It was getting dark when I hit the first riffle of my trip down Utah鈥檚 Green River in a canoe. My plan was to set out while it was cool and log some mileage before nightfall, but dusk came on quicker than I thought. Because I鈥檇 been in a rush to launch, my gear wasn鈥檛 tied down very well. I had trouble reading the water in the fading light, hit some shoals, and barely came out upright. Shaking, I pulled over to camp on a scruffy pile of gravel near the highway for a night of bad sleep and excoriating self-recrimination.
It all seemed a fitting metaphor for the way I鈥檇 been hurtling through life. In the previous two years, I鈥檇 , recorded a dozen podcast episodes, zombie-marched through a 14-city book tour, gotten sick a few times, and missed more of my kids鈥 dance recitals and cross-country meets than I care to remember. Hoping for recovery and insight, I鈥檇 embarked on an ambitious vacation: a 120-mile solo paddle with a tight deadline for a resupply and another tight deadline for a water taxi to pick me up at the end. A vacation with deadlines! The insight, at least, was becoming obvious: what I really needed was to slow down.
I鈥檓 not alone in my overreach. Most of us have a hard time refusing to set goals. In this age of 5G hyperconnectivity, performative workaholism, personalized coaching, biohacking, Strava posturing, and supplement swilling, we鈥檝e internalized the imperative to optimize every aspect of our lives. We feel lost without a plan, guilty for slouching, regretful of every injury, scuttled workout, and to-do item left unticked. Even our so-called leisure activities require frantic preparations and logistical ops reminiscent of Caesar鈥檚 army.
We don鈥檛 just have fear of missing out, we have dread of slacking off. It鈥檚 telling that so many of us push to the edge of our endurance in order to feel good about ourselves. We鈥檝e equated recreational difficulty and social-media posts of summits with self-worth, and that鈥檚 a precarious and unsustainable place to be.
So how is putting our heads down and suffering in the name of glory working out for us? Not so great. Americans are, by and large, fried. Depression听and 听听are , we鈥檙e experiencing high , and we鈥檙e not engaged in as many 听as we used to be.
Anne Helen Petersen, a 38-year-old 听and long-distance runner in Missoula, Montana, remembers the days when her college pals graduated and became ski bums for a while or worked odd jobs in national parks. Now, she says, that鈥檚 rare. Younger millennials and Gen Zers, anxious over the gig economy and helicoptered by their parents, fear veering too far off script into experiences that offer unquantifiable personal gains. The result? Malaise, disaffection, disconnection.
Last year the World Health Organization 听its entry on burnout in the International Classification of Diseases, defining it as a syndrome resulting from 鈥渃hronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed.鈥 It is characterized by feeling depleted, cynical, and unmotivated. Many experts also understand it as a concept of charging too hard without adequate recovery in other spheres of life, including parenting, exercise, and passion-based volunteering.
Leisure pursuits used to be about, well, leisure. Running, for example, emerged as a recreational pastime in the sixties and seventies largely as a way to bliss out, according to Princeton historian Dylan Gottlieb. By the early eighties, though, 鈥渞unning, and marathon training in particular, dovetailed with the same habits that yuppies honed in their white-collar jobs. Personal discipline, delayed gratification, obsessive time management, constant self-analysis, long-range planning: they were just as vital to race training as they were to arbitrage or corporate litigation,鈥 Gottlieb writes in .
We don鈥檛 just have fear of missing out, we have dread of slacking off. It鈥檚 telling that so many of us push to the edge of our endurance in order to feel good about ourselves.
