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5 Ways To Avoid Burnout as You Climb the Career Ladder

5 Ways To Avoid Burnout as You Climb the Career Ladder

Yahoo07-05-2025

Climbing the career ladder can lead to higher pay and greater success — but it can also push you toward burnout if you're not careful. Long hours, constant pressure and the drive to get ahead can take a toll on your mental and physical well-being, making it harder to enjoy the success you're working so hard to achieve.
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The good news? With the right strategies, you can stay productive, motivated and balanced while advancing in your career. Here are five ways to avoid burnout and keep moving forward without sacrificing your well-being.
1. Recognize the Signs of Burnout
The first step to avoiding burnout is recognizing that you're experiencing it. Burnout can look different for each person, according to Sara Briggs, PhD, an instructor in the clinical mental health counseling program at University of Phoenix.
For some, burnout may present as emotional or even physical exhaustion, she explained, while others may experience feelings of cynicism at work or detachment from colleagues. 'Burnout may feel like dissatisfaction with work projects or achievements,' she said.
Even people who love their jobs can experience burnout, which can trigger biological, psychological and social responses, Briggs added.
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2. Set and Maintain Healthy Boundaries
Having healthy boundaries in the workplace is one of the most important steps in preventing — or recovering from — burnout, Briggs pointed out.
'Increasing self-awareness as well as reflexivity are important to recognizing mental health needs,' Briggs said.
Setting boundaries could look like turning off notifications after hours, delegating tasks when appropriate, or learning to say no to nonessential commitments. Developing these habits can help protect your energy and preserve a healthier work-life balance.
3. Get Organized and Manage Stress Proactively
Managing stress is a key to avoiding burnout, and it often requires changing up how you work. Getting organized and building in stress-reducing activities throughout your day can make a big difference.
'A detailed and constantly updated calendar with to-do items can be super helpful,' said Lijana Vaulinait, talent acquisition specialist at Omnisend. 'However, managing stress mostly comes down to your ability to take care of yourself, things like regular sleep, meals, and exercise are the fundamentals for sustaining productivity.'
Janice Litvin, founder, Banish Burnout Academy, recommends a variety of self-care strategies, including the following:
Get outside. Sunlight boosts vitamin D and dopamine levels, and exercise is known to reduce stress.
Savor fun experiences. Not only do you need to take time to do fun things, but it helps to keep reminders of them around. For example, keep a photo of your vacation (destination or post-trip) at work.
Activate friendships. Social connection combats loneliness and reinforces emotional support systems.
4. Create a Strong Support System
It's important to have trusted people you can rely on, according to Tara Kermiet, a burnout prevention strategist and leadership coach. She recommends building a support system that includes five key roles: role model, mentor, coach, cheerleader, and sponsor.
Role model: Someone who has qualities and characteristics you admire, which contributes to self-awareness and confidence building.
Mentor: Someone who is a few steps ahead of you professionally. They can show you what's possible and help guide your growth.
Coach: Focuses on helping you develop specific skills for your personal or professional development.
Cheerleader: Your unconditional supporter. This person knows and understands your strengths and will remind you of them when needed.
Sponsor: The most strategic ally in your support system. This person is in rooms you're not in and has access to opportunities you don't. Their job is to get you in front of the right people for the right opportunities.
5. Strive for Financial Stability
Burnout can also be a product of overworking or overspending. 'When you don't have financial stability, you may begin making decisions out of fear or necessity,' Vaulinait said. 'But once you have a solid reserve, there's more breathing room to make career choices that actually align with your wants.'
One way to build financial stability is to set aside a small percentage of your earnings in a savings fund that grows over time, according to Lorraine Lee, an instructor with Stanford Continuing Studies and LinkedIn Learning.
'Another key strategy is to avoid lifestyle creep — spending more as your income increases, such as upgrading to a bigger apartment or dining at more expensive restaurants,' Lee said.
While it's important to enjoy your success, be mindful of living within your means. Overspending can create long-term financial stress, making it harder to save and potentially forcing career decisions based on financial desperation rather than thoughtful strategy.
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Sources:
This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: 5 Ways To Avoid Burnout as You Climb the Career Ladder

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The proof that older people are getting smarter
The proof that older people are getting smarter

Yahoo

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The proof that older people are getting smarter

