For myself, the answer lies in losing my spark at work, which can be characterized by a few things:
1) My boss brings me a sense of dread when he or she comes around. Rather than think, "Oh, I wonder what is up," I tend to think, "What does he want, now?" with the connotation of being a taker and not really giving anything back. Or, the boss comes and says, "Got a minute?" when really he means the rest of your day will go onto this here thing I just found.
2) My ideas are put down, ignored or considered a joke. For example, I may have an idea for some new whiz-bang-y feature that I tell my boss about and get a, "Well, we'll see. Maybe we'll get to it," or on wanting a change in how work flows through the office that gets met with nothing after multiple times of explicitly asking, "Could we work like this?"
3) When I know the legacy systems along with the bureaucracy all too well. Most of the companies I've worked for were young in many ways but they all had their share of the ways things used to get done and that there were 101 issues that I knew existed and weren't going to get fixed.
4) When the team I'm on loses its drive. Rather than be a team that is on the go and getting somewhere, we're all going in different directions that seems pointless enough that I lose my desire to work hard.
5) When communication has lost all enthusiasm and humour. I'm not saying I want the place I work at to be all jokes all the time, but there should be some joy in being at the office from my view, some reason to come in and have the attitude, "What will I rock with today?"
6) When finishing something means more problems. An example here is where I finish the features for a new release and as I put in feature A, out comes enhancements B, C, and D to do ASAP. Or in fixing a bug, I find another few bugs and my work load keeps going up and up and up until.... Another way to see this is the notion that my work is like a killing a hydra where for each head I chop off, there are 3 more that grow back and I keep swinging and swinging knocking off a large number of heads, but then think about how many heads there are by then, e.g. if it had 5 heads to start and I chop off each of the original ones, there are 15 at the end of that.
Preventing it can be simple if the environment can be changed into a nuturing one, where there is some connection and the management does know how to run things well. I could work on older technologies all day long if I felt that my work is appreciated and that when I got into the office there was a feeling of, "Wow, now that you're here we can do these awesome things!" or something similar. It is the question of how much of myself is in the job and how much of the job do I like.
