
How to Protect Your Wellbeing in an Unsupportive Workplace | Burnout Prevention
How to Protect Your Wellbeing in an Unsupportive Workplace | Burnout Prevention

Setting Boundaries: Your Shield Against Workplace Burnout
When your workplace dismisses burnout as normal or tells you it's your problem to handle, you're facing a real challenge. But here's the truth: while the workplace culture may be broken, you still have power. That power lies in boundaries.
Boundaries aren't just nice to have, they're essential protective factors that only you can implement for yourself. No one else can protect your wellbeing the way you can. Whether you're dealing with toxic colleagues, unsupportive leadership, or chaotic work environments, boundaries become your lifeline.
Surviving Toxic Workplace Culture
When negativity and cynicism surround you at work, it drains you emotionally and mentally. To survive this environment, focus on your tasks and limit interactions with colleagues who drag you down. If negative conversations start, set that boundary and walk away.
Find at least one small positive in each workday, no matter how minute. Staying out of cynical conversations and holding onto those positive moments makes toxic workplace culture more manageable, at least in the short term.
When Leadership Ignores Burnout
If your leadership is ignoring burnout, document what you're seeing. Are there potential safety issues? Injury risks? Present these concerns to your supervisor. If they don't listen, escalate to HR and keep climbing the hierarchy until someone pays attention.
Your voice matters just as much as leadership's voice. In some cases, particularly in healthcare, filing anonymous complaints may be necessary when situations become unsafe. Don't be afraid to speak up, change requires people willing to advocate for it.
Managing Chaos Without Burning Out
Healthcare and many other fields come with inherent chaos. Instead of focusing on what you can't control, identify what you can control and focus there.
Take your breaks. Step outside for five deep breaths in the sunshine. Walk around the building. Sit outside during lunch. Working through breaks doesn't make you more efficient, it depletes your resources and diminishes your ability to excel.
Protect your personal time by working only your required hours. If you're asked to stay overtime but don't have the capacity, practice saying: "No, I can't today. I won't be any good." You're the only one who knows if you can do the job well.
Setting Boundaries with Demanding Bosses
Remember that "no" is a complete sentence, even with your boss. While they assign tasks and make decisions about your role, they can't run you into the ground if you don't allow it.
When given too many tasks, try this approach: "I can't complete that task to the best of my ability because I have too many other tasks. What would you like me to give up so I can take this on?" This puts the prioritization back on them while protecting your capacity.
Knowing When to Leave
If you've advocated multiple times and nothing has changed, it probably won't. You need to decide if you can work within that broken system or if it's time to find a new organization.
If your boundaries are repeatedly disrespected and leadership isn't listening, leaving might be your healthiest option. While the mission is always to help people stay in the jobs they chose and feel called to, sometimes a change means you get to be a healthier, happier version of yourself.
You are the only one who can take care of you. Set those boundaries. You've got this.
