When was the last time you genuinely declined a request? Not a “let me check my calendar” or a “give me a few days” that you knew was a disguised yes, but an actual no?
If you can’t recall, you might be living what I call the Eternal Yes: a way of life where your time, energy, and goodwill are available to everyone except yourself. This doesn’t mean you’re lazy or a pushover; it likely indicates that you care deeply about other people. However, burnout doesn’t care about your intentions.
Burnout rarely results from a single catastrophic decision. Rather, it’s the culmination of countless small yeses when a simple no would have sufficed. It’s every meeting that could have been an email, every favor accepted to avoid the discomfort of declining, and every instance where you compromise your true self for others.
Burnout occurs when you mistake your worth for your availability. Remember, you are not a resource; you are a person.
The word that disrupts this cycle is simple, yet one of the hardest for adults to say without apologizing — no.
The struggle to say no is not a personality flaw. It’s a recognized psychological phenomenon with multiple contributing factors.
The Research On Saying No
Aaron Beck’s cognitive behavioral therapy highlights the thought pattern behind most boundary issues: “If I say no, people won’t like me.” Consequently, we attend meetings, take on projects, review documents, and question our sanity.
Kristin Neff’s research on self-compassion shows we’re often kinder to others than ourselves. If a friend said she was overwhelmed, you wouldn’t tell her to agree to more tasks. You’d advise her to eliminate unnecessary obligations. Yet, we fail to do this for ourselves.
Demerouti and Bakker’s Job Demands-Resources model (2001) describes burnout as a result of demands consistently exceeding available resources like energy, time, autonomy, and support. Each unearned yes is a new demand, while every declined request is a reclaimed resource. The math is simple. Complications arise when we face a culture that values availability and treats rest as a reward.
Research frequently shows that those most susceptible to burnout aren’t the uncommitted or negligent, but those who care too much to say no and have done so for too long.
If this resonates, here are three practical steps to start small. Each step increases in size, and none requires a complete overnight transformation.
1. Decline Something You Said Yes To
This week, say no to one thing that you’d usually agree to out of obligation, not genuine willingness. Maintain your major commitments. Begin with a small task where the worst-case scenario is slight discomfort instead of professional repercussions.
Examples might include skipping a non-essential meeting or a social event you agreed to weeks ago. The event itself is irrelevant. What matters is realizing the world continues afterward. Friends, family, and colleagues will adapt. You don’t owe everything to everyone all the time.
Try this: Examine your calendar for the next week and identify one commitment that is draining instead of energizing — something you accepted automatically. Decline, reschedule, or cut it in half. You don’t need a dramatic reason. “I can’t make it” or “I have a conflict” is sufficient.
2. Assess How You Spend Your Time
Analyze where your yeses are going. Many habitual overcommitters view their schedules as a series of events that happened to them, rather than choices they made. By understanding where your time goes, you can identify which commitments align with your values and which exist because no one asked your preference.
Try this: List everything you’ve agreed to over the past two weeks, covering work, personal, and social commitments. Sort them into “I chose this” or “This just happened.” The latter indicates where your boundaries aren’t holding. Identify any patterns and consider if adjustments can be made.
3. Reframe Your Boundaries
Many of us have learned to see saying no as withholding or selfishness. But a boundary is simply informative. It shows others what you can realistically manage. An unconditional yes from someone who never refuses is risky. They’re heading towards a wall they can’t yet see.
Try this: When you feel inclined to say yes but mean no, pause to consider: “If I say yes to this, what am I denying?” It’s usually rest, focus, or time for activities that rejuvenate you. Before automatically agreeing, acknowledge what you’re sacrificing.
Choose Your Signposts
You don’t need to make a dramatic declaration that you’re no longer available. Similarly, the aim isn’t a complete personality transformation. It’s a minor adjustment towards a version of yourself with enough energy left for what truly matters at the end of the day.
Burnout doesn’t develop overnight, nor does it disappear overnight, but it can be reversed. Typically, it’s undone in the same way it emerged: through a series of small, deliberate decisions.
Author Bio
Sarah Oelschig is a human resources leader, certified professional coach, and trained counselor whose career has centered on helping people navigate workplace exhaustion, transitions, and the inner critic. She holds an M.A. in Counseling Psychology from the University of San Francisco and a Professional Coaching for Life and Work Certificate from UC Davis. Her new book is Unburned: A Slightly Messy, Mostly Honest Guide to Life After Burnout. Learn more at sarahoelschigcoaching.com.

