When I started law school, I loved it. The hypercompetitive classroom, the demanding coursework, and the adrenaline rush of solving complex cases drove me to pursue this career. Once I officially earned the job title “lawyer,” I was drawn even more to the fast-paced work culture. I wanted to stand out, make a difference, and find my niche. My work was my passion, and it empowered me.
I didn’t realize the same work was also steering me onto a path of debilitating burnout.
One afternoon in the summer of 2020, I was sitting in my office when intense fear gripped me. I slipped into a loop of troubling thoughts about my life, loved ones, and job. The more I tried to escape it, the deeper I dove. I was scared. Very, very scared. My heartbeat quickened, and aftershocks of the feeling shadowed me for days. Each time I entered my office, a familiar dread followed. My concentration dwindled. I turned to alcohol for refuge.
It took me several months to finally admit to myself and my loved ones that I needed help. Later, I learned from a professional that I had severe anxiety and was put on medication. My recovery has been a humbling experience. It has put many things into perspective.
What I experienced during those months is one of the many destructive consequences of burnout. I worked 80+ hours a week (without complaints) at the law firm I had worked so hard to establish. My professional identity defined my sense of self, meaning my self-worth was attached to my achievements.
Unfortunately, my story is not unique. In the past few years, we have learned just how common burnout is, and in law, it is especially common. One survey conducted by Bloomberg Law in May 2021 reported that attorneys felt burned out for 50% of the year’s first quarter. Among those surveyed, junior and mid-level associates were particularly hard hit, with two-thirds reporting a decline in overall well-being.
These findings directly reflect the culture we have created in the legal profession—one that prizes individualism and competition, promotes conflict, and discourages any show of vulnerability. If this is a career you want to pursue, here is some advice I wish I had been given sooner. Read More
Before taking a job, gauge the company culture.
Avoid working for a law firm that values billable hours more than your sanity. This is easier said than done when starting and competing with highly talented peers.
How you start your career matters. The pressure you feel to land that first gig may feel more important than waiting to work at the right firm, which prioritizes inclusion, belonging, and the well-being of its workers. If you begin in a workplace that doesn’t value you beyond your skills or take care of your psychological health, it’s going to be unsustainable in the long run.
There are a few questions you can ask the hiring manager (or your future peers) during a job interview to figure out whether the organization values work-life balance or promotes a burnout culture:
Do you have a good level of work-life balance? Why or why not?
Does your company have any policies around family and medical leave? Do new parents at your company typically return to work right away?
How does upper management react to failure or mistakes? Can you describe a situation that didn’t turn out how you wanted it to and how the company handled it?
If you hear that people are worked to the bone (instead of given flexibility), asked to return to work before their leave is over (instead of asked to take the full leave), or punished for their mistakes (instead of encouraged to learn from them) — those are all red flags. The idea is to understand how a firm responds to the needs and expectations of its employees.
Don’t ignore your physical triggers.
What if you’ve already landed a job? How do you manage burnout when you’re working in a burnout culture?
The biggest piece of advice I can give you is: Do not ignore what your body is telling you. Typical signs of exhaustion include increased heart rate, headaches, fatigue, palpitations or sweating, and general irritability. These symptoms can come on gradually, or as they did for me, all at once. When you’re in a stressful situation, your body shifts into a state of high alert. It prepares itself to confront or run away from a threat, the reaction we commonly call fight or flight.
If you feel these triggers during your workday, pay attention to them. Small things like staying hydrated, breathing deeply for a few seconds, or taking a short walk around your office to disconnect physically can help. In the long term, however, your body tells you you need a break. It may be worth having a more serious conversation with your manager about your workload or seeking the help of a medical professional to talk about treatments or coping mechanisms.
It took me months of therapy to find my coping strategies. But over time, I have realized that even when I can’t afford to take a day off or go on a vacation, I can build smaller breaks into my workday to prevent me from losing track of my physical and mental health.
The more you start paying attention to what your body needs, the easier it will become to take care of it. And if your workplace or manager makes you feel ashamed of those needs, it may be time to look elsewhere.
Build a life outside your work.
The hard truth is that the legal profession is extremely draining. When you choose to be a lawyer, you choose a path that often requires long hours to study and prepare for each case. Clients can be demanding. Your assignments can start as fairly low stakes and shift into stressful, high-stakes scenarios overnight, depending on various factors.
If you are working on emotionally fraught cases, which happen often in criminal and family law, you may also experience emotional exhaustion. In these cases, it can become difficult to disconnect yourself from your clients’ lives. To protect yourself and do your job well, you have to set healthy boundaries at work — and this often means having a life and a support system outside of it.
Start by taking time off at least once or twice a year. To reduce the stress that often comes before and after a vacation, plan your time far in advance and make it a personal goal not to cancel. When you’re off, actually “turn off.” (Yes, that means unplugging from calls and emails.) If you are worried about missing out, remember that building deliberate moments of rest into your work life may boost your overall productivity and performance.
For some people, this may sound entirely undoable. In that case, set a smaller goal: Do something outside your work that brings you joy. What helps you unwind? Do you have hobbies and activities you love? It could be as simple as walking your dog every morning, going to the gym at night, watching a TV show uninterrupted, having dinner with family at least twice a week, or volunteering for a cause that matters to you. These small commitments will help you expand your social circle, rediscover your interests, and be better (and healthier) at work.
Give yourself a little grace.
In certain legal fields, a tendency toward perfectionism is, in my experience, commonplace — as the situations you are dealing with can be very high stakes, and you are often getting directly involved in the personal lives of real people. While striving to perform at your best is generally good, the danger here is setting unrealistic expectations and being too hard on yourself when you fail to reach them. This cycle of behavior can be linked to depression, anxiety, and other physical and mental health problems.
While I understand the deep desire to win every case and do right by your client(s), I know from experience that this pressure can do more harm than good. You are not a superhero. You can’t just wave a wand and magically make things work. Remind yourself that, just like everyone else,
you’re doing your best with what you have.
One strategy that has personally helped me in this area is writing down one thing I’m grateful for every day. Give it a try: The next time you lose a case, write down what you learned along the way and why it is meaningful to your growth. The next time a client isn’t happy with you, write down one way you were able to help them (even if you couldn’t get them exactly what they wanted). Or reflect on why you are thankful for your support system, family, or friends. Studies show that giving thanks can help us sleep better, lower our stress, and improve our relationships with other people.
Finally, remind yourself regularly that you are not your job. Like me, you might be passionate about your work, but you must consciously separate it from the other parts of your life to avoid burning out. This leads me to my last advice: Put yourself and your loved ones first. Your career is more delicate than the other parts of your life. There is always going to be more work. We can’t say the same about our health or our time.