Don’t Let Your Ambition Wear You Out. You’ve built your career on ambition and output. But now that you’ve advanced, that same drive feels draining instead of energizing. Instead of pushing harder, step back and reassess what’s changed—and what to do next.

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Don’t Let Your Ambition Wear You Out

You’ve built your career on ambition and output. But now that you’ve advanced, that same drive feels draining instead of energizing. Instead of pushing harder, step back and reassess what’s changed—and what to do next. 

 

Diagnose the real issue. If your energy and recovery have declined, you need to adapt your approach to work to your capacity. If your motivation has faded, the issue goes deeper and signals that your connection to the work itself may have shifted. 

 

Redefine what drives you. If you’ve been chasing achievement, that motivation may no longer sustain you. Shift your focus toward work that feels meaningful. Aim to engage with tasks that are inherently interesting or impactful, not just those tied to advancement. 

 

Reclaim your standards. Examine whose expectations you’re trying to meet. If your sense of success depends on external validation, you’ll stay stuck in pressure and anxiety. Set your own definition of excellence and separate it from constant performance. 

 

Focus on what energizes you. Identify when you feel most engaged, then reshape your role around those activities. Delegate or reduce tasks that drain you and invest your energy where it has the most impact. 

 

Decide if it’s enough. If only a small part of your work energizes you, it may be time to explore change. Otherwise, adjust your role, boundaries, and workload to make it sustainable. 

 
A ballet dancer lies backstage with legs extended, wearing pointe shoes and a pink tutu on a wooden stage floor in front of red curtains.

Read more in the article

When Your Ambition Starts to Exhaust You

by Rebecca Knight

Read more in the article

When Your Ambition Starts to Exhaust You

by Rebecca Knight

A ballet dancer lies backstage with legs extended, wearing pointe shoes and a pink tutu on a wooden stage floor in front of red curtains.
 

 

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