You're staring at the blue light showing from your computer screen while your hands work magic on the keyboard. Metal music blasting out of the headphone around your ears. You've consumed 25 cups of coffee in just 6 days, you're still feeling hyped. You love the space you are in. The god mode, the maniac self operational mode of ignoring what's going on around. 3... 2... 1.... application deployed. The application you just deployed, it'll take 4 junior developers 6 weeks to build, you said. It took you a week to design, build and ship it. You're happy! Your head is screaming! Spinning. Then it hit, you stand up feeling numb down from your waist, tried stretching and you collapse heavily on the floor.

You’re dead.

End of the story.

Don't go now. The fun is just getting started!

Burnout

What's that? Why does it happen to us developers? And what can we do to avoid it?

*grabs a long chair. . .brace yourself, son*

What is Burnout?

Burnout is the physical, and mental collapse caused by overwork or stress. It slowly enters developers’ life and kills the passion for coding. It manifests itself in different ways for different people. I'm one of those different people. Did you know? Burnout is a very common thing in the IT industry?

We developers get stuck working hard for a long period on multiple projects, that seem impossible to complete. If things go south side (meaning if things don't go as planned) it becomes really dangerous for the developer, and he/she may have to quit from the industry. Or they may fall pit-deep into it and struggle all their life to get out of it.

Why does it happen to us developers?

The answer is already right in front of you, my friend. I want to let you in a little secret. Here it goes. Even the smartest programmer can fall into the bosom of serious burnout. Why does it happen commonly to us developers?

What can we do to avoid burnout?

These are points you are probably already familiar with.

Conclusion:

If you're going to deny yourself sleep, and refuse to eat. Then be ready to leave the software industry. *keeps a straight smiling face*

But really, you need to always put your mental health first. Most developers do not burn out. Instead, they are promoted to roles that involve less and less coding. For those of us that remain in or around coding, the formula for keeping it together is simple. Take care of yourself. Maintain the body. Feed the mind. Build strong and lasting emotional ties. Play, eat, sleep, and have fun. Here's a quote from Vic Blends!

If you’re just out here grinding for no reason, something is going to make you quit. But if you have got a reason for why you’re grinding and you know why you’re doing what you’re doing, ain’t nothing going to be able to stop you. […] You can’t make me quit because I know this is something bigger than my pockets.

Bonus points: For sticking with me, I'll like to give you some free cookies.

WE ALL WANT TO BE THE BEST, REMEMBER THAT ONE SURE WAY TO BECOMING ONE IS TO AVOID BURNING OUT!

Also published on: https://digitalstade.com/burnout-a-developer-best-enemy