The alpha-dog self-optimization trend has now permeated youth sports, too. Some coaches admit that they鈥檙e complicit in creating burnout. 鈥淔or many sports, there is no longer an off-season, no time off, competitions all year long, nonstop, and that鈥檚 trickled down to kids,鈥 says Ken Vick, the CEO of Velocity Sports Performance. 鈥淭he demands are ridiculous.鈥
Millennials are helping us understand burnout in a new way, because they鈥檙e insisting鈥攊n their insistently millennial fashion鈥攖hat we recognize its impact and the urgency of learning how to back off, both in the workplace and in the rest of our lives. For many of them, years of working hard has failed to deliver听measurable gains in wages, affordable real estate, or even job security. And they are not happy about that. In 听that went viral last year on Buzzfeed News, Petersen wrote, 鈥淏urn颅out and the behaviors and weight that accompany it aren鈥檛, in fact, something we can cure by going on vacation. It鈥檚 not limited to workers in acutely high-stress environments. And it鈥檚 not a temporary affliction: It鈥檚 the millennial condition. It鈥檚 our base temperature. It鈥檚 our background music. It鈥檚 the way things are.鈥
Of course, every recent generation is at least passingly familiar with burnout. The sometimes inspiring, sometimes soul-sucking rally toward achievement, self-颅reliance, and optimal efficiency has been dogging us since the dawn of industrialization. As early as 1807, Words颅worth , 鈥淭he world is too much with us.鈥 He preferred to leave it behind, walking some 180,000 miles in his lifetime across alp, glade, field, and fen.
The overburdening of the individual can exact a real cost on both physical and emotional health. As sports psychologist Michael Gervais bluntly puts it: 鈥淭he way the human organism responds to chronic stress is fatigue, staleness, and even death.鈥 He points to the effects of the stress hormone cortisol, a get-up-and-go neuropeptide that is adaptive in spurts but should not remain elevated all day.
When we鈥檙e pushing hard for an extended period of time, we do indeed get stuff done. We pass the test, win the race, meet our deadlines, make money for shareholders. But as scientists are now , those who are exposed to prolonged stress are more likely to develop dense arteries, cellular inflam颅mation, and 听of the telomeres, those protective casings at the end of a cell鈥檚 chromosomes.
Even if we鈥檙e incredibly fit, we can inflict collateral damage on two of our most health-promoting systems, sleep and relationships, warns Rob Kent de Grey, a social neuro颅scientist at the University of Utah. 鈥淥ne way or another, there鈥檚 a cost to overdoing it,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l eventually suffer performance decrements, and you don鈥檛 always get to choose where the decrements are.鈥
The relentless pursuit of achievement is also counterproductive to many of our values, says Christie Aschwanden, a former nordic ski racer and the author of . 鈥淗igh-achieving people almost uniformly don鈥檛 prioritize sleep,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd they are kidding themselves, because that鈥檚 the single most important thing you need to be good at anything.鈥 Researchers at Harvard 听that adequate nighttime sleep significantly improves motor-skills learning and memory consolidation. And a 2014 review of 113 studies found that sleep deprivation likely reduces motivation and endurance, while a 听from Australia found that a lack of shut-eye increases tension and worsens mood before competition.
A 2014 report from researchers in Sweden 听that people experiencing symptoms of burnout had poorer neural connections between their brain鈥檚 amygdala鈥攐r threat center鈥攁nd the anterior cingulate cortex, which helps regulate emotions. Translation: they let stressful events get the best of them. Another 听from Sweden, published in 2015, found that chronic occupational stress accelerated aging in the medial prefrontal cortex, whose function is critical for decision-making, judgment, and self-concept.
To put it simply, we鈥檙e becoming jerks and prematurely aging ourselves. Burnout and exhaustion, Aschwanden says, prevent us from being present, tuning into the needs of our own bodies, and enjoying the people around us. Relying on technology like sleep-tracking apps may only stress us out more. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l become one of those people road-raging on the way to yoga class,鈥 she says.
The good news is that while elite coaching may have contributed to the burnout epidemic, it also points to a solution. 鈥淲e spend more time now talking about recovery,鈥 says Gervais, who has coached amateurs, Olympians, and, increasingly, burned-out executives. 鈥淭o go the distance, to do extraordinary things, nobody does it alone, and nobody does it when deeply fatigued.鈥 It鈥檚 easier to prevent burnout than to treat it, he says. But we shouldn鈥檛 be stress avoidant, because it鈥檚 stress that drives us to perform and to excel. The trick is to toggle between what Gervais calls 鈥渞unning to the edge of our capacity鈥 and recovering on a daily basis, with emphasis on the daily.
