How do I stop overworking?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-30

Short answer

Overworking is usually anxiety wearing productivity as a costume. You stop it by fixing the fear underneath — of being seen as lazy, of losing status, of the silence when you stop — not by adding another time-management app.

If you cannot stop working even when you are tired, sick, or on holiday, you are not disciplined — you are dysregulated. The nervous system has learned that stopping equals danger. Rest feels like risk. That is a treatable pattern, and it does not respond to another Notion template.

The three drivers

Fear of being found out (imposter tax). Fear of the identity vacuum when you are not producing. Fear of the feelings that surface in stillness — grief, loneliness, boredom that has always been there. Overwork medicates all three.

The rules that actually work

Hard-stop the day at a fixed time and let the day be imperfect. Schedule one non-productive block per week (walk, coffee, nothing) as if it were a client meeting. When the urge to over-deliver rises, name the fear out loud: 'I am afraid X will think I am not enough.' Naming drops the intensity by 30–50%.

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