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Managing Stress & Burnout

How to spot burnout early and find your way back to steadier ground.

Stress and burnout are not the same thing

Stress is usually about too much: too many demands, too much pressure, a sense of being overloaded. Burnout is more about empty: a depletion that builds quietly over months, leaving you exhausted, detached, and doubting whether anything you do matters.

Knowing which one you are facing helps. Stress can often be eased by adjusting the load. Burnout usually asks for something deeper: rest, recovery, and an honest look at what has been draining you.

Early signs worth noticing

Burnout rarely arrives all at once. Watch for the quieter signals: dreading things you used to enjoy, feeling cynical or numb about work, struggling to concentrate, sleeping badly yet always tired, becoming short with the people around you, or feeling that nothing you do is ever enough.

Recovering your energy

Protect your sleep first, since almost everything else is harder without it. Build in genuine breaks rather than scrolling on your phone, which rarely restores you. Move your body in ways that feel good. Reconnect with people who leave you feeling lighter.

Just as importantly, look at what is filling your cup with holes. Burnout is often a sign that something needs to change, not just that you need to cope better with an impossible situation.

Boundaries are a recovery tool

Learning to say no, to set limits on your time, and to ask for help is not selfish. It is how you make your recovery sustainable. Start with one small boundary this week and notice what it gives back to you.

If you are running on empty and cannot see a way to refill, talking it through with someone can help you find the changes that will actually make a difference. We are here when you are ready.

Talking helps

Self-help can do a great deal, and sometimes a little support alongside it makes all the difference. Our team is here, with no waiting list and no GP referral needed.

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These guides offer general support and are not a substitute for professional care or a medical diagnosis. If you are struggling, please reach out to us or to your GP.