Currently, I feel my productivity has diminished substantially. It's around ~20% what it used to be in 2016. I also procrastinate a lot more than I used to.
Much of the fire I had for development early in career has dwindled. It's not that I don't like it, I really do. There's no other activity I would rather do.
A lot of things happened from 2017 (laid off, child diagnosed with stage 4 cancer, mother died, sister died, and more).
On the bright side, after being laid off in 2017 my side project turned into an official business and I've been living off it ever since (pays ~2x more than a bay area salary). So "work" isn't really an issue.
I'd like to work more on my business and grow it. I'd like to also work on some side projects (maybe a game, some other business ideas, etc).
This sounds ridiculous to write, but I can't seem to do much when I sit down. Hours can go by and I haven't done much of anything.
Anyone experience this? Is this burnout? What can one do to fix this?
The more important factor is that you know something is wrong and you want to fix it. Your best bet is to talk to a doctor and/or therapist about it. Get a professional diagnosis of what is actually wrong (or a confirmation that nothing is wrong and this is normal), and then filter out anecdotal advice that isn't applicable to that diagnosis.
Your business revenue can really help you out in this department. If it happens to be that you lack motivation for specific things, can you hire those out and focus on working on the things that actually give you joy and satisfaction?
The suggestion of therapy is a good one, but I think that figuring out the root causes of your lack of motivation is also a good first step. So when you sit down to work and can’t get going, ask yourself “what am I trying to do, why am I doing it, why don’t I want to, and would handing this off to somebody else give me motivation to move onto the next thing.”
Maybe the answer is to sell the business and find something else that’s exciting to work on, or just to give your mind the space to recover.
Best of luck!
Wholly… I am so sorry and at the same time so much respectful for you. That you managed to keep going and grow.
Maybe you’re just bored pf your current project that requires a lot from you without giving enough opportunities in return. Maybe you’re just burned out under too much stress and you need some kind of sabbatical for a year.
I don’t think anyone on the web can tell you what you already don’t know about yourself, or your situation or anything relevant.
Good luck!
So I do small bits of staring at screens in my spare time, but non-work time is so scare that I consider it too expensive to waste telling computers what to do, and this does help preserve some capacity to do it when it's necessary.
If I'm sitting down and not able to get into a zone, all other conditions being ideal, I've probably just been trying too hard and spending too much time on it, at the cost of other things that I subconsciously know I should probably be valuing more. This might be even more of a struggle if you have near complete agency of your time.
Like a relationship, you spend a ton of time together in the beginning, maybe even for quite a while, but if you trade your friends for them, or all your hobbies for scrolling Instagram, you'll be in for a wakeup call at some point when you can't remember how to show up for yourself.
If you are making money don't worry about it I'd say.
Keep a good nest egg savings etc. Enjoy it. You deserve it and more time for your child is a great thing.
I felt the exact same way in pretty much the same timeline, and then burned out hard last year from trying to force myself to work when all the joy had already fled.
Personally, I think it’s a systemic problem with the industry as a whole, which has been made even worse by the rapid pivot towards LLMs. Somewhere around 2018 I realized that I don’t actually like writing software for other people any more. The projects no longer excite or challenge me, it’s just more of the same.
It's very hard to grind for many years on your own. If you want to grow your business, and you're already feeling a lack of motivation, that seems destined to fail if you try it alone.
Whatever path you choose, I highly recommend trying to bring someone alongside. HN is good for finding folks to work with.
I think what you're experiencing is normal. An entire lifetime doing the same thing for almost all of your time is going to get tedious eventually. I'm about there myself, I realize I'm in the best possible world but my passion has fizzled out.
IMO, seek professional help, even if that takes a few iterations to find the right fit.
Could say more, but that shouldn't be a public conversation. Reach out if you'd like, I'm easy to find online.
Now, it’s only a matter of what you want. When I went through burn out after being laid off the first thing I did was define what I wanted:
* Never again write JavaScript for work.
* Watch TV
* Play games
That became my life goals, basic burn out leisure stuff. What’s important is not the absurdity of the goals, but just knowing what you really want.
When I was at peak burn out I really did not want to write software, but I was really good at writing personal applications. If I really wanted to watch more TV and play more games then I would need a place to store these things free from subscriptions, advertising, analytics, and all that shit we hate. So, I created a home media server with custom media software to make it play from playlists in my IPhone.
After changing careers I realized I could do the enterprise API management way better than the enterprise, so I wrote a dashboard of web servers and docker container management that included a better way to proxy traffic for the home file server.
If the goal is still to maximize time for watching TV and playing games then I need to automate this shit out of the new career. This means adapting this personal dashboard tool to doing job related things. Now I can test and analyze traffic better than the other available tools at work. I still need to write agents for the dashboard tool to run a list of transmission tasks with assertions to close that loop though. Now I have more time for my life goals even at work. My productivity at work appears high.
When you were going through your family issues, were you thinking that you should be spending more quality time with your family or your side projects?
The culture of “I always need to be spending time on my computer and doing side projects after work” is one of the most toxic things about our industry.
Work on your main business for reasonable amount of time, shut your computer down and live your life, enjoy your family and friends - “touch grass”
Start by counting your wins. You have somehow made it through hardships and still managed to create something successful - that's one. (a big one)
take it day by day. But know you're not alone. Don't forget to take time for yourself :)
I'm not a depressed person and I never had success with building a side project that actually makes money.
I came to conclusion in the last months that it's not about loving to do a thing to become successful in it, it's just doing!
There are just as many people who give good advice as those that mislead you towards bad advice deceptively on HN. The latter group may actually hold dominance given what I've seen of the structural biases inherent in who gets heard overall.
Useful advice is often removed or downvoted to the point where you don't see it. This is true of all social media today post-AI.
I fully expect this post to be downvoted solely for pointing this fact out, in saying this.
You have a lot of life changes happening all at once. Your support structure is unstable as a result, and this puts extra work on you in cognitive load.
You don't mention how much time you spend on your business, family, etc, but I'd guess its more than half your time for the former most.
Did you take time off for bereavement? (mother, sister, child soon?) Have you done a bucket list?
Failing to take time needed for changes represses issues, and similar to burnout eventually you crack and succumb to the guilt and stress. Are you sure you aren't just burying your head in work trying to ignore reality?
You can only fix this by bringing the issues to the front of your attention and working through the issues, addressing them in turn. There won't be a magic bullet.
Right now, given what you've said it seems like you are trying to hide in your work. It will only get worse the longer you do this.
Repression has a complex relationship with psychosis, and that's important because eventually if you do nothing people crack.
I would suggest you bring someone on to help running the day-to-day of the business so you can take the appropriate time for these issues. Your business must be a bus factor greater than 1 so you don't have to worry about finances during these tough times.
Your lack of focus is most likely your unconscious mind telling you that you are running away from working on important issues you don't want to deal with.
You may not be able to control the circumstances, but you can control what you do about it.
The focus will return once you've worked through the personal issues. If you are unable or unaware of how to go about working on these things, you should seek competent professional help.
Be mindful though, there are many mental health professionals who are not great at their job or that competent. These people may run you in a circle.
If they aren't helping you within a few sessions and you are putting in the work, move on to a new one.