We are accustomed to thinking of workaholism as an excessive love for work, a passion for the cause, or simply a high level of responsibility. But often, behind this beautiful picture, there is a completely different story. A person does not work because they are passionate about an idea, but because they are afraid to be alone with themselves. They are not striving for success — they are running away from questions they are not ready to answer. Workaholism becomes a convenient shield behind which one can hide from life's tasks requiring courage, time, and honesty. In this case, work is not a calling, but an anesthesia.
Each person has their own list of tasks, but there are common themes that are often overlooked in the endless race against deadlines.
The first is relationships. When work fills all the space, we have no time for a partner, children, friends. We do not resolve conflicts, discuss grievances, or make plans. We simply exist side by side, but not together. Relationships require presence, and the workaholic is physically at work, but emotionally absent everywhere.
The second is health. We postpone visits to the doctor, ignore the signals of our bodies, and attribute fatigue to the "busy season." We do not solve problems with sleep, weight, or blood pressure because "there is no time." But in reality, there is no courage. The fear of knowing the truth is stronger than the fear of overtime.
The third is personal development outside of one's profession. Many people immersed in work stop learning new things, trying hobbies, or traveling. Their world narrows to the office, and this is terrifying, but they are not ready to admit it to themselves.
The fourth is self-identification. Work gives us a ready-made identity: "I am a manager," "I am an engineer," "I am a doctor." But the question "who am I outside of work?" remains unanswered. And if work is taken away, we do not know who we are.
Work has unique properties that make it an ideal place for escape.
First, it gives the illusion of control. There is a lot of uncertainty in life: people leave, plans fall apart, health fails. But in work, there are tasks, deadlines, clear algorithms. Everything depends on you. This is comforting, even if the workload is huge.
Second, work provides quick feedback. Closed a project — received praise. Met the plan — saw the numbers. In life, the results are often delayed: love cannot be measured in KPIs, happiness cannot be fixed in reports. And this is terrifying.
Third, work legitimizes our existence. "I am busy — means I am needed." Society does not condemn the workaholic, it respects them. And if you "just live," it is perceived as weakness. Thus, workaholism becomes a socially approved form of escape.
And finally, work gives a postponement. "I'll finish the project, then I'll take care of myself." "I'll get a promotion, then I'll deal with my relationships." But the project changes, and the moment of truth never comes.
Not every overtime is an escape. How to distinguish between healthy enthusiasm and pathological avoidance?
The first sign is a sense of guilt when you are not working. If rest causes you anxiety, not joy, that is a warning sign.
The second sign is the absence of other sources of meaning. If you cannot answer the question "what else is important in your life?" without mentioning work — you are in the risk zone.
The third sign is constant fatigue that does not go away after the weekend. This is a signal that the body's resources are exhausted, and work is becoming not creation, but destruction.
The fourth sign is that your relationships are suffering. If your loved ones complain about your absence, and you justify yourself with "work," — perhaps you are using it as an excuse.
The fifth sign is that you do not remember when you last did something simply for pleasure, without benefit, without result.
The first and most difficult step is to admit that there is a problem. A workaholic rarely admits this to themselves because their behavior is socially approved. But if you recognize yourself in the description — this is the beginning of change.
The second step is to stop and ask yourself: "What am I running from?" It may be the fear of loneliness, fear of failure, fear of being needed by no one. The answer may be painful, but without it, it is impossible to move forward.
The third step is to start gradually introducing "non-work" activities into your life. You do not need to quit your job or take a month off immediately. Just 15 minutes a day that you dedicate to yourself, your family, your body. Meditation, a walk, a heart-to-heart conversation — this brings you back to reality.
The fourth step is to reconsider your priorities. Ask yourself the question: "What is truly important in my life? If I knew I had a year left to live, would I spend it like this?" This question wakes you up.
The fifth step is to allow yourself to be imperfect. Work does not have to be perfect. You have the right to mistakes, a slow pace, rest. You have the right to a life that is not subject to the schedule.
Workaholism as an escape is not a sign of strength, but a sign of fear. Fear of emptiness, fear of reality, fear of choice. But you can run indefinitely, and life is here. And it waits for you to stop and pay attention to it. Work is an important part of life, but not all of life. And if you feel that work has become your shelter, perhaps it's time to come out of it — into the light, into the present, into what is truly important.
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