Fitter, faster, stronger – and smarter. I'm paraphrasing, but that's how researchers at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently summed up the Baby Boom generation in a recent report on the consequences of global ageing. The developed world may be running out of lithe young things to drive our economies forward as birth rates collapse, but the oldies that remain are brainier than any generation before and can pick up at least some of the slack, it said. The IMF's findings rely on data from 41 advanced and emerging market economies and show that, on average, older people from around the age of 50 are smarter or more cognitively able today than ever before. Moreover, of all the indicators of healthy ageing (better retained agility, flexibility, strength, stamina etc), it is an improvement in our mental capacities that is most marked in the data, says the IMF. 'We aim to offer a new perspective on the old argument that ageing will lead inevitably to slumping economic growth and mounting fiscal pressures', say Bertrand Gruss and Diaa Noureldin, lead authors of the new report. 'When it comes to cognitive capacities, the 70s are indeed the new 50s: A person who was 70 in 2022 had the same cognitive health score as a 53 year old in 2000. Older workers' physical health – such as grip strength and lung capacity – has also improved.' The IMF aren't the only people who have looked at this trend. A 2022 study from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the US shows that when it comes to brain power, Baby Boomers (born between 1946 to 64) beat the Great Generation (1901-27) on all the researchers' key measures of cognition. 'We found better age-adjusted performance in the cognitive domains of processing speed, executive function, attention and verbal fluency in more recent generations compared to the Greatest Generation', said its authors. So why is the world seemingly getting smarter? Professor Axel Börsch-Supan, director of the Munich Center for the Economics of Aging (MEA) at the Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy in Munich, said improvements in education have been key. 'That [Boomers] are smarter is essentially a function of their much better education than earlier generations', he says. 'If you look at the years of schooling, that immensely increased in Europe, particularly in the Mediterranean countries, but also in the North and the East.' Education and better nutrition in childhood does not just help preserve good cognition in later years but improves employment prospects. And the longer you stay in employment, with all the mental and social stimulations that brings, the better things are for our brain health. Given the proportion of over 65s participating in the UK labour market has been slowly rising, and has more than doubled since 2000 participation was at 7.8 per cent over the first three months of that year, increasing to 15.7 per cent in 2025), no wonder our mental fire power is improving. Further Department of Work and Pensions data reveals that in the UK, 10 per cent of 70 to 74-year-olds were still in employment in 2024 (up from 5 per cent in 1984) as were over a quarter of 65 to 69s (27.6 per cent, up from 9.5 per cent in 1984). In 2024, the average age of people exiting the workforce hit its highest level since the 1960s (65.7 years old) and its highest level on record for women (at 64.5 years). On June 7 The Oxford University Longevity Project will gather for the Smart Ageing Summit 2025 in Rhodes House in the heart of Oxford. The meeting brings together leading longevity experts and enthusiasts from around the world to explore 'how we can age smarter and better now'. Leading lights include the runner and academic Sir Christopher Ball, 90, the father of the pace maker Professor Denis Noble, 88, and the broadcaster Angela Rippon, 80. Physician Sir Muir Gray, 80, a director of the Longevity Project and a pioneer in the area of evidence-based ageing, said the first thing to grasp about ageing is that 'ageing by itself' is not the problem. Instead 'controllable factors' including loss of fitness (mental and physical) and environmentally-linked disease were the things to look out for. 'The trick to healthy ageing is for all of us to have a plan', says Gray. 'A plan to understand ageing, a plan to regain lost fitness, a plan to reduce the risk of disease striking, a plan to better adapt to your environment… It's knowledge that's the elixir of life. 