T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
706.2 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | It's a terminal drama... | Tue Mar 07 1989 22:03 | 46 |
|
I think there are definately times when we all feel this way.
"Burnout" in our jobs can definately lead to decreased
productivity in the workplace and put stress on our personal
lives.
The way I deal with burnout in the workplace is to spend
about 15 minutes at the end of everyday planning my next day.
Included in that planning is time for ME. Whether it be a
lazy stroll across the building to talk to a friend who knows
nothing about my project (hence not talking work for a couple
minutes and enjoying the stroll) or maybe its talking a walk
outside on a nice warm day at lunch. I schedule a few
minutes for myself on hectic days to calm myself down. You'd
be surprised at the results a few minutes can cause.
Personal life is a real kicker, I know for a fact that its
very hard to explain to most people that the reason you
haven't spent time with them in the past X weeks/months is
that you have been working so hard and getting so stressed at
work that its difficult to relax when you aren't at work.
Some people take the "distance" personally instead of realizing
it for what it really is. I've been on both ends of this
situation and its rough for all parties involved. I've
learned to accept the fact that when I don't hear from
someone I love its that they are busy...it doesn't mean that
they love me less. Being on the receiving end of the
distance, I've learned that the quality things are what
counts...not quantity.
I guess the way I deal with burnout is that I find quality
time for ME....I get that refresher that I need...especially
on a daily basis. I take a walk, I exercise, I do the
"little things" that count so much for the people I love.
Also, I am no longer afraid to let my mind be wiped clean of
the work that is stressing me. One of the major problems I
faced with "burnout" was that I could not let myself totally
forget the work...even if it is only for a few minutes...I
feel that totally divorcing my mind from the subject is
definately necessary to combat the "burnout."
good luck!
kath
|
706.3 | Let it Burn.... | MCIS2::AKINS | I C your Schwartz is as big as mine! | Wed Mar 08 1989 00:52 | 7 |
| Having a full time job with OT, and working towards two degrees
(Science and Art) as a full time student, I have experianced Burn-out.
It usually only hits when I miss a couple nights in a row sleep.
What I do is to just keep going and ignore it. Eventually it passes
and I'm myself again in a day or two.
Bill
|
706.4 | | TPVAX1::WHITEWAY | | Wed Mar 08 1989 07:25 | 26 |
|
At one point in my "past life" I was going to 2 different schools full
time nights, while holding my full time(40+ hours) job.
One day I just stopped functioning............ It was at that
point I learned the most important thing one can do is take time
for themselves. That is the key..... You need to find time to do
something for yourself.. It does not have to be a lot of time either,
just quality time.
I personally made myself get away more frequently from my normal
life..... I went on more walks, drove to the beach..etc...........
It is suprising what a fresh attiutude can do, and change is the
best thing in the world to give yourself a new attitude.
Goodluck.... What you are facing is something very difficult.
It can "screw up" all parts of your life if you allow it to...
As an afterthought........ Take a stress management course...
Or there is always counselling.(This can be very beneficial)
Keep the faith and goodluck.
|
706.5 | What I did... | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Disic Vita Lux Hominum | Wed Mar 08 1989 07:32 | 27 |
| I quit working. Not totally, I now only work 40 hours a week.
The only thing about doing that is you have to be willing to drop
a rating in your performance review. To me that will be worth it
if it happens. I was working from 7 to 4:30 Monday through Friday,
then I'd log in from home and work from 8pm to well past 1am or 2am.
And then work all day Saturday, and most of Sunday afternoon/evening.
Sure the work was getting done, and my review (rating wise) was really
good, but I was a wreck, because I was doing the work of 2+ people.
So, the middle of December I went on a 2.5 week vacation, and when I
came back, I came back to ONLY work 40 hours a week, and thats it.
It has done wonders for my personal life. I am able to do the things
I've always wanted to do.
It did create quite a strain at work, because now it looks like
I'm not performing as well. I'm performing just as good - in fact
probably better, because I'm no longer carrying the stress I did.
It was something my boss still has not gotten used to. But sooner
or later, he'll come around, its just a matter of time, I'm sure.
I don't mind putting in 80+ hours a week in work, but you have to
be appreciated. When its obvious that you're not, its up to you
to change the situation.
Gale
|
706.6 | It could happen to YOU! | MEMV01::CROCITTO | It's Jane Bullock Crocitto now | Wed Mar 08 1989 08:41 | 42 |
| Hi--
As a victim of "burnout" myself, I just have to answer this note.
