Yes...to be honest I found most burn zones tended to occur in university and be study relatedKishor Rao wrote: ↑27 Sep 2019, 13:09 One of the Burn Zones that I have faced is a college project which squeezed the juices out of me. It might seem a little childish or less of trouble that I'm mentioning an assignment, but it was pretty daunting and I had to keep my calm, work on it constantly and fortunately, I completed it.
Your Own Burn Zones
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Re: Your Own Burn Zones
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But other than that I guess we may have been feeling with burn zones since we began to try and walk as babies and out mothers had to help pick us up and continue...
I guess these burn zones just got bigger and better as life goes on
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I can relate to this. There was a period where I was surrounded by a group of people who made it their mission to bring me down. To ridicule my hobbies, like reading, and prevent me from chasing my dreams. For awhile, I thought something was wrong with me and then I took the courage to cut these people out. At that moment, I realized I was doing well all along. If you can block the negative Nancy's out of your life, it's the best. Miserable people will never be satisfied until others are on their level.
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Wow, your experience sounds crazy! I don't know if I'd have the strength for that. Exhaustion to me is such a huge obstacle to face. Which affected you more: the physical or psychological effects of sleep deprivation and hunger?damis wrote: ↑07 Apr 2020, 16:44 I think that we all have burn zones several times throughout our lives; trial is the only way you can really know how much you've grown. That being said, the hardest one I had to go through was definitely my medical internship. I remember back in the day they used to make me work shifts that lasted 36 hrs non stop where they didn't allow me to eat more than a couple bites hidden every now and then, let alone sleeping, that for three shifts per week with just a free weekend every month. And with no payment at all (Thank you, Mexican health system). Anyway, looking backwards, even if it probably was the hardest year of my life, and I wanted to quit every five minutes, it was worth it, and I would totally do it again if needed. I learned more about medicine and my patients than what I learned in five years of medicine school.
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Probably the psychological, because I mean, obviously the physical needs drain you out. But at least for me, I often felt guilty for feeling them. Like "how could I keep thinking about a hamburger when my patient was in pain" or "why did I always have to get out running as soon as my shifts ended". It was an environment where you kinda sorta were seen by patients and their family as a bad person for thinking about your own needs when they needed your help, so I think that was the worst part of it all.anaplasticCerebrum wrote: ↑09 Jul 2020, 07:49Wow, your experience sounds crazy! I don't know if I'd have the strength for that. Exhaustion to me is such a huge obstacle to face. Which affected you more: the physical or psychological effects of sleep deprivation and hunger?damis wrote: ↑07 Apr 2020, 16:44 I think that we all have burn zones several times throughout our lives; trial is the only way you can really know how much you've grown. That being said, the hardest one I had to go through was definitely my medical internship. I remember back in the day they used to make me work shifts that lasted 36 hrs non stop where they didn't allow me to eat more than a couple bites hidden every now and then, let alone sleeping, that for three shifts per week with just a free weekend every month. And with no payment at all (Thank you, Mexican health system). Anyway, looking backwards, even if it probably was the hardest year of my life, and I wanted to quit every five minutes, it was worth it, and I would totally do it again if needed. I learned more about medicine and my patients than what I learned in five years of medicine school.
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