burnout
rrr_kgknk Higuchi's experience-based impression is that working a lot where there is no discretion is painful, but working a lot where there is discretion is interesting. Since the quality of work varies greatly depending on the presence or absence of discretion, the argument will continue to diverge if the assumptions here are off. Therefore, the first battle for workers is how far and how to acquire discretion. kouichiat Those who have experienced both know what I mean. He said that the ideal environment is one where you can control and try to overwork or pamper yourself from a third-party perspective.
I see
You're in the "try to apply a high-intensity load while being metacognizant of your intellectual production process." I've been the one who tries to overuse it, but I've never really consciously indulged in it. chihokojj What I'm realizing when I see various mens rea cases in HR is that once you get one, your stress tolerance goes down tremendously. The load that used to be bearable becomes unbearable and the depression recurs.
So you have to do it sloppily, but in the eyes of a healthy person, it looks like "slacking off".
He's dragging his heavy body and trying his best, but he's doing his best.
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