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The Burnout Generation
- Narrated by: Anne Helen Petersen
- Length: 1 hr and 47 mins
- Categories: Health & Wellness, Psychology & Mental Health
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About the Creator and Performer
Anne Helen Petersen is a senior culture writer at BuzzFeed News, where she writes about the intersection of celebrity, gender, and a whole lot more. She received her PhD in media studies from the University of Texas, and her most recent book, Too Fat, Too Slutty, Too Loud: The Rise and Reign of the Unruly Woman, was named one of the NPR's Best Books of 2017. Her next book—Can't Even: How Millennials Became the Burnout Generation.—is forthcoming from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and Audible Studios in 2020. She lives in Missoula, Montana.
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What listeners say about The Burnout Generation
Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- flcounsel
- 10-19-19
I loved the topic of burn out. But stopped listening section 2.
I stopped listening at the point where the author, whining about her and others’ staggering student loan debt, mentioned that she was proceeding to get her doctorate In a field where she conceded she would never earn enough to ever be be able to pay back her loans. At least not in her working lifetime. That is, IMO, crazy. I can't feel confident in taking the advice of anyone who would do this. Someone placing ego over common sense, it appears. Don't we have enough of that?
14 people found this helpful
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- Michael Howarth
- 10-07-19
Needs less emoting, more courageous questioning
A well-produced exploration that misses the mark. There's a lot of emoting and angsting and "sort of" and "right?" here but not much more. And thus, while I found the conversations interesting, the end result feels like a bunch of people safely lamenting instead of courageously questioning. Don't get me wrong. Burnout is a real thing, and I think it's important to look at it and deal with it. But that's the problem here. Petersen seems devoted to lamenting the problem, to talking about it ... but ... not much more. This angle — combined with a lack of definition as to what burnout is — inflate burnout to Goliath proportions as if to say, "This must require a book. And more think pieces. And a TED talk. And a Netflix documentary." So, to me, the concept comes off as hyped. Burnout is positioned as a huge problem but with no clear definition. It seems Petersen wants you to believe it's lurking behind every corner. Lots of generality and critique, almost zero actual introspection and digging ... though Petersen seems to like the *idea* of introspection and digging. The result, it seems, is that burnout can be almost anything from normal job dissatisfaction and workplace politicking to oppression by systemic racism or sexism. All of this comes off as a conversation taking place inside a comfortable room with soft couches and coffee — a safe space to journal and lament the difficult world handed to Millenials by the Boomers. My suggestion is this: yes, talk about burnout. Lament it. But first, define it. Then, once defined, venture out of that comfortable room, down into the basement and give the support beams about 10 to 20 strong kicks. See if they hold. That is, instead of only safely emoting, also courageously question your assumptions. The big ones. Test the foundations. What if the modern religion of Individualism is toxic and unfulfilling? What if our consumerism consumes us? What if education and knowledge are extraordinarily dangerous without humility? What if meaning can't be found through the scientific method? What if knowledge puffs up, makes you proud, makes you want to impress yourself and others, and that pride actually paves over your deepest needs and suffocates your heart? What if burnout is your heart convulsing under all these layers of assumption, error, and expectation? What if you were created for a purpose and you don't get to decide what that purpose is?
284 people found this helpful
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- Elad Aviv
- 10-21-19
Very irrelevant for people living outside the US
The audiobook is focused on the young american experience, which is ok if you're american. But other people will find it hard to relate to the issues presented in it. Also, some of the speakers are very hard to listen to.
12 people found this helpful
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- Jonathan E.
- 10-08-19
An advertisement.
I wanted to listen to a book about people and their struggles with burnout, explain what burnout is, and perhaps offer some solutions. Instead, I got stories about burnout with personal politics laden throughout and constant paraphrasing and interruptions from the author when I would rather have heard the speaker say it for themselves. The author did manage to indirectly explain what burnout is (so long as the definition means "working so much that everything becomes work"), but offered no advice other than "learn more about burnout", which is something that a potential reader could have been told first thing (or done on their own time) so that they would not have to bother with this. The Author kept referring to some article she wrote about burnout on some site that will remain unnamed, yet couldn't be bothered to have placed it in this body of work in any capacity, forcing anyone interested to give their site free clicks. This was free with my audible membership. This was the only book this month that looked even remotely interesting, and I feel like I just wasted my time.
207 people found this helpful
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- Siz_Nss
- 10-19-19
Depressing
The author is seeking empathy and approval from others, it’s very depressing and unhealthy to listen to people like that. Humble opinion skip it!!
9 people found this helpful
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- Phil
- 10-06-19
So, basically a podcast episode.
As the title says, it doesn't go very deep, and doesn't even define any of the signs and symptoms of burnout. Didn't even deliver something as basic as that.
73 people found this helpful
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- Crank E. Grump
- 10-11-19
wow best comedy ever
I don't know whether to blame the parents. Or, to slap my dad. So they get free help? good God. grow up! amazing and best comedy ever. before I heard this book I didn't realize being lazy was a mental health problem!
7 people found this helpful
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- Michael Connell
- 10-14-19
Falls short
I was expecting to hear an anecdotal account of relatable peers. I found it ironic because one of the opening statements mentions how the older generation perceives millennials as being lazy and entitled, yet the entire discussion then goes on to sound nothing short of lazy and entitled. That's of course when you can actually make any sense of what the interviewees are trying to explain at all in between their unintelligible flow of nonsensical dialogue. I give the author credit because she did draw a reasonable conclusion to wrap everything up, but I just overall couldn't help the feeling that this discussion was the opposite of helpful. It feels like a spiraling echo chamber of the issue that almost serves to tell you to feel somewhat justified in the drowning "burnout" that is apparently all too common in young adults. The constant underlying political and identity politics tone also didn't help at all. I wanted to like this and I am discouraged to have such a critical opinion when I feel the author was well intentioned and did thorough work.
36 people found this helpful
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- Ying Hu
- 10-16-19
Inflammatory when it should be informative
I was hoping to find reliable information about burnout, not a bunch of anecdotes about people who say they have it without saying anything convincing about how or why they have it. Clear advice about symptoms, how to diagnose it, how to talk to a doctor about it, how to correct unhealthy patterns to avoid it, how to treat it and recover when you do have it, how to help others who have it... I kept hoping they would get to it but eventually gave up. Instead it was a bunch of horror stories to feed off people's hypochondriac tendencies. A good example is how the author "discovered a new type of burnout", with no supporting scientific research or authorities on the subject to weigh in on it. No thanks, not even going to finish this one.
41 people found this helpful
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- Kendel Christensen
- 10-05-19
Nothing that adds up to something
A collection of stories, interviews really that all describe a shared experience (being burnt out). A lot of description and talking about a problem, but very little by way of practical advice or solving it. Not worth it if you're looking for more than common sense, but of course there is value in hearing something that resonates with your own experience. But this is nothing more than that.
80 people found this helpful
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- Zaxarenia Vidaki
- 04-11-20
A journalist's view on the subject
An interesting perspective on the matter through the eyes of a journalist. The interviews were insightful though being so specific makes it less relatable. Best "read" it as a docomentary on a current issue.
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- Jason Tranter
- 06-16-20
Only useful as a warning
Limited to educate on what burnout can look like, but no real useable points for recovery.