Why do I feel empty for no reason?
Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Consultant Psychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-05-05
Short answer
Persistent emptiness most often reflects anhedonia — the dampening of the brain's reward response. It is a core feature of depression and burnout, and it responds well to structured treatment. It almost never means 'nothing is wrong with you'.
When patients describe 'emptiness without a reason', they are almost always describing anhedonia — a real, measurable dampening of the brain's reward response. It is one of the two cardinal symptoms of depression, and it is also one of the three signatures of burnout.
Why it happens
Chronic stress, poor sleep, prolonged overwork and unprocessed grief all blunt dopaminergic signalling over time. The activities that used to feel rewarding stop feeling rewarding, which makes you do them less, which deepens the flatness. It is a feedback loop, not a character trait.
What helps
Restoring the basics first — sleep architecture, daylight exposure, movement, social contact. Then structured behavioural activation: scheduling small, low-friction sources of pleasure and mastery before you 'feel like it'. The feeling follows the action, not the other way round. If this has been with you for more than a few weeks, please take the PHQ-9 and the WHO-5.
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