Burnout IS real, and it IS caused by unresolved stress. Previous
noters have given some excellent suggestions to deal with stress,
and they do work. But you must MAKE yourself do them--get up, leave
the "scene of the crime", and take a walk, or call a friend, or
take your lunch and go someplace nice, go shopping or whatever.
For the past 18 months, I have been working steadily on a major
project. The part of it that I worked on was always in a state
of change, and it made it extremely difficult to get my job done,
and to feel good about what I was doing on it. I put in long hours,
and worked constantly to meet my deadlines. I was rude and short
with everyone I worked with, and took a lot of my frustration out
on my husband and family. I could never stop thinking about it,
or worrying about it. I even used to have nightmares about it!
My body's way of handling the burnout was to break down periodically--
I'd be out for a week with bronchitis or flu. Then, once I got
back, it would start all over again.
But one day, things came to a head. I had what was diagnosed as
a "stress attack" (mimicks a mild heart attack) and was carried
out of the workplace on a stretcher, and spent the rest of the day
hooked up to monitors in the hospital. And all because I wasn't
dealing with my own stress!! It can happen to anyone, and you have to head
it off at the pass, so to speak.
If you are in the situation where you must be at work, and can't
find another job, or whatever, then DO take 20 minutes or so for
yourself each day. Look into one of the stress management courses
that are offered in-house--they are very good.
Don't let the situation control you--control the situation!
Best of luck to you, and please keep us posted.
Jane
|
706.7 | Scary stuff! | PARITY::STACIE | Life's playin' me like a war game | Wed Mar 08 1989 08:52 | 59 |
|
I'm afraid this is what is happening to my best friend, and it scares
me.
She is a full-time nursing student, and has been doing her "time"
in the hospital (different wards) to learn all of the different
things there are to learn. She does this from 7am to 2:30pm, all of
which is extremely stressful for her, she is in an accelerated learning
class, and a lot is expected from the students. She is just beginning
to do a lot of the assorted medical procedures that nurses do, and
everything she does is supervised by strict instructors. The environment
is very fast paced and the students are expected to keep up, of
course. From what I hear, she does great/better than average than
most of the girls in her class.
Along with this, they are given large amounts of homework and case
studies to work on at night. To support herself, she works a lot
at a local nursing home, usually a few days a week and often "doubles"
on the weekends. The nursing home (who paid some of her tuition)
is supportive and allows her to work on her homework if she has
time at the end of her shift, but she doesn't always. She has a
serious boyfriend (who has no transportation) and he lives 40 miles
away. She spends many nights driving down to see him, and getting up
at 4am to come home and start her day again. To top that all off,
her parents give her a lot of flak about her boyfriend, not letting
her have him over to her house, so if she wants to see him she has
to drive. She's close to her parents and fighting like they do
takes a lot out of her. Her weekends are always completely
jam-packed, and she says she begins the week more tired than she
ends it. She is basically just trying to fit too much in, and I'm
afraid it's too much for her.
There is no other way she can make it. She graduates in 3 months.
She also worries a lot about money because it seems like she works
so much but she never gets anywhere. On her nights "off" I usually
(like last night) take her out to a nice restaurant and we relax
and have a few drinks. I know this helps her a lot, to be out with
no "agenda" because she feels so stressed all the time.
She has a very fragile system and has gotten sick quite a few times
this year. She still keeps up her pace because she's too close
to graduation to fail now. I'm really afraid that once she gets
out of nursing school she is going to be a real mess or that she
is going to have nurse's burnout before she starts. I mean, she
nurses, whether it be school or work, many days 7-3 (school)
and 3-11 (work) How long can she keep that up??
I do the best I can, I keep in touch and do her as many favors as
I can to make things easier. She likes to go out and have fun because
it takes her mind off of things, so I take her out. I pick her
boyfriend up at the train station when I can so that she doesn't
have to rush over after work (it's a few towns over). I try to
be there for her to lean on and to be supportive, sometimes typing
papers for her and doing errands, but still, I'm really worried
about her.
Any suggestions?
Dilly
|
706.8 | there's this book... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Be *Excellent* To Each Other | Wed Mar 08 1989 09:31 | 14 |
| I'd suggest that you read a really good book on the subject (my
dad gave it to me - we both got a lot out of it). It's called "Burn
Out - How to beat the high cost of success" and it's by Dr. Herbert
J. Freudenberger (Ph. D.).
I lent it to a friend because I thought it might help her (she was
becoming kind of a stress-puppy and working long hours and so forth).
