Wednesday, February 17, 2021

My Burnout Recovery Plan

I have been hesitant to publish this post as I recognise that I have not fully recovered from my burnout yet.
Making declarations about what might be working for me and could be an answer for you should be taken a little lightly. In saying that, I still think something of my strategy could be a great platform you could try for yourself?

Here are 4 things I am focused on right now: 

1. Dump the what's next and focus on right now

I have discovered that my internal culture and the world around me is always screaming "what's next?". At our core I think we have an insatiable appetite for new, new, new and next, next, next.
In context for my burnout recovery I have dumped the "what's next?" question and the potential anxiety it causes me and instead I am focusing on right now. Taking whatever opportunity comes my way today. Doing what I can do and that's all. Letting tomorrow look after itself.

When I try and look too far ahead I don't feel very good.
Partly because my hope in the future has been bruised a little and it makes me feel quite vulnerable.

Matthew 6:34 actually states “Do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself...each day has enough trouble of its own.” 

2. Less Friends - Better Quality

I can not say this was my plan, but it worked out for the best I think, as painful as it was to experience.

Being a Pastor meant I had a large "friend" group or so I thought. Lots of people in my life who needed me, that I worked with. I had plenty of "people time".
As our world and role changed we lost so many friends and at a seemingly blinding pace.
While it was, and still is to some degree difficult to take, it also was setting me up for recovery.

I honestly believe now that less is best when it comes to really special friends.
Burnout recovery requires a special few people you can have relationship with.
People you can trust with your current state of mind and emotional quality.
Too many people will drain you. 
Go for quality over quantity.
Have people around you that you trust to say what you need to hear and in a way you might best receive it.
The crowd will only bring noise and cause you confusion and eventually retreat.

3. Simplify your Day

When I began a new career in the 90's I was introduced to quality diary use and planning.
It was based around making lists of what you needed to do each day and also attributing priority values to those lists. It really helped me in my new career.

Now leap forward several decades and I have lived my life by lists.
Lists of tasks. Task lists that were never ending. Lists that never were completed yesterday so spilled into the next day. You probably get the idea...
This model does not work when you are burned out!

Instead of big lists to do maybe have 1-3 acheivable things to do each day.
Start there and then review later on if you have energy for more.

Knowing you have achieved something each day, even if its small, is far more satisfying than knowing you never achieved everything!

4. Heathy in every sphere but not in a hurry

When I first considered my health seriously near the end of last year I initially wanted to get healthy like I did when I wasn't burned out. By creating an intense fitness and food plan. To go hard at it like I have in the past.
But the mere thought of tackling my health like this made me feel even more sick and ultimately not motivated.

So this time around I trying to get healthy at a pace I can live with.
If it takes me 2 years to lose some #lockdownlife flab so be it.
If it takes longer than that to run 10K reasonably comfortable like I used to do many days a week, well that's all good with me.

I reminded myself of this simple truth recently...
It took me years to get unhealthy. It is ok if it takes me years to get right. Just as long as I am heading in the right direction. 

And finally....
Go easier on yourself than you think you should at this time.
I have to keep reminding myself to keep reminding myself...
In my burnout, berating myself for my failure is easy for me.

If you are struggling please stop kicking yourself.
It might feel like you are doing something but that something is just hurting yourself.

I hope something of my journey helps someone out there?

Something to think about...

If you want to support what I have done and will do in the future, you can now do that with Buy Me A Coffee - I love coffee!




2 comments:

James Anson said...

Good on you Locky. Brave thing to write about. Keep putting one foot in front of the other. Blessings

Karin said...

Brilliant. Looking forward to more.
Regards Karin
(Otherwise known as Adrian Daniel's mom)