extra story or two at bedtime.

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My biggest problem is the stress, I have a couple of things I do to deal with it

  1. Riding my Bike 8-15 miles every morning
  2. Working on private projects that interest me and allow me to learn new things
  3. My outside hobbies: woodworking, turning, etc
  4. Manual labor: Building horse corrals for in-laws, build a fence, cutting down trees with my chainsaw, I really like the Chainsaw part :)
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Hey Rob,

Read non-tech stuff, Exercise, music, code purely for fun - like an OSS project. In your case, clearly surfing/boating, and that Hawaiian music you've talked about before.

http://computeristsolutions.com/blog/post/Death-March-Survival-Guide.aspx

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Embrace it man! We weren't meant to sit around and do the same thing all the time, that's why we get burnt out. Build something great, if you get tired of it find a new home for it and move on to something. (that's the beauty of entrepreneurship)

Also focus on what's really important, family, friends, and being happy. Life is way to short to work on shit you don't care about.

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Do/start non-IT business (while you still keep your IT jobs), that's what I do right now.

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I'm sure it varies by person, but for me having a good work/life balance is helpful. That means both finding a job that that doesn't drive you too hard and not driving yourself too hard.

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Having hobbies that are outside the traditional geek realm but easily benefited by geekery worked well for me (I can spend time in them in a way outside my work but also use my skills to enhance these hobbies).

Astronomy, scuba, mountain hiking, and motorcycle riding all proved true for me. I can lose myself in a pure ride, or I can geek out as much as I want. This kept me both tied to my profession as well as leaving it behind when necessary.

Edit I should also warn you that spending time in a hospital because some jerk in a stolen car interrupted your hobby at about 45mph can also help you refocus on what's important pretty quickly. ;P

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Which hobby was interrupted at 45mph? Dont tell me it was scuba! – akf Sep 12 at 3:50
eek - I'm sorry to hear that! – Rob Conery Sep 12 at 5:09
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Burnout can be caused by many factors (especially overwork!) and remedies / preventions vary accordingly. In your case, it looks like burnout was triggered by feeling unappreciated and disrespected: as a remedy / precaution for THAT, I recommend (if you can afford to do it and still keep some bread on the table;-) pouring your energies into open source (development, community involvement, writing, etc, etc) -- either on existing projects (don't pick ones with hundreds of contributors already onboard) or if you're the creative type by starting your own.

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Doing open source work is a GREAT way to make yourself feel unappreciated. I would not recommend that, IMHO. For a while it will be hard to get people to be interested; or they may not understand, and in that time it will be quite depressing. – silky Sep 12 at 3:38
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My experience with open-source is very different from yours, I guess... how much such experience do YOU guys have with it? I've been putting lots of my time in it for over a decade, wrote books, got >100,000 search hits, won awards, got great contracts (as a freelancers) and my best job ever thanks to it -- met the woman who's now my wife through my open source work, co-wrote a book on it with her, etc... I can think of many friends with also SUPERB experiences (all of them outstanding developers, surely in the top 1% of the world's IMHO, tho; not sure how it works for less skilled ones). – Alex Martelli Sep 12 at 4:44
LOL silky I think you hit on something I never considered :). Alex I run a few OSS projects - pretty active in that regard :) – Rob Conery Sep 12 at 5:09
@Rob, so on the basis of your experience (forgetting my luck in meeting my wife that way;-), would you say that involvement in OSS is good for getting respect and appreciation (as I believe) or bad (as @silky's comment says)? – Alex Martelli Sep 12 at 5:25
Nah - it's great stuff. I've very much enjoyed doing it, but you have to make sure you keep clear on why you're doing it. – Rob Conery Sep 13 at 20:21
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I haven't been at it for more than four years, but what I have done is just learn new languages and patterns. Doing that has helped a lot.

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I play with my children, and I am looking forward to starting to take a cruise with them, and my wife, to get away from everything, to be away from cellphones and computers.

It is important to have a balance though in life. If it is just work then burnout will be faster.

Take up a hobby that has nothing to do with technology, perhaps carpentry, just using hand tools, no electric tools at all. Or, take up welding.

Have friends that are not into tech, but live very different types of lives.

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Drink alcohol and go outside. For real. Let loose on the weekends. I say that at 10:35pm on a Friday night.

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It's 10:35 somewhere – OMG Ponies Sep 12 at 3:37
Can I just drink alcohol outside? – Buggieboy Sep 12 at 3:49
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oh common... do you really think that solves it? Sorry, i don't – Johannes Rudolph Sep 12 at 6:23
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Because killing your liver is a great way to prevent burn out! – docgnome Sep 12 at 7:14
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"Drink alcohol" doesn't mean you have to drink a litre of 96% alcohol, it may also mean "two beers with friends". Works for me. – Esko Sep 12 at 8:19

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