- Burnout is a physiological state, not a character flaw — your nervous system has been running on empty and needs replenishment, not judgment
- Recovery isn't about adding more to your plate; it's about removing what drained you and slowly restoring what supports you
- Small, consistent acts of self-restoration — including nutritional support like magnesium — rebuild the foundation burnout destroyed
Step 1: Name It
Burnout has a specific feeling. It's not just tiredness — it's waking up already depleted, the sense that nothing is exciting anymore, the creeping suspicion that you're failing at everything. The WHO recognizes burnout as exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced efficacy. The first step isn't fixing — it's acknowledging: I am burned out. This is real. This is happening to my body.
Burnout lives in the nervous system. Chronic stress keeps cortisol elevated, depletes magnesium and B vitamins, disrupts sleep architecture. This isn't laziness — it's biology.
Step 2: Stop Adding
When you're burned out, your instinct might be to add solutions. Resist this. Burnout recovery is about subtraction. What can you temporarily stop doing? What standard can you lower from "excellent" to "done"?
Step 3: Sleep Before Everything
Before you fix your diet or exercise — sleep. Your brain cleans itself during sleep. Magnesium glycinate can be a practical support: glycine helps lower core body temperature to initiate sleep; magnesium supports GABA to calm neural activity. Taken 30-60 minutes before bed, it's not a sedative — it's a signal to your body that it's safe to rest.
Protect your sleep window. If you do nothing else in the first two weeks of recovery, protect 7-8 hours of sleep like it's a medical prescription. Everything else builds on this.
Step 4: Feed Your Nervous System
Your nervous system runs on nutrients — and stress depletes them. Magnesium is one of the first minerals your body burns through during prolonged stress. Replenishing it isn't a cure for burnout, but it's a prerequisite for recovery.
Step 5: Reconnect With Something Not Productive
Burnout robs you of pleasure. Reclaim it by doing something with no purpose — read a novel, walk without a destination, cook a meal you won't photograph. Remember that you exist beyond your output.
Step 6: Let Recovery Take Its Time
There's no timeline. The pressure to recover quickly is itself a stressor. Show up daily — even if "showing up" just means two magnesium gummies and an early bedtime — and trust that the trajectory, however slow, is upward.
Frequently Asked Questions
References
- 1. World Health Organization. "Burn-out an occupational phenomenon." ICD-11. 2019.
- 2. Boyle NB, Lawton C, Dye L. "The Effects of Magnesium Supplementation on Subjective Anxiety and Stress." Nutrients. 2017;9(5):429.