Last week, a client asked me a question I hear more and more often:
“Do you work with clients who experience burnout? I think I’m almost there.”
That phrase almost burned out is something many high-performing professionals say right before they hit a wall.
Here’s the truth: burnout doesn’t happen overnight. It builds slowly, quietly, and often while you’re still achieving, producing, and showing up for everyone else.
If you’ve been feeling exhausted, disengaged, or questioning everything you once worked so hard for, this is your signal not to push harder but to pause and reassess.
Because burnout is not a requirement for success.
What Burnout Really Is (And What It Isn’t)
Burnout isn’t just being tired after a long week. It’s deeper than that.
Burnout is a state of chronic physical and emotional exhaustion, often paired with:
- Feeling detached or disengaged from your work
- A loss of motivation or sense of purpose
- Increased frustration, irritability, or cynicism
- A noticeable drop in performance or confidence
It’s what happens when your effort consistently outweighs your energy, your values feel misaligned with your environment, and your boundaries have slowly disappeared.
Burnout is not a sign that you’re not strong enough.
It’s often a sign that something in your career or life is no longer aligned.
The “Almost Burnout” Stage: The Warning Signs
Most people don’t recognize burnout until they’re already deep in it. The “almost burnout” stage is where real change can happen.
Here’s what that stage often looks like:
- You’re constantly busy, but not fulfilled
- You feel mentally drained before your day even begins
- You struggle to disconnect from work
- You say “yes” when you mean “no”
- You feel like you’re on autopilot
This is where career ownership becomes essential.
When you take ownership of your career, you don’t wait until things fall apart, you proactively realign.
Why Burnout Happens (Especially to High Achievers)
All of my clients are ambitious, capable, and deeply committed. Ironically, those qualities can increase the risk of burnout.
Burnout often stems from:
- Lack of boundaries
- Misalignment with values
- Overcommitment and people-pleasing
- Perfectionism (and do I have a lot of clients who battle perfectionism)
- Lack of clarity around goals or direction
In my Own Your Career framework, we focus on aligning your work with your values, defining clear goals, and creating a path that is both successful and sustainable.
Because success without sustainability leads straight to burnout.

Burnout and the “CEO of Your Life” Mindset
If you were the CEO of a company and saw your top performer running at 120% with no recovery, what would you do?
You wouldn’t push them harder.
You’d step in, assess, and restructure.
That’s the shift I invite my clients to make:
Start leading your life the way a CEO would lead a business.
That means:
- Evaluating what’s working and what’s not
- Making intentional decisions
- Protecting your most valuable resource which is your energy
Your career is one part of your life. Not the cost of it.
How to Prevent Burnout Before It Takes Over
Burnout prevention isn’t about doing less, it’s about doing what matters, in a way that’s aligned and sustainable.
It starts with awareness, but it requires action.
In my coaching work, we focus on:
- Clarifying values and priorities
- Setting boundaries that protect your time and energy
- Creating SMART goals that are realistic and aligned
- Building systems for time management and decision-making
- Strengthening communication so you can advocate for yourself
Because when you’re clear on what matters, it becomes easier to say no to what doesn’t.
10 Practical Ways to Avoid or Minimize Burnout
If you’re feeling “almost burned out,” start here:
1. Get Clear on Your Values
When your work doesn’t align with your values, burnout accelerates. Define what truly matters and use it as your decision filter.
2. Redefine Success
Success isn’t just achievement, it’s sustainability. Ask yourself: What does a fulfilling life look like for me?
3. Set Boundaries Without Guilt
Your time and energy are limited resources. Protect them intentionally.
4. Learn to Say No
Saying yes to everything is often what leads to burnout. Saying no creates space for what matters most.
5. Audit Your Energy
Pay attention to what drains you and what energizes you. Then adjust accordingly.
6. Create SMART Goals
Clear, realistic goals reduce overwhelm and create direction instead of pressure.
7. Prioritize Time Management
Structure creates freedom. Even simple planning systems can significantly reduce stress.
8. Build a Support System
Mentors, coaches, and peers can provide perspective, accountability, and support.
9. Take Breaks Before You Need Them
Rest is not something you earn, it’s something you require.
10. Take Ownership of Your Career You are not stuck. You always have choices. The first step is to recognize that you’re in the driver’s seat.

You Don’t Have to Navigate Burnout Alone
Burnout can feel isolating and it doesn’t have to be.
In coaching, we create space to:
- Step back and assess what’s really going on
- Identify what’s out of alignment
- Build a clear, actionable path forward
As outlined in my coaching approach, this work is about creating clarity, shifting mindset, and developing a path that aligns with your values and goals, not just pushing through what isn’t working.
If you’re feeling “almost burned out,” this is your opportunity to reset before you reach full burnout.
Your Next Step: Take Back Control
You deserve a career that challenges you and supports you.
You deserve success that doesn’t come at the cost of your well-being.
If this resonates with you, I invite you to take the next step.
Let’s work together to realign your career, redefine your goals, and create a path that leads to both success and fulfillment.
Successful Career, Fulfilling Life.