You know that moment when your laptop starts acting weird?
Apps lag. Tabs freeze. The fan sounds like it’s preparing for takeoff. You tell yourself it’s fine, close one tab (out of 47), and keep going.
That’s where I’m at.
Except I’m not a MacBook.
I’m a human.
And my life needs a hard refresh.
I’ve tried soft refreshes. They don’t work.
I’ve done the human equivalent of:
- restarting Chrome
- clearing some cache
- pretending sleep is optional
I’ve told myself things like:
“After this deadline.”
“After this project.”
“Just one more week.”
But the bugs keep showing up.
Brain lag. Motivation 404. Emotional memory leaks.
At some point, you have to stop debugging symptoms and admit the system itself is tired.
Somewhere between productive and burnt out, I lost the plot
I love what I do. I genuinely do.
I like building things. I like solving problems. I like that little click when code finally behaves.
But when your calendar looks like Tetris and every gap gets filled automatically… something breaks.
Burnout isn’t dramatic. It doesn’t arrive with fireworks.
It’s quiet.
It shows up as forgetting why you started. As opening your laptop and feeling heavy before the screen even lights up.
The World Health Organization officially classifies burnout as an occupational phenomenon linked to chronic workplace stress. Not laziness. Not weakness. Stress.
Turns out the body keeps logs even when you ignore the warnings.
Tech metaphors aside, this isn’t just a dev thing
We live in a world that rewards always-on behaviour.
Notifications. Deadlines. Side hustles. Personal brands. The pressure to optimise every waking hour like we’re poorly written productivity apps.
Research consistently shows that constant context switching and digital overload increase stress and reduce focus.
And yet we keep refreshing everything except ourselves.
Because stopping feels like falling behind.
A hard refresh isn’t quitting. It’s maintenance.
In tech, a hard refresh clears the junk.
It forces everything to reload cleanly. No shortcuts. No stale data pretending to be useful.
For me, that looks like:
- questioning routines I’ve been running on autopilot
- saying no without a follow‑up apology paragraph
- resting before my body forces it
Not disappearing. Not starting over.
Just… reloading with intention.
Even productivity research backs this up: deliberate rest improves creativity, problem‑solving, and long‑term performance.
Who knew rest wasn’t the enemy?
If you could hard refresh one part of your life right now
What would you clear first?
Your schedule? Your job? Your expectations? The version of yourself you’re performing for everyone else?
Tell me in the comments. I have a feeling I’m not the only one running on cached emotions.
Want to stick around?
If you like thoughtful tech stories mixed with real life, quiet honesty, and the occasional existential bug report, subscribe. I write about building things on the web, and rebuilding myself, one refresh at a time.




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