
Lifestyle
2026 Edit
BALANCE > Burnout
Somewhere between answering one more email and squeezing in one more workout, it's easy to mistake being busy for being fulfilled. I learned the hard way that constantly running at full speed just isn't sustainable. Over time, the stress showed up physically, and it reminded me that productivity means very little if it comes at the expense of your health. The truth is: balance always wins over burnout, even when it feels less productive in the moment.
Redefining the day
I used to plan my days around output — how many tasks I could check off before sunset. Now I plan them around energy and focus. Deep work in the morning when my mind is quiet, movement and sunlight in the middle of the day, slower creative work in the late afternoon. The list still gets done, but it no longer comes at the expense of my quality of life.
Non-negotiables
These are the small things I protect like meetings:
- A slow start to my morning — movement before notifications.
- One walk outside, phone on do-not-disturb.
- Whether that's pilates, cycle, lifting, or a hiit class.
- Here are my Alo favorites, movement essentials, and wellness wardrobe.
- An honest cutoff time — romanticizing my space, candles mode on.
- A bedtime routine I actually look forward to.
- Time to do something I enjoy and be a little silly.
Catching burnout early
Burnout almost never shows up as a crash. It whispers first — short patience, a dull skin day, the sudden urge to cancel everything. When I notice those signals, I pull back instead of pushing through: lighter calendar, earlier bedtime, and at least one day a week with absolutely nothing scheduled.
The reframe
Rest isn't a reward for finishing the work — it's part of the work. Balance doesn't mean equal hours for every area of life; it means giving each season what it actually needs. Some weeks that's ambition. Some weeks it's a quiet morning with the dog, no agenda, and that being more than enough.