I asked her how she was doing at reading it, and whether it was
helping. She said she would read it in bits and pieces while she
was Batch Processing things. I giggled a bit, because that's *not*
the way to avoid burn-out.... ;).
-Jody
|
706.9 | take time for YOU | VIDEO::PARENTJ | physical>human, Logical>person | Wed Mar 08 1989 11:05 | 25 |
| re: .6 Jane
Boy did you hit the nail square on the head. Yes unresolved stress
is a killer. I continue to experience the stress and its effects
but now I'm doing something about it. In my case a job change and
professional help are called for. Burnout is real, the name
unfortunatly does not describe the problem and is frequently
misapplied. I can tell when the stress has reached the boil point
now, I cannot perform, the memory goes to pot, and the general feeling
of out of control sets in. It can get into an endless loop condition
where the more out of control you feel, the more you try to control
without success. This sends you right back to the start of the
last sentence. I try to break the loop, do something different,
go somewhere _I_ like, or just get a little more sleep for one day.
The responses I've read do point out one thing, pay attention to
yourself. ASK YOU, whats important? Are you working toward it?
Oh yes there is a question _I_ ask me, it it important to _ME_?
Afterall its your body and mind.... Have you hugged yourself today?
Cheers, john
|
706.10 | what they said | HANNAH::MODICA | | Wed Mar 08 1989 11:12 | 11 |
| RE: .9 and .6 too.
John, Jane, I was really surprised when I read your notes. Because I
could have written those exact words myself. I'm kind of surprised
to hear that others have felt the same and/or experienced the
same physical disintegration.
So, I'd just like to say thanks for sharing your thoughts on this
and I wholeheartedly endorse the advice you've offered.
Hank
|
706.11 | nutrition | TPVAX1::WHITEWAY | | Wed Mar 08 1989 14:45 | 9 |
| One more note............ When your body and mind is stressed
so are other parts effected..... Correct diet (Nutritional) can
play a big role.
When I was severely stressed I ended up in the doctors.....The
first thing to go on me was the muscles..(Between shoulders and
neck) and then it went all over......Vit b complex and c was a needed
part of my diet....... And I still am having problems all based
on that time I allowed myself to burn out.
|
706.12 | Take it easy before you kill yourself | SSDEVO::NGUYEN | | Wed Mar 08 1989 15:03 | 12 |
| I just got back from the doctor's office, symptom: burn-out. I
have been working like crazy for the last few months. I am working
on two graduate degrees, trying to keep up with piano practice for
concerts. I usually go to bed at two in the morning and get up
at seven during week days. On weekends, I go to bed at four or
five in the morning and get up at ten. My doctor told me that he
was very surprise I did not die. He ordered me to take a vacation,
but I can not do it for I am new here and my time off is limited.
I just have to live with it then.
Take care of yourself before you end up in the hospital like me.
|
706.13 | Some alternatives | FDCV01::BOTTIGLIO | One Day At A Time | Wed Mar 08 1989 15:47 | 14 |
| Given that the work situation can't be changed all that quickly,
one must look outside of work ... an outside interest, some positive
social experiences, a hobby, excercise - will all help.
The most significant help must come from within - i.e. your
attitude. If you accept that the work situation is a temporary reality
which you can not change, but know full well that it will change
in time, or that you will be able to effect a change, and just go
with the flow, you will feel better about things.
I hope this helps.
Guy B.
|
706.14 | Go with the flow | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Wed Mar 08 1989 18:15 | 22 |
|
The base note is close enough to describing me that I have been
asked if I wrote it.
Add to that note the following: I have been living on the road for the
past week and will be on the road for at least another week, living in
hotels and eating generally unhealthy foods, setting host to access my
account. No end in sight.
When I find myself stressing out I concentrate on the goal. When
the pace gets just a bit too fast I find that letting up causes
me more stress than if I hold my pace so I look towards the achievement
of completion.
Sure, my social life consists of asking the waiter the contents
of my French Goop and my personal time consists of 20 minutes of
CNN before I fall asleep.
It's the choice I made and it works for me. Workaholic? Probably,
but somehow, in some perverse way, I enjoy it.
Kris
|
706.15 | What a timely topic | SCRUZ::CORDES_JA | Clogging is my life! | Wed Mar 08 1989 20:22 | 30 |
| Boy can I relate to this note.
On top of the fact that I'm burning out from the 200+ phone calls
I take per day while trying to do my administrative work in major
interrupt mode, I have been having financial and medical problems.
