Developer Burnout and Balance: What I’ve Learned So Far That Will Help Me On My Journey

Jorge Diaz

April 5, 2025

Developer Burnout and Balance: What I’ve Learned So Far

Let’s talk about something that doesn’t get enough airtime: developer burnout and balance — or more accurately, trying to find balance while everything’s on fire.

Besides pointing out one thing here, I am already calling myself a developer😅

Three weeks into this journey of walking more, coding more, and trying to be a decent human, I hit a wall. And not even a dramatic, crash-and-burn kind of wall. It was more like a slow leak. You know — the kind where suddenly you’re out of energy and motivation, and you don’t even remember when it started.

For example, I sat in front of the computer, thinking, I should prepare a few other posts about this, need to continue journaling… and boom, empty. OK, OK, let’s code a bit… and boom, coding burnout… I need to play with Emma… and boom, not enough creativity to help her.

And I thought burnout was something that happened to other people.

When Burnout Sneaks Up Quietly

If you’ve been following along since Post 4, you know I didn’t start this journey with a big plan — just movement. And in Post 5, I finally got around to naming actual goals.

But here’s what I didn’t expect: how easy it is to burn out even on things you like.

Trying to be consistent with coding, walking, writing, tracking habits, being a present dad, supportive husband, and productive adult — it’s… a lot, but at this point, I was even doubting, am I procrastinating again and am I starting to get burned. 🤔

And when the pressure builds (even if it’s self-imposed), that’s when burnout creeps in.

The Wrap-Ups I Didn’t Write

I had a plan. I was going to publish a neat little weekly wrap-up for Week 2. Then Week 3.

Instead?

I ghosted my blog. Not because I didn’t care — but because I was overwhelmed by the idea of keeping up.

What did happen:

  • I half-updated the habit follow-up tracker as a way to feel progress, but in reality, I was procrastinating (and moving at the same time)
  • I drafted part of previous posts and never finished those.
  • I beat myself up more than once for “slipping”

But the real lesson here? Burnout recovery for developers doesn’t always start with rest — it starts with honesty.

Redefining “Balance” as a Parent + Dev

So what does work-life balance for devs like me even look like?

It’s definitely not some serene, color-coded calendar. It’s more like:

  • Walking laps in socks while my daughter tries to climb me, or play around me while I am walking in the treadmill
  • Writing drafts at 11 PM after bedtime routines or after completing some tasks from my job
  • Coding while my brain does mental gymnastics about bills, projects, and dinner

Balance isn’t about being in control. It’s about adapting — even if it’s messy and imperfect.

How I’m Resetting After Burnout

Here’s what I’m doing now to pull myself out of the mental slump:

1. Admit I’m Burned Out

No toxic positivity. Just facts, I am tired, I am trying to cover multiple fronts, not only from the goals I have set, I have a full-time job and still get some time to freelance.

2. Lower the Bar (Seriously)

One task per day. That’s it. If I hit more, great. If not, no guilt, but still, need to be committed, even when taking a 💩, instead of crazy scrolling through TikTok, I could check some documentation, write a few posts ideas or finally shaping episode 0.

3. Update My Tracker Anyway

Even when the numbers look sad, the habit follow-up page keeps me grounded. But still, even when it’s looking empty and depressing, not checking it to beat myself but to remember that there are multiple things I could be doing and will still be improving my life.

4. Remember Why I Started

This journey was never about being perfect. It was about being real, transparent and honest with me. Remember, no-one besides me gives a shit.

You’re Not Alone (Seriously)

I found a great external read on preventing developer burnout from Dragos Nedelcu(theseniordev) that gave me perspective: burnout isn’t a sign of weakness — it’s a signal that something needs adjusting, and he provides a few tips on how to avoid burn out as a developer.

If you’re here, juggling code and life and wondering if you’re the only one who can’t “keep up” — I promise you’re not.

developer burnout and balance reality of working parent dev life

🚀 Let’s talk honestly:

What’s your go-to strategy when burnout hits?

Whether it’s rest, routine, or rage-quitting social media — I want to hear it. Drop it in the comments and let’s share notes.

And if you want to follow this real-time rollercoaster, check out the habit follow-up page — I update it with the wins, misses, and everything in between.

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