Most leaders don’t change when life is bad. They change when life becomes unbearable.
That was true for me. In my early years as a founder, I was proud of how much pressure I could withstand and wore exhaustion like a medal.
Of course, I didn’t call it burnout; I called it commitment.
But the nervous system is honest, and eventually your life delivers a message that you can’t outwork.
A System Warning
The word burnout is often used casually, but it has a specific meaning. The World Health Organization describes burnout as a syndrome resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed, characterized by exhaustion, increased mental distance or cynicism, and reduced professional efficacy.
Notice it’s not a moral judgment. It’s a warning light.
In my experience, burnout happens when ego is running the system. Ego says: “Keep going. Prove yourself. Don’t slow down. If you rest, you lose.” It turns your job into an identity and your identity into a hostage.
That is why burnout is not solved by a weekend off, and if you return to the same inner driver, you will recreate the same pressure.
Don’t Wait Until the Crash Makes the Decision for You
Most high performers do not see burnout coming because “performance” looks fine. After all, you can still hit your KPIs while your inner life unravels.
Business CEO Maren Perry calls this “the silent burnout epidemic,” and highlights how burnout often shows up in subtle behavioral shifts—irritability, withdrawal, cynicism, overcommitment—long before someone quits or collapses. Forbes psychology columnist Mark Travers has also written about “high-functioning burnout” and the early signs many driven people miss.
I’ve lived that pattern. I gained weight, my blood pressure and cholesterol climbed, and eventually I injured my back badly enough that I couldn’t ignore it. Even then, my first instinct was to power through.
In the years when I was running on ego, I ignored basic human needs such as proper sleep, real time with my family, and even the humility to listen to feedback. I could still produce results, so I assumed I was fine.
Then the costs showed up where they always show up: in the body, in relationships, and in the quality of decision-making. Burnout doesn’t just drain you. It also narrows your vision. You become reactive, impatient, and less able to listen. That is dangerous for you, your team, and your business.
So my advice is don’t use pain as your business coach, and don’t wait for total exhaustion to force a change.
A Pre-Burnout Protocol for Leaders
I’m not going to give you a “ten-step morning routine,” but I will give you a simpler filter and three questions I now use as an early-warning system:
- What is my inner driver today: purpose or pressure?
- What is one thing I’m doing to look capable instead of being present?
- What is one boundary that would protect the next 90 days?
If you can answer those honestly, you can intervene early.
Then choose one small, structural change that reduces chronic stress rather than decorating it. That could mean cutting a recurring meeting, delegating a decision you cling to, or putting a hard stop on after-hours messaging. It could mean walking for ten minutes without your phone so your nervous system can reset.
Most importantly, begin practicing self-awareness in micro-moments. Notice the tightening in your chest before you say yes. Notice the impulse to keep grinding when you’re already depleted. Notice the story that says, “If I slow down, I’ll fall behind.” That story is usually ego, not truth.
There is a better time to change than “after burnout.” The best time is when you still have enough energy to choose the change with clarity.
Don’t wait for the crash; decide before you have to. And as you do, that choice will protect your future.











