Sun. Nov 24th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Dan Ball remembers a time when he was so exhausted from work that he started to question his sense of reality.

“I remember the actual moment of being in a meeting … and almost from outside of my body, [I was] listening to what I was saying,” Dan recalls.

In 2018, it wasn’t uncommon for Dan to work up to 14 hours a day in the technology industry.

Portrait of a young man with facial hair and brown hair. He is smiling at the cmaera.
Dan Ball used to work long hours, which he said wasn’t sustainable in the long run. (Supplied)

He used to pride himself on being “the first person in the office” in the morning, right up until he experienced an “episode of exhaustion and burnout”.

“It was quite confronting when I had that realisation; it’s almost like my body turned around to me before my mind could even catch up and said ‘No, this is not sustainable Dan’,” he says.

According to a study published in 2023 from the University of Melbourne, one in two workers aged between 18 and 54 have reported feeling exhausted at work.

“[That] is very high,” says Professor Ian Hickie, who is the co-director of Health and Policy at the University of Sydney’s Brain and Mind Centre.

“It does cause us all to stop and go; now hang on a sec. Work is supposed to be the fun part of life, the enjoyable bit, the bit we thrive on. And yet we say we’re exhausted by it?”

He describes this as the “great November disease” in Australia.

“[It’s] the belief that if I can just get to Christmas and fall over the finishing line, then, in December, it will all come good. And by January, it’ll all be fixed,” he explains.

But, he says, it’s simply not true.

Other stresses in life

Tired Frustrated male with tension sitting at desk full of drawings.

Working long hours can take its toll both physically and mentally. (Getty:  Pipat wongsawang)

Professor Mark Wooden, who is a research fellow at the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research at the University of Melbourne, has also observed a rise in tiredness across Australian workplaces.

He’s the former director of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics project in Australia, also known as the Hilda survey, which looks at the topic of tiredness, among other things.

“It was fairly stable throughout the 2000s when we first started [the survey], but it has been picking up,” he tells ABC RN’s This Working Life.

“Pretty much this feeling of tiredness got worse for most age groups up to about the age of … about 45.”

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