We have also recently lost 1 family pet and are having to put the
other one to sleep tomorrow due to cancer. I keep saying I just
can't deal with all of this but I keep on dealing with it (at least
I think I am). I feel as if I'm burning out at work and in my personal
life.
I think the only thing that keeps everything at a tolerable level
is the fact that I've set aside 2-3 nights a week for exercise.
I "clog" (its sort of like tap dancing) for 3 hours/night, helps
take the aggressions out. I also have some good friends that I lean
on when necessary.
Sure is nice to have a place like this where you can express your
feelings on the subject. I think its helped me just acknowledging
that a problem exists. Based on the 1st couple of months of this
year, if I had the option to cancel the rest of 1989 and move on to
1990 I might just go for it. I just keep telling myself its got to
get better and I try to keep a positive outlook and clog, clog,
clog those problems away.
Thanks for listening,
Jan
|
706.16 | a useful list,,, | KOBAL::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Thu Mar 09 1989 09:50 | 53 |
|
At the company I worked for before DEC, I went through three separate
periods of burnout. I found myself handling each one differently,
probably because I saw it coming sooner each time. (Half the problem
is that by the time you know you're burned out, you don't have as many
emotional and physical resources to deal with it.
Late in my 8.5 years with the company, I sent to a management seminar
that addressed burnout as one of the topics. Here's a list of
burnout avoidance steps (which I kept over my desk for a while).
They don't all apply to every case, but they got me thinking about
ways I could be more flexible, and also thinking about priorities.
(It helps when you tell a boss that a little flexibility now will
make you more productive - and creative - over the long haul.)
Good luck - hope this helps...
Ron
o Pace yourself according to your own natural rhythms and responses
o Delegate some responsibilities to others
o Try to reverse the pattern of denial. Make a list of the tasks
you;ve been avoiding and make a point of completing one, then
another, and on to the next.
o Take a look at how you;ve been eating, the amount of rest you
get, and the amount of exercise you take.
o Don't add to your own stress by starting a rigid diet or a harsh
exercise routine -- do these things in moderation.
o Talk about your feelings with close friends or relatives.
o Don't rely on your memory. Write things down; keep a phone
log; write things on a calendar; keep a Rolodex. [This was
one of the most important ones for me - at the time I had
five writers working on over 40 projects, and had 10 regularly
scheduled meetings a week.]
o Rearrange your work hours if possible.
o Pamper yourself. Give yourself rewards for coping with
stress -- a weekend in the country, a new book, a
class in Japanese. [The way I am in foreign languages,
this would hardly be a stress reducer for me!]
List reproduced without permission from course material from
"Management for Publications Professionals" Editorial Experts, Inc.
|
706.17 | Ah yes, friends | VIDEO::PARENTJ | physical>human, Logical>person | Thu Mar 09 1989 11:19 | 9 |
|
There was one thing I did forget, the last two note reminded me.
You have to have friends you can talk to, and that you listen to.
Better then even they will see the signs before you do.
Cheers,
john
|
706.18 | say it over and over and over... | MORO::NEWELL_JO | Replies, they don't come easy | Thu Mar 09 1989 13:43 | 13 |
| RE: many
And while you're exercising, eating right, getting more sleep, etc...
say to yourself:
"and this too shall pass..."
You have *no* idea how this little bit of hope has helped me through
even the darkest days of my life.
Jodi-
|
706.19 | reply to 706 | ISLNDS::DONAHUE_C | | Wed Mar 15 1989 16:34 | 36 |
| Try an experiment.
Go home at 5 today or tomorrow or friday
And do not feel guilty:DEC is a big company, and the stock will
not take a tumble tonight!
If it is affecting your personal life, you have to assess what is
more important in the long run. If it is effecting your health,
then you need to slow down. You only get one body! About 5 years
ago, I was working very late, losing weight( which was nice), but
my hair was going grey! Well, I left the job. My hair has less
grey today than 5 years ago.
To get out of a bind, it is sometimes necessary to take the time
to analyze how you spend your time, and plan a little. This of
course cuts into the day, but it may make you feel better about
the hassle in that you have control. Plan your next few weeks,
put in deadlines, approximate the hours needed to complet the project,
write down the hours spent in meeting. If this adds up to 40+ hours
(which I suspect it will), then see if there are a few items someone
else can help with (really look at this) For meetings, get someone
else to attend, tell the person holding the meeting, or get notes
from someone else.
I know when I work a lot, I resent the place.
when you talked to your boss, did you have your act together, or
were you just talking off the top of your head? It is better to
go in with a plan.
