Career Advice
Overcoming Overworking: 15 Tips for Taking Back Your Life
Working too much? Here are tried-and-true ideas and tips to help you do something about it.
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Maybe your social life feels non-existent. Maybe you’re regularly in a bad mood and you can never entirely switch out of work mode. Or maybe you’re just exhausted.
If you have any of these symptoms, chances are you’re overworking. Here are a few ideas to help you make things better.
None of the suggestions for overcoming overworking will succeed if you don’t do the following:
Even if you’ve never heard terms like “hustle culture”, “performative workaholism”, or “presenteeism,” it’s no secret that “working hard” is a culturally embedded American value. The romanticization of hard work can go too far. When overworking jeopardizes your health, family life, or productivity, nobody wins.
Despite everything we’ve been told, research indicates that sustained overworking doesn’t get you ahead:
Knowing what’s fueling your workaholic tendencies can help you decide how to stop them. Ask yourself:
What drives you, personally, to work so much? Does working make you feel necessary? Is it important for you to impress others? Is work a critical part of your identity? Are you worried about financial security? Do you like to do things perfectly every time? Were your parents, mentors, or people you looked up to workaholics, too?
The key to overcoming overworking is defining your priorities and creating a structure that helps you break habits and achieve your goals.
Just trying a few of these tips can make a big difference. Remember—this is not a checklist; you don’t have to do all of these. In fact, resist the mindset that this will create more work. Change can come if you can commit to making progress on just a few things at a time.
Spend some time thinking about how you want to spend your life.
To proactively advocate for your wellbeing at work, you can:
Look for things you like to do so much that you’ll actually stop work to do them. For example:
Breaking the cycle of workaholism isn’t easy. But creating a healthier and more productive lifestyle is worth the effort.
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