| Definitely not. You should preserve now your abilities and build up uoir health. Find ways to relax, release stress, eat healthy and do moderate exercise. You will a) delay or prevent burnout b) the impact of burnout would be less. I burned out at 34, that was 8y ago. Now cant still do productive work more than 4h/day. And thats on a good day. Im lucky to have sufficient expertise and high enough hourly rate to pay for my modest lifestyle. Meds and therapy help only so much. While some meds are available under social security its usually not very modern meds, so a good part of income goes to self paid therapy and more modern meds that help me be at least somewhat functional ans productive. 4y ago, my productive hours were 2h/ workday on good days. Or 1 day per week. I survived at that rate but couldnt afford necessary help to recover faster. 2y after burnout my inflammation levels were still so high that doctors suspected i had cancer. (Wasnt the case). I had to move to small town, close to nature, cut out all even the slightest stress factors from my life. Of course if i could have avoided burnout or proper medical attention and time off after burnout it would have gone better faster. Now it serves as info for others what not to fall into |
It's a miracle drug for me. Strong effect, no tolerance buildup, few side effects. And it's dirt cheap, even on the black market.