'In the 12 years since my myocardial infarction [heart attack], I've had 400 boxes of pills and not one prescription of exercise or diet from the NHS. The pills keep me going but it's all the other stuff that keeps me young,' he says. 'All the other stuff' includes the internet – Gray believes it has contributed to gains in cognition by keeping older people engaged with the world. The same applies not just to staying in the labour market for longer, but particularly to career changes – an increasingly common phenomenon that forces us to start over again in our learning and greatly broadens our knowledge and experience. Volunteering has a similar impact. 'Becoming a volunteer is a very good way of reducing your risk of dementia,' says Gray, because, as with staying in the labour market, it allows you to keep yourself 'mentally and physically challenged' by keeping you engaged with society and your local community. The threat of dementia is the perfect reason to heed Gray's call for people to better understand the process of ageing and plan for it. Only around 60 per cent of it is caused by Alzheimer's, leaving 40 per cent linked to behavioural and environmental factors – many of which we can avoid or mitigate. According to Gray, this also includes looking after your vascular heath through regular exercise; a good diet and the avoidance of binge drinking, smoking etc; and protecting the brain tissue from damage 'caused by stress, sleep problems and over medication'. Working has already proved its cognitive worth: a 2020 study by the Fisher Center for Alzheimer's Research Foundation in the US found that American women who had paying jobs as young adults into middle age had slower rates of age-related memory decline than women who didn't, while women who did not have much paid work between the ages of 16 and 50 tended to have faster declines in memory later in life. Medical understanding had also completely changed in a generation, says Gray: 'we know now we can form new neural circuits at any age, whereas doctors who qualified before 2000 were taught that after 20 all that happened was that brain cells died off'. Until recently there has also been prejudice in the medical establishment, says Gray – some of it quite subtle. 'The effects of ageing on intellectual capacity have been greatly exaggerated because researchers have used tests that concentrate on quick decision-making, which does slow with age. But quick decision-making is only needed in pub quizzes and landing planes and [now] AI will do it for you. We actually get better at complex decision making as we live longer. As Oscar Wilde said, 'experience is the name we give our mistakes!'' But while the trend from the Greatest Generation to the Baby Boom generation shows an uptick in brain power, there are important caveats and nuances. Although the IMF points to an average gain in cognition worldwide, there are outliers who are faring less well, particularly in disadvantaged groups among Generation X (born between 1965 and 1980). 'Average health scores are significantly lower for individuals in rural locations, individuals with at most primary education, and lower-wealth households', says the IMF. 'Further analysis reveals that lifestyle factors, such as levels of physical activity, body mass index, and smoking, are significant determinants of the functional capacity of older individuals [even] after age and socioeconomic characteristics are controlled for.' 'The biggest changes in the UK are in the lower [socio economic] groups,' agrees Börsch-Supan. 'There's definitely a social gradient and it has a lot to do with health behaviours, nutrition and the big disaster of cheap prefab food. Look at the pizza which you buy for a pound – they're really bad quality.' In short, the trend can only continue if we don't sit on our laurels. Only those people cycling to work each day, climbing stairs or going to night classes will get a boost in the smart charts. To gain personally, you've got to put in the hard yards (and plenty of fruit and veg) yourself. Still, as the rest of the world continues to get smarter, the Boomer generation are the poster boys: it's why Mick Jagger, 81, and Iggy Pop, 78, are still touring. We just need to be wealthy, clean-living, gainfully employed and well connected to make it last. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

15% of women under 40 say they would likely try Botox. Is the 'preventative' messaging working?
15% of women under 40 say they would likely try Botox. Is the 'preventative' messaging working?

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • Yahoo

15% of women under 40 say they would likely try Botox. Is the 'preventative' messaging working?

Botox has traditionally been sought out by older women looking to do something about the wrinkles they already have. But that's changing. Now younger women are turning to the cosmetic treatment to avoid getting those fine lines in the first place. That's the idea behind preventative Botox, which Houston plastic surgeon Dr. Kristy Hamilton has seen explode in popularity over the past five years. 'The summer of 2020 was when I started seeing younger patients coming in and asking about starting Botox to prevent lines,' Hamilton tells Yahoo Life. 'What I tell them is that when you start to see lines linger when you're not moving your face, that's a good indicator that it's a good time to do so.' Data from the 2023 American Society of Plastic Surgeons report indicated that while patients between the ages of 40 and 54 account for the largest percentage of those getting Botox, treatments among patients from 18 to 39 years old have been increasing. 'Many in Gen Z are starting preventative Botox, known by some as 'Baby Botox,' to stop wrinkles before they form,' the report reads. Results from a recent Yahoo News/YouGov poll align with those findings. Among 1,677 U.S. adults surveyed in late March, 15% of women ages 18 to 39 said they would likely try Botox, compared with just 10% of women age 40 and older. This, experts say, indicates that the messaging behind preventative Botox — that when it comes to wrinkles, the best defense is a good offense — is not only spreading but also successfully convincing more people to start Botox sooner rather than later. But not everybody is buying in. Christine Cambus, a 36-year-old makeup artist living in New York, is someone who hopped on the Baby Botox train before it was a bigger trend. In her mid-20s, she started noticing expression lines in her forehead that weren't going away. 'When I turned 26, I decided to start doing Botox because I was like, I want to get ahead of this problem before it gets more intense,' she tells Yahoo Life. 'Now here we are 10 years later and — not to toot my own horn — but people routinely think I'm still in my early to mid-20s.' Baby Botox, aka micro-toxing, refers to using smaller doses of the neurotoxin (which isn't always Botox brand) to temporarily paralyze muscles in the face. According to Hamilton, these dosage amounts vary. 'It's still customized on the patient because I'm assessing the intensity of their muscle movement, which is going to be different person to person just based on anatomy, age, all of that,' she says. 'What we're talking about is just less than a full [Botox] treatment … usually less than half of what is recommended by the pharmaceutical companies.' Cambus receives 30 units for the injections across her forehead. 'I get it up into my hairline,' she says. 'I get my 11's and the very outward edges of my eyebrows because I want my brows to kind of tick up a bit at the end.' She believes that the injections she's had over the years are the reason she hasn't developed lines elsewhere, like crow's-feet. Hamilton backs this up. 'It's preventing the lines that are caused by movement, so if she's getting a little bit around the corners of the eyes, that's what is preventing her crow's-feet wrinkles,' she says. But if Cambus were only injecting the 11's between her eyebrows, for example, it wouldn't have that same preventative effect on the outside of the eyes. Jess Peachy, a 26-year-old from Charlotte, N.C., on the other hand, has been interested in getting injected since first hearing about preventative Botox on Bravo shows like Vanderpump Rules. But she has decided against it after doing further research. 'I looked into it, looked at other people's TikTok videos about their experiences and everything seemed fine and seemed good and normal. Everyone was like, 'My face isn't moving, I'm not getting wrinkles,'' she tells Yahoo Life. 'But what changed my mind about getting it was when people had masseter Botox and started discussing that after a while, they got the jowls.' Peachy is referring to people having Botox injections in their masseter muscle along the jaw — not an area prone to wrinkling — and experiencing jowl-like drooping. Peachy worries that sort of effect could happen elsewhere on her face if she tried Botox. 'At the end of the day, it is weakening your muscles, so I'm afraid of putting it in my face and the long-term effects of it,' she says. 'I don't want any muscle atrophy and to end up with loose and saggy skin.' Dr. Sean McNally, a plastic surgeon in Oregon, tells Yahoo Life that there is a slight possibility of experiencing significant weakening. But he says it's rare for people to be getting so much Botox so frequently to get to that point. 'If people are very consistently, very aggressively high-dosing Botox in certain muscles, and if they do that for years, those muscles can actually look weak and anemic, kind of pink instead of red. They do weaken with time,' he says. But McNally adds: 'For most people, they are not redosing their Botox before their Botox has completely worn off. So they're going to have this break in between where the muscle is functioning and you're actually using it for a while and then redosing it. It's not a long-term concern because if somebody is dosing you appropriately, they're going to be weakening the muscles but not completely freezing them out.' McNally himself has been getting injections for 12 years, starting when he was 31. If he hadn't gone the preventative route, he says, 'I would now have permanent creases that even with Botox wouldn't go away.' The messaging of preventative botox is working when it comes to getting younger people interested and considering it. What was previously a part of beauty regimens and culture for older women is now 'just something that Gen Z talks about,' says Hamilton. But that doesn't necessarily mean that every young person is running to get it. For some, it's concerns about the long-term effects holding them back; for others, it's the price tag. For those who are eager to begin, McNally encourages patients to wait until they're 25. 'I don't think you're going to get a ton of benefit out of it until you're in your late 20s, early 30s,' he says, unless there's an otherwise significant indication (like a skin or collagen condition) that someone younger should be starting. Hamilton recommends that people of all ages be particular when selecting who is doing the injection. That's especially important for young patients who don't want to overdo it. 'It's about going to someone that matches your aesthetic or understands your aesthetic,' she says. 'So if you walk into the office and everyone is completely frozen and people don't have any movement, that's probably not the office for you.'

15% of women under 40 say they would likely try Botox. Is the 'preventative' messaging working?
15% of women under 40 say they would likely try Botox. Is the 'preventative' messaging working?

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • Yahoo

15% of women under 40 say they would likely try Botox. Is the 'preventative' messaging working?

Botox has traditionally been sought out by older women looking to do something about the wrinkles they already have. But that's changing. Now younger women are turning to the cosmetic treatment to avoid getting those fine lines in the first place. That's the idea behind preventative Botox, which Houston plastic surgeon Dr. Kristy Hamilton has seen explode in popularity over the past five years. 'The summer of 2020 was when I started seeing younger patients coming in and asking about starting Botox to prevent lines,' Hamilton tells Yahoo Life. 'What I tell them is that when you start to see lines linger when you're not moving your face, that's a good indicator that it's a good time to do so.' Data from the 2023 American Society of Plastic Surgeons report indicated that while patients between the ages of 40 and 54 account for the largest percentage of those getting Botox, treatments among patients from 18 to 39 years old have been increasing. 'Many in Gen Z are starting preventative Botox, known by some as 'Baby Botox,' to stop wrinkles before they form,' the report reads. Results from a recent Yahoo News/YouGov poll align with those findings. Among 1,677 U.S. adults surveyed in late March, 15% of women ages 18 to 39 said they would likely try Botox, compared with just 10% of women age 40 and older. This, experts say, indicates that the messaging behind preventative Botox — that when it comes to wrinkles, the best defense is a good offense — is not only spreading but also successfully convincing more people to start Botox sooner rather than later. But not everybody is buying in. Christine Cambus, a 36-year-old makeup artist living in New York, is someone who hopped on the Baby Botox train before it was a bigger trend. In her mid-20s, she started noticing expression lines in her forehead that weren't going away. 'When I turned 26, I decided to start doing Botox because I was like, I want to get ahead of this problem before it gets more intense,' she tells Yahoo Life. 'Now here we are 10 years later and — not to toot my own horn — but people routinely think I'm still in my early to mid-20s.' Baby Botox, aka micro-toxing, refers to using smaller doses of the neurotoxin (which isn't always Botox brand) to temporarily paralyze muscles in the face. According to Hamilton, these dosage amounts vary. 'It's still customized on the patient because I'm assessing the intensity of their muscle movement, which is going to be different person to person just based on anatomy, age, all of that,' she says. 'What we're talking about is just less than a full [Botox] treatment … usually less than half of what is recommended by the pharmaceutical companies.' Cambus receives 30 units for the injections across her forehead. 'I get it up into my hairline,' she says. 'I get my 11's and the very outward edges of my eyebrows because I want my brows to kind of tick up a bit at the end.' She believes that the injections she's had over the years are the reason she hasn't developed lines elsewhere, like crow's-feet. Hamilton backs this up. 'It's preventing the lines that are caused by movement, so if she's getting a little bit around the corners of the eyes, that's what is preventing her crow's-feet wrinkles,' she says. But if Cambus were only injecting the 11's between her eyebrows, for example, it wouldn't have that same preventative effect on the outside of the eyes. Jess Peachy, a 26-year-old from Charlotte, N.C., on the other hand, has been interested in getting injected since first hearing about preventative Botox on Bravo shows like Vanderpump Rules. But she has decided against it after doing further research. 'I looked into it, looked at other people's TikTok videos about their experiences and everything seemed fine and seemed good and normal. Everyone was like, 'My face isn't moving, I'm not getting wrinkles,'' she tells Yahoo Life. 'But what changed my mind about getting it was when people had masseter Botox and started discussing that after a while, they got the jowls.' Peachy is referring to people having Botox injections in their masseter muscle along the jaw — not an area prone to wrinkling — and experiencing jowl-like drooping. Peachy worries that sort of effect could happen elsewhere on her face if she tried Botox. 'At the end of the day, it is weakening your muscles, so I'm afraid of putting it in my face and the long-term effects of it,' she says. 'I don't want any muscle atrophy and to end up with loose and saggy skin.' Dr. Sean McNally, a plastic surgeon in Oregon, tells Yahoo Life that there is a slight possibility of experiencing significant weakening. But he says it's rare for people to be getting so much Botox so frequently to get to that point. 'If people are very consistently, very aggressively high-dosing Botox in certain muscles, and if they do that for years, those muscles can actually look weak and anemic, kind of pink instead of red. They do weaken with time,' he says. But McNally adds: 'For most people, they are not redosing their Botox before their Botox has completely worn off. So they're going to have this break in between where the muscle is functioning and you're actually using it for a while and then redosing it. It's not a long-term concern because if somebody is dosing you appropriately, they're going to be weakening the muscles but not completely freezing them out.' McNally himself has been getting injections for 12 years, starting when he was 31. If he hadn't gone the preventative route, he says, 'I would now have permanent creases that even with Botox wouldn't go away.' The messaging of preventative botox is working when it comes to getting younger people interested and considering it. What was previously a part of beauty regimens and culture for older women is now 'just something that Gen Z talks about,' says Hamilton. But that doesn't necessarily mean that every young person is running to get it. For some, it's concerns about the long-term effects holding them back; for others, it's the price tag. For those who are eager to begin, McNally encourages patients to wait until they're 25. 'I don't think you're going to get a ton of benefit out of it until you're in your late 20s, early 30s,' he says, unless there's an otherwise significant indication (like a skin or collagen condition) that someone younger should be starting. Hamilton recommends that people of all ages be particular when selecting who is doing the injection. That's especially important for young patients who don't want to overdo it. 'It's about going to someone that matches your aesthetic or understands your aesthetic,' she says. 'So if you walk into the office and everyone is completely frozen and people don't have any movement, that's probably not the office for you.'

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