
Outside a daycare center, a woman in her early thirties is sitting in a parked car with the radio and engine off, staring at nothing in particular for longer than she intended. She’s not in tears. She’s not doing well either. When she eventually brings up this incident weeks later, her therapist doesn’t inquire about her workload first. Another question she poses is, “When did you stop wanting any of this?”
The question “Is this actually your life?” rather than “Are you overworked?” has become a common one in therapy sessions for adults over thirty. Physicians who previously used burnout as a catch-all diagnosis are now taking more time before making the diagnosis. Perhaps the word became too handy. Yes, burnout explains the fatigue, but it doesn’t always explain the fear.
Until you sit with it, the difference seems insignificant. Clinically speaking, burnout is essentially about exhaustion—too much work, insufficient rest, the kind of tiredness that a genuine vacation and a few boundaries can significantly reduce. Dissatisfaction with one’s life path is unfamiliar and more difficult to manage. You’re not too exhausted to continue. Is it that a part of you has lost faith in your future? Some clinicians have a helpful acronym: if a nice vacation or a change of employment would truly make things better, it’s most likely burnout. Something else is going on if the unhappiness doesn’t go away after the trip, the new job, or anything else that should have resolved it.
This also has a generational flavor that is difficult to overlook. It used to feel like an arrival at thirty. These days, it frequently feels like an audit. The mortgage, the marriage, and the title that should have been obtained by now are all weighed against a conception of adulthood that may never have been feasible in the first place. Therapists describe patients who appear to be doing well on the outside but are secretly certain that they made a mistake sometime in 2019.
The two conditions wear similar clothing, which makes diagnosis more difficult. Burnout typically manifests as simultaneous mental, emotional, and physical exhaustion that necessitates a break before it worsens. On the surface, life dissatisfaction may appear to be the same—flatness, irritability, and dragging through Tuesdays—but on the inside, it doesn’t call for relaxation. It’s requesting redirection, which is a much less comfortable thing to allow yourself to desire.
People are hesitant to even think about the second option, I’ve noticed. It feels almost honorable to admit that you’re exhausted; it’s a sign that you’ve worked hard. It feels like failure, or worse, ingratitude, to acknowledge that life itself may be flawed. The distinction between “tired” and “lost” is more hazy in practice than any clinical chart would have you believe. Many people experience silent burnout in the middle of their careers without ever calling it that, and a startling percentage of employees report stress that is directly related to it.
This situation doesn’t have a clear solution, and that’s kind of the point. Some therapists are just more adept at sitting in that ambiguity these days, avoiding the temptation to give someone a sleep schedule when what they really need is permission to ask more difficult questions. I’m still not sure if that change will last or if burnout will once again be the most common explanation. For the time being, the question itself—your life or burnout—seems to be more beneficial than any response.