Also, eat correctly. Eat lunch, can the coffee, eat a good dinner,
not fried foods. Treat yourself to a good dinner, not nachos and
beer. Eat cereal (at your desk if necessary) for breakfast, not
a donut.
Hope this helps.
|
706.20 | Milo's Medow | MCIS2::AKINS | College....The Big Lie | Fri Mar 17 1989 10:32 | 4 |
| Why not take an extra long lunch and enjoy the weather with a
dandelion break? (For those who read Bloom County.)
Bill
|
706.21 | try several ideas | DPDMAI::DAWSON | THAT MAKES SENSE.....NONSENSE! | Thu Mar 23 1989 05:35 | 31 |
| RE:ALL
Well I guess I am not the only one that this occurs to.
That in-itself, helps! I work for Field service as a rep. This
means that I am the one that has to go out and fix, what others
have broke. I have been in this line of work for prox 16 yrs and
have found that this problem (burnout) is many times taken as just
"PART" of the job. I can tell you that there are ways of handeling
this problem but they are not simple or even easy.
I had one manager, not with DEC, that handled this problem
as well as anyone I have ever seen. He, had the ability to observe
all that was going on around him without appearing to do so. There
were many times he would walk up to me and say "get out of here
for about 30 min and relax". Since he was new to this particular
management job there was a lot of disbelief when, after three months,
the performance of his people bypassed every other group. His
contention was...in our line of work it is very easy to get what
he called "tunnel vision" and that was the critter that caused many
of the stress problems. This person had decided that a few care-free
moments helped to get around this "normal" result of working on
a very complex problem. So this is the way I try to ease my stress.
Since managers are all different people you may not get one that
understands these problems or how to handle them. My point here
is try to find "something" that works. You may have to try several
ideas until you find one that will work for you. When you do, sit
down with your manager and explain what these ideas are so that
person can deal with your needs.
Dave
|
706.22 | It's not the hours, it's the stress. | NISSAN::STIMSON | Thomas | Thu May 11 1989 18:17 | 24 |
|
It isn't the hours of work that gets you, it's the stress.
Work does not have to be stressful. It can be as satisfying
and relaxing as a hobby, while still following a tightly
disciplined course of action.
Much of the potential stress is not related to the performance
of the work, but to how you perceive it as affecting your image
in the eyes of others, particularly your boss.
This is assuming that the job is not physically tiring or
monotonous. 100, 120, even 140 hours a week (that's 20 hpurs
a day) can work if you enjoy it. (Different people need different
amounts of sleep, just as they have differing nutritional
requirements. The optimum is probably one hour less than the
time after which you would awake naturally.) Taking a whole
weekend off every 2 or 3 weeks will then provide a change of pace
that is refreshing and re-invigorating. It's truly *quality* time.
|
706.23 | RE: .22 - Watch those hours, too | STAR::RDAVIS | If I can't dance,you can keep your OS | Mon Aug 14 1989 18:45 | 33 |
| Tunnel vision is a serious problem not only with "event driven" jobs but with
"long view" jobs such as programming (assuming you have a DEC-style programming
job, with responsibility for functionality, design, and debugging as well).
When I first started out, it struck me how many programmers worked very long
hours but didn't seem to get much done. After a while of keeping track of my
own time, I noticed a pattern: I would do well for a while, then run up against
a problem that I couldn't solve or go off for hours on some "interesting"
tangent. I would resist leaving the office until I was dead on my seat because
of not wanting to leave some particular job-itch unscratched.
Then the next morning, while I was taking my shower or having coffee, I would
come up with the solution to the problem or realize that the solution I worked
so late on the night before was worthless and would have to be redone. It
seemed that most of my hours were being spent undoing things that I had done
in other of my hours.
Now, I am usually in the office for longer-than-required stretches, but try to
stay aware of the possibility of tunnel vision. If I'm not getting anywhere,
I try to convince myself that it's time to leave. I also interrupt my work
fairly often (with other pending work, conversation, VAX Notes, whatever).
Of course, I'm far from completely successful, but it's kept me from going
through burnout while staying comparatively (: >,) successful in
meeting deadlines. I've had managers who were used to whipping the troops
through 80+ hours a week - they didn't like the look of my method, but didn't
argue with the results (although there was one that always imagined how much
more I would accomplish if I'd just put in those extra 40 hours of effort).
Also, it leaves at least one person with energy available for that final
horrible crunch that hasn't been anticipated.
Hope this helps someone,
Ray
|