
Why People Feel Depressed At Work And What To Do About It
I keep hearing the same thing from people in completely different roles and industries. They say they go to work, answer emails, go to meetings, and do what's expected. But underneath all of that, they feel something is off. They say things like, "I feel like I am existing, but I'm not really living." Or, "I used to care more, but now I just want the day to end." They're not necessarily depressed. But they're not fully engaged either. It's like something vital is missing, and they're too tired to go looking for it. You might think this is about quiet quitting or burnout. For some people, it probably is. But there's something else going on. I hear it from people in situations where you'd expect them to be excited, like when they have a new job or a flexible schedule. There's something deeper, and it feels like it's about how people see their place in the world and at work. Many describe it as feeling depressed at work, even when nothing specific has gone wrong.
Why Do I Feel Depressed At Work And Blah Even When I Should Feel Fine?
Why Do I Feel Depressed At Work And Blah Even When I Should Feel Fine?
There's a heaviness that a lot of people seem to be carrying into their workday. You might not even see it because they still hit deadlines and smile on Zoom. But if you ask them if they feel like they're doing meaningful work, they pause. Or they laugh in that way that people do when they don't know how to answer. I think a lot of people are just tired of pretending that things are fine. They're overwhelmed, overstimