What would be some efficient (economical) ways to recover from a creative burn out
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hm, that really doesn't have anything to do with programming. It is a question to ask either a psychologist or a doctor. General advise is especially hard with Burnout since it is very different from person to person. That means that the necessary actions of therapy and recovery can vary a lot too. I strongly advise to see a health professional, if you or anyone close to you suffers from a serious burnout, burnout often comes with quite heavy depressions which can be lethal. But otherwise here some guidelines: Persons at risk of burnout syndrome very often do not pay enough attention to their own needs. They often let themselves be dominated by their very high expectations of themselves and their performance, regardless of the resources which are actually available to them. It is therefore important for you to consciously plan time and space for rest and regeneration into your daily routine. Cultivate regular opportunities of regeneration such as sports, music or other hobbies which do you good and you enjoy.
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I feel risk of burnout some times. Some things I do are:
And do seek professional help - there's nothing to lose. |
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It really depends on what your burnout is about... If you're sick of your job (but still want to keep it) take vacation time, and don't think about them at all. AT ALL. Turn off your cell phone. Don't check email. Take a relaxing visit to a monastery that has no technology whatsoever. This may work; however, depending on your work, they may get creative. (I.e. carrier pigeon with the message "What's the database root password?") If you're sick of your job and DON'T want to keep it, search for a new one. When you get it, quit in a flamboyant manner. Ideally nothing involving feces or open flame, but that entirely depends on the nature of your burnout. If you're sick of coding and the like... that's a little bit more complicated. I personally have found that spending time studying new and interesting technologies, things that are similar to why I first got into the industry in the first place, can be EXTREMELY refreshing and can revive your "joie d' emploi", as it were. For example, I was getting really really really burned out on C++; Java had been out for a couple of years, and I'd been hearing good things about it; I decided to look into it and investigate it and teach myself. The sense of "holy crap, this stuff is actually really good" lifted me out of burnout and gave me a renewed sense of purpose; it made me realize that some people in our industry were actually doing GOOD work, as opposed to just crap. That last method can be useful because it can lead to new career paths; I've worked in Java happily after that. Wouldn't go back to C++, either, at this point. In general... I would try to remember what got you into this field in the first place. That sense of wonder and control; the amazement at what you can do with good software, that thrill of code done right... that's what you want to try to rediscover. It's still there, I suspect; but it's so easy for all of us to get "heads down" in our current task, our current job, our current technology, that we forget to look up and realize that this is a wonderful time to be in this industry; that there's so much innovation and that we still are in such a young field, that the world in which we work is changing rapidly, and with each change, there are new wonders to be discovered. Finding that again, I think, is the true cure for burnout. And, of course, a couple of beers after work on Fridays does wonders as well... :-) |
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Take a vacation, vegg out on Stack Overflow, and spend some time focusing on things that you are passionate about (whether computer-related or not) |
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If you're referring to programming burn out, you might want to take a look at this earlier Stack Overflow post: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/273299/how-do-you-pull-yourself-out-of-a-programming-slump |
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Workout. That would have avoided the burnout in the first place! |
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Arent you supposed to steer in the opposite direction? |
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