6 hours ago

When Burnout Breaks Your Self-Trust

Burnout isn't just about being tired. It's a trust crisis, and the most serious damage happens inside.

New research shows 55% of the U.S. workforce is experiencing burnout, a six-year high. But the statistics miss something critical: burnout doesn't just exhaust you. It erodes your confidence in your own judgment. Nearly one in four employees reports that workplace stress has significantly reduced their ability to trust their own decisions.

In this solo episode, Richard explores the hidden relationship between chronic workplace stress and erosion of self-trust, drawing on insights from his recent conversation with talent development leader Jeremy Hannah and the latest research on burnout, organizational trust, and recovery.

In this episode, you'll learn:

  • Why self-trust is the "operating system" that burnout corrupts, and how that affects every other trust relationship
  • The three-part mechanism: how capacity gaps become internalized failure, curiosity dies, and isolation accelerates the spiral
  • What sabbatical research reveals about recovery timelines (hint: it takes longer than you think)
  • How micro-wins, external feedback, and deliberate curiosity rebuild the neural pathways of self-trust
  • The uncomfortable truth about why employees don't speak up, and what leaders miss as a result

Plus: The Monday Morning Test with specific action steps for CHROs, COOs, and individual contributors.

Whether you're a senior leader trying to understand why your high performers are quietly disengaging, or a professional who's lost confidence in your own judgment without knowing why, this episode names what's happening and offers a path forward.

Research cited: Eagle Hill Consulting Workforce Burnout Survey 2025, Aflac WorkForces Report, Microsoft Work Trend Index, Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, Academy of Management sabbatical research, and more.

Companion episode: Interview with Jeremy Hannah, Viante Talent Solutions

Connect with Richard: LinkedIn | Substack

Comment (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to say something!

Copyright 2025 All rights reserved.

Podcast Powered By Podbean

Version: 20241125