
Before the sun rises, the gym lights flicker on at 6:00 a.m. There are already a few people there, monitoring smartwatches, recording sleep scores, and modifying plans from the previous evening. In between sets, one person browses through a habit-tracking app, acting as though the workout isn’t finished until it’s recorded. It’s difficult to ignore how organized everything seems these days. Even something as natural as waking up has been turned into a show.
Self-improvement used to require sporadic introspection, such as reading a book or perhaps establishing a goal at the beginning of the year. It feels continuous now. measured. It’s almost industrial. Some of this change is supported by the data. The American Psychological Association frequently cites research that indicates an overemphasis on optimization may exacerbate anxiety and burnout, particularly in high achievers. It’s harder to tell when progress subtly gives way to fatigue.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic | Self-Optimisation & Mental Health |
| Field | Psychology / Behavioral Science |
| Core Concept | “Betterment Burnout” & Toxic Productivity |
| Key Mechanism | Moving goalposts, perfectionism, cognitive overload |
| Affected Groups | Professionals, students, high achievers |
| Referenced Organization | American Psychological Association |
| Key Insight | Excessive self-optimization linked to burnout & anxiety |
| Reference Link | https://www.apa.org |
It’s possible that the issue isn’t self-improvement per se, but rather how it never seems to end. There used to be edges to goals. You paused, completed a task, and perhaps even felt content. Now, most of the time, achieving a goal simply opens the next one. Aim for ten kilometers while running five. Track it more accurately and get better sleep. Eat well and maximize your macros.
The goalposts are constantly shifting. Aggressively at times, subtly at others. When someone finally gets what they’ve always wanted and feels nothing, it’s a strange moment. Or worse, a glimmer of worry about what might happen next. Although that response doesn’t always make sense on paper, it appears in conversation more frequently than people realize.
When two independent contractors are comparing their productivity schedules while seated in a café, one of them mentions getting up earlier in order to “gain an edge.” The other nods, already considering how to proceed. Neither seems especially content.
There’s a feeling that getting better has turned into a duty.
Social media is not beneficial. Seldom does it. If you scroll long enough, you’ll see well-organized lives with disciplined schedules, ideal diets, and optimized morning routines. Naturally, it is curated. However, this does not always lessen the impact. Quietly and persistently, comparison continues to creep in.
Furthermore, self-worth begins to attach itself to output once comparison is introduced. Productivity turns into morality. The rest starts to feel suspicious.
Although the exact date of this change is still unknown, it appears to be connected to a more general cultural belief that everything can and should be improved. Sleep is something to maximize, not just a place to rest. Recuperation for improved performance is what leisure is all about. Relationships can also begin to feel like systems that need to be improved.
In other words, life turns into a project.
There are cognitive costs associated with that project. It takes focus to continuously monitor habits, modify routines, and assess progress. Much of it. Decision fatigue begins to set in. When little decisions are made repeatedly, they begin to weigh more than they should.
Someone staring at a to-do list, unable to begin, is a familiar scene. They feel that every choice must be the “right” one, not because they lack self-control. the best one. The pressure to make the right decision becomes crippling.
Ironically, striving for efficiency frequently results in passivity.
Something more biological lies beneath all of this. The human brain isn’t made to solve problems all the time. However, self-optimization maintains it there by looking for defects, spotting gaps, and attempting to close them. It’s a loop.
And the body reacts appropriately.
Stress turns from acute to chronic. The nervous system remains active for longer than it should because it is primed for brief bursts of challenge. After that comes irritability. Fatigue sets in. It’s not a dramatic feeling. Compared to that, it is quieter. It sounds more like a constant background hum.
A deeper, more difficult-to-quantify tension is also at work.
Despite how frequently the metaphor is employed, humans are not machines. We don’t work with consistent outputs and clean inputs. We require inefficiency. idle time. unplanned moments. In particular, creativity appears to be resistant to optimization. It flourishes in unmeasured spaces.
It seems a little strange to watch someone attempt to fit creativity into set time slots. Not exactly incorrect. Just not finished.
Among those who abandon rigorous self-improvement regimens, there is a story that is whispered. They discuss rediscovering basic things, such as reading without summarizing important insights, walking without keeping track of steps, and spending time without assessing its “value.”
It doesn’t sound revolutionary. However, it feels different.
It has an air of lightness. A relief of sorts.
Naturally, not all self-optimization is detrimental. It helps to have some structure. Certain objectives are important. When progress becomes unceasing, and there is no room for just being, the issue appears.
One term that keeps coming up is “betterment burnout.” It depicts a subtle yet genuine exhaustion that results from trying too hard for too long rather than from failing.
Perhaps that is the paradox.
There is less space to truly experience life, the more someone strives to be flawless in every way. Moments turn into measurements. Days turn into to-do lists. Advancement becomes limitless.
There is a growing sense that something needs to be adjusted, as this is seen in social circles, workplaces, and even quiet personal routines. Growth is not rejected, but rather its hold is loosened.
Because it’s still unclear if we can actually become the ideal version of ourselves—the one who is constantly improving, perfectly disciplined, and endlessly optimized.
or if pursuing it is what wears people out.
Although it doesn’t trend as quickly, a more subdued alternative is starting to emerge. It implies that not everything has to be fixed. that some days might not be completed. That remainder doesn’t require explanation.
It sounds easy. Almost too easy.
However, deciding not to measure something could be the hardest choice of all in a culture that measures everything.

