Why Software Engineers Burn Out Differently And What To Do About It
There's a specific kind of exhaustion that software engineers know well. It's not the kind where you can't get out of bed. It's the kind where you get out of bed, open your laptop, join the standup...

Source: DEV Community
There's a specific kind of exhaustion that software engineers know well. It's not the kind where you can't get out of bed. It's the kind where you get out of bed, open your laptop, join the standup, close a few tickets — and feel absolutely nothing. You're still functioning. You're still shipping. But somewhere along the way, the curiosity, the drive to build something that works, the satisfaction of solving a hard problem — quietly disappeared. That's burnout in tech. And it's different from burnout in other fields in ways that make it particularly hard to catch. Why tech burnout is different The work is invisible. When a nurse burns out, there are physical limits. When an engineer burns out, they can still type. The output looks the same from the outside even when the inside is hollow. This makes it easy to push past warning signs for months. Context switching is relentless. A single engineer's day might include three different codebases, two product reviews, a design sync, four Slac