Two-time Olympic volleyball silver medalist Nicole Davis learned this the hard way. After the London Olympics, as she was training for the 2013 professional season, she says, 鈥淚 would take stress home with me and bring it to others.鈥 After a poor practice session, she was more impatient, grumpier, and quicker to anger. Ultimately, she had to acknowledge that her emotional state affected her performance back on the court.
鈥淔ear and anxiety are a wet blanket for passion,鈥 she says. So she worked with Gervais to 鈥渄ecouple my identity from just being an athlete鈥 and to reexamine her core values, including her relationship with the sport. It made her realize that attitude is a big component of stress. 鈥淲e are firing on a lot of cylinders all the time,鈥 she says. 鈥淔atigue is inevitable. Burnout is not.鈥
Science tells us that harnessing a spirit of play helps us bounce back from life鈥檚 stressors and put disappointments into manageable perspective.
Both Gervais and Davis, who now coach together, believe that mindfulness meditation can play a major role in daily recuperation, along with sleep, nutrition, and hydration. A combination of these basics, they say, can apply to anyone at risk for depletion in work or sport. 鈥淢editation,鈥 Davis says, 鈥渃reates more presence and a lengthened perception of time.鈥
Who doesn鈥檛 want a more expanded sense of time? In fact, it appears that for many of us there鈥檚 an inverse relationship between scheduled productivity and bliss. Not that we can鈥檛 be in a flow state at work or while exercising, but it happens despite the striving, not because of it. Bliss occurs when we are emotionally at ease, in the moment, and well rested.
But it wasn鈥檛 until I read , by another disaffected millennial, Jenny Odell, that I realized that perhaps the recovery experts are asking only part of the question. Rather than attending to our own optimization, what would happen if we attended to something else altogether鈥攕ay, each other? Or the natural world? Thoreau suggested as much in his 听鈥淲alking鈥: 鈥淏ut the walking of which I speak has nothing in it akin to taking exercise 鈥 as the Swinging of dumb-bells or chairs; but is itself the enterprise and adventure of the day.鈥
Reorienting in a meaningful way requires a fairly radical upending of capitalist norms, not to mention our relationship with social media and information itself, but Odell, a Bay Area artist and an art and art-history lecturer at Stanford University, says it鈥檚 worth it. Even simply loafing about outdoors, with no goals in mind, is 鈥渁n act of political resistance,鈥 she writes. 鈥淚鈥檓 suggesting that we fiercely protect our human animality against all technologies that actively ignore and disdain the body, the bodies of other beings, and the body of the landscape that we inhabit.鈥
Odell says she does this by wandering around and looking, slowly, at birds and plants she鈥檚 learning to identify. It鈥檚 not that she isn鈥檛 busy, and she hasn鈥檛 sworn off Twitter, but she also takes three-day retreats several times a year鈥攂y herself and unplugged鈥攖o minimalist rental cabins in the mountains. 鈥淚 call them hermit trips,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he whole point is that they help me maintain a sense of interiority.鈥 The deep thinking that follows can help drive her creativity. She finds it funny that apps like AllTrails rate spots by scenery over natural history, biodiversity, and general loafability. 鈥淚 like to look for metaphors in nature, and those are not in an AllTrails review,鈥 she says. (For more on how Odell does nothing, see this story.)
After sustaining a couple of injuries from overtraining, runner Anne Helen Petersen no longer clocks her workouts or races, although she still enjoys participating in organized events. 鈥淚鈥檒l track distance, but not while I鈥檓 running,鈥 she says. Without her Garmin, she says, she鈥檚 gotten better at sensing how her body feels, and she鈥檚 stronger because of it. She takes her earbuds out and listens to the sounds of the mountains instead.
There are lessons that don鈥檛 come easily for many of us raised in late-stage industrialism. One day last spring at an artist retreat, my neighbor, Robbie Q. Telfer, asked me if I wanted to join him for a short hike near Georgia鈥檚 Chattahoochee Hills. I glanced from my computer screen to the pulsing burst of springtime outside. I considered the number of pages I had left to write and the number of days I had left to write them. I sighed and turned him down.
Telfer, whose performance poetry often centers on the natural world, came back many hours later looking very pleased with himself. On the trail, he鈥檇 stopped to study a map when a retired schoolteacher sidled up to him and asked, 鈥淲ould you like to see a pond full of baby salamanders?鈥 Uhhh, OK? The pond turned out to be full of amphibians of all kinds, and there were sci-fi carnivorous plants and two killdeer having sex. He was giddy recounting all this to me. When I asked how far he walked, Telfer looked wounded: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 consciously record my mileage. My main rules are to let the experience unfold and don鈥檛 get lost.鈥 He and the teacher have since become pen pals.
Science tells us that harnessing a spirit of play helps us bounce back from life鈥檚 stressors and put disappointments into manageable perspective.
鈥淲e take ourselves so seri颅ously,鈥 says Lynn Barnett-颅Morris, associate professor in the department of recreation, sports, and tourism at the University of Illinois. 鈥淧layful people have more resilience鈥濃攂ecause they know how to find amusement, defuse stressors, and solve problems creatively. 鈥淲e think playfulness can be an antidote to burnout,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hings roll off you.鈥
As Telfer, a fan of nonlinear creativity, explained it to me, 鈥淚f I see a path going off, I鈥檒l take it.鈥
I decided I needed to go look for some nonlinearity. So a few weeks after my trip on the Green River, I asked social neuroscientist Rob Kent de Grey to join me for a relaxed hike in Utah鈥檚 Wasatch foothills. The 34-year-old postdoc knows a thing or two about the trade-offs we make, sometimes subconsciously, in the push to achieve. He spent his graduate-school years in thrall to a looming corkboard in his office, on which he tabulated the 30 research projects he was working on in various stages of completion. While collecting data, publishing, and studying for his exams, his immune system fizzed out, his relationships faltered, and the only time he could find for pleasure reading was while brushing his teeth.
When we allow ourselves to wander a bit, we become better at aligning our everyday actions with who we are and who we want to be, and we boost our cellular health at the same time.
For a full sensory wake-up, we decided to start our hike in Red Butte Garden and gradually make our way toward the Bonnev颅ille Shoreline Trail. A sign on the arboretum鈥檚 Floral Walk reminded us to notice microclimates by paying attention to how the trail鈥檚 sunny spots felt on our skin. In the cool fall morning, they felt great. That made me breathe more deeply. The toads and birds were riotous, including a hummingbird that darted around a red yucca. We leaned over to inhale a silver sands lavender shrub and admire blue globe thistles as tall as our armpits.
But as two people often do when they鈥檙e out for a hike, we soon forgot to smell things and landed deep in conversation. And that鈥檚 OK, Kent de Grey assured me. Social connection is perhaps the most important factor for happiness. He was geeking out explaining what he鈥檚 learned about how psychosocial factors influence health and disease. The upshot is that when we allow ourselves to wander a bit, we become better at aligning our everyday actions with who we are and who we want to be, and we boost our cellular health at the same time.
鈥淪hall we sit for a bit?鈥 I asked, feeling a desire to shore up my telomeres.
鈥淵es!鈥 he said. The bench was high off the ground, and we swung our legs like little kids. A hawk circled overhead. The scent of sage wafted from the hot slopes. I felt like I was sitting in the sweet spot of stimulation, not too much and not too little.
Kent de Grey passed me a water bottle and adjusted his Ute Proud cap.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not built for unrelenting stressors,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat the science points to is this: the very act of doing nothing is important.鈥
We stood up, stretched, and started out again, in a random direction. I was liking it. I could see what Wordsworth and Thoreau knew, and what millennials like Odell are rediscovering鈥攖hat cruising around at the pace of human locomotion may be the perfect riposte to modern life.
When we want to feel powerful, it鈥檚 good to remember that humans are the only striding bipedal mammals in the world.
This, right here, is our superpower.
Contributing editor Florence Williams is the author of听The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative.