I work a rather demanding job and I’ve constantly been feeling tired and underperformant compared to my colleagues for the past few months. I keep evading responsibilities or putting them off until the last minute.

Many people would kill to be where I am. Yet, I show up every day unmotivated.

There were several stressful years leading up to my current job and I’m wondering if I’m burnt out at this point or if I’m just not pulling my weight.

Edit: Thank you all for your support and guidance. I haven’t given too many details here, but personal life has been moving along smoothly, chores get done, etc. But I definitely need to reconsider where I’m going with my job.

  • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    There’s no such thing as “lazy”. It’s always, always, always a word used to make someone feel guilty for hitting a personal limit or threshold.

    Even if you want to work on those thresholds and improve them, you can achieve that without framing yourself as fundamentally selfish and uncaring.

    • Alice@beehaw.org
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      19 hours ago

      I think there is such a thing as lazy, but it’s when you push your responsibilities off onto another person solely because you can get away with it. The ex who leaves the dishes dirty and tells you, “I don’t know, they just come better when you wash them”, for instance.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I think “selfish” is a better word for it in all instances, because some people are just selfish. Like, if you can’t be bothered to return your shopping cart or pick up your dog’s shit, then that’s selfish. It’s not anywhere near the same category as being too burnt out to do the dishes after a double shift, or wanting to sleep in on a day off.

      Calling all of it “lazy” creates some imaginary obligation to the universe that simply does not exist. You don’t owe the universe clean dishes or your time in the morning. If you have roommates and you left dishes in the sink, you are being selfish. If your kids have an early baseball game, and you are too hungover to show up, then you’re being selfish. You are always obliged to return your cart and pick up after your dog.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        or pick up your dog’s shit, then that’s selfish

        If you didn’t notice that you have only one waste bag, and your dog had a need in more than one place, and you’ll be late for something, and in addition to that generally have a bad sense of time and place (ASD definitely, BAD or ADHD probably), then it’s not.

        It’s not anywhere near the same category as being too burnt out to do the dishes after a double shift

        Imagine that sometimes people wake up this tired. Someone left an electric light on outside and you can’t force yourself to cover the window - bad sleep. Forgot to drink some water before falling asleep - bad sleep. Ate something salty in addition to that - horrible sleep.

        If you have roommates and you left dishes in the sink, you are being selfish.

        Suppose so.

        If your kids have an early baseball game, and you are too hungover to show up, then you’re being selfish.

        Hangover is a bad feeling.

        Not returning a cart should be punished with crucifixion though.

        • vintageballs@feddit.org
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          1 day ago

          You’re approaching this from a point where it’s already too late.

          If you’re not capable of taking proper care of your pet, don’t get a pet in the first place. Picking up the shit your dog left in a public place is part of owning a dog.

          If your kid has a baseball game the next day, don’t go drinking today. That’s the selfish part. Although I would argue if you do get drunk, you kind of just have to deal with it and go to your kids game regardless.

          • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            If you’re not capable of taking proper care of your pet, don’t get a pet in the first place. Picking up the shit your dog left in a public place is part of owning a dog.

            So you never ever think you took 3 waste bags when you took 1? Nothing ever falls out of your pocket? Forgetting something is “not being capable of taking proper care”?

            Or maybe you are simply not capable of reading before answering. That’s typical for people without ASD.

            If your kid has a baseball game the next day, don’t go drinking today. That’s the selfish part. Although I would argue if you do get drunk, you kind of just have to deal with it and go to your kids game regardless.

            I don’t drink.

    • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Lazy exists. I am a fully capable person, but some times I just don’t want to get up off the couch and wash the dishes, or finish painting the wall trim. Its not that I am sad, tired or depressed, it’s just I’d rather be doing something else or nothing else.

      • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 days ago

        That’s not laziness, that’s looking after yourself and your own needs, and prioritising that over non urgent chores.

        At some point, the balance changes, and you do the stuff.

        And if the balance doesn’t change, and you always put it off, even when you shouldn’t be, there’s something going on behind it.

        • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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          1 day ago

          What going on is I don’t feel like doing it LOL.

          I worked with a former autoworker, his job was inspecting roof seal adhesive and hitting the button for next car. He said he sat in a chair and read a book and would push the button with his foot. I asked how he could see roof glue, he said “I could not see it, I just pushed the button” . Too me that is the essence of a lazy person. It was not related to physical or mental overload, he was a sports guy etc. He just didn’t want to inconvienece himself with getting out of the chair or interrupt his book reading.

          • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            22 hours ago

            That’s not mental overload, it’s the opposite. It’s a job without mental stimulation, boring, repetitive and requires very little cognitive processing. And people doing jobs like that seek stimulation to escape perpetual boredom.

            Give that guy a job that didn’t bore him to tears, and the picture would have been very different.

            As I said, it’s always about hitting a threshold, and boredom is a threshold. And if an employer cares about quality, rather than the appearance of quality, they’d have designed that job differently.

            • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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              18 hours ago

              We worked in a high paced Engineering office together, after the auto job, he would put his feet up and pile boxes near his desk to avoid working and read a book. There was more than enough stimulation available, he would just rather do what he wanted than work. Not everthing is the employers’ doing, some people just make poor choices, even given opportunity.

        • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 day ago

          I can believe that a lot of what we call laziness is really something else, but I’m not in the maximalist “lazy does not exist” camp. Whatever your goals are in life, you need at least some ability to buckle down and do those necessary things you’d rather not do. All else being equal, some people are better at that than others.

    • Aitherios@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      One of the best replies I’ve seen on social media! Allow me to be a zoomer and say, absolute W!