Mar 21, 2025
•
5 min read
Everyone says they're burned out. But there's a real difference between needing a weekend off and needing to fundamentally change how you're living.

Everyone uses the word "burnout" now. Had a long week? Burnout. Feeling a bit flat on a Monday morning? Burnout. Didn't feel like cooking dinner? Must be burnout.
But there's a real difference between being tired and being burned out, and mixing them up can lead you down the wrong path entirely.
Tired is temporary
Tiredness has a cause and a cure. You stayed up too late, you had a demanding week, you've been running around after your kids all day. The fix is straightforward: sleep, rest, a weekend off. You bounce back.
Tired people still care about things. They're just low on energy. They can still picture themselves feeling good again. They know what would help, even if they haven't done it yet.
Burnout is different
Burnout isn't about energy levels. It's about meaning. You could sleep for a month and still wake up feeling the same way because the problem isn't physical exhaustion. It's emotional and psychological depletion.
When you're burned out, you stop caring about things that used to matter to you. Work feels pointless. Hobbies don't interest you. You go through the motions but there's nothing behind it. You might not even feel stressed anymore because you've gone past stress into numbness.
The World Health Organisation actually classifies burnout specifically as an occupational phenomenon, but I see it show up in people's personal lives too. Parents, carers, people who've been putting everyone else first for years.
How to tell which one you're dealing with
Ask yourself these two questions:
If I took a proper two-week holiday with no responsibilities, would I come back feeling like myself again? If the answer is yes, you're probably tired. Rest will fix it.
Can I still picture a version of my life that excites me? If the answer is no, if everything feels flat regardless of circumstances, that's closer to burnout.
Why this matters
The reason I care about this distinction is because tired people and burned out people need completely different things.
If you're tired, you need rest and maybe some better boundaries around your time. If you're burned out, rest alone won't fix it. You need to look at the underlying patterns that got you here: the people-pleasing, the overworking, the complete absence of anything in your life that's just for you.
I've had clients come in saying they're burned out when they're actually just exhausted from a rough patch. And I've had clients insist they just need a holiday when they're clearly dealing with something much deeper.
Getting the diagnosis right matters because it changes everything about what you do next.

Written by Maya
Holistic wellness coach helping overwhelmed professionals find their way back to balance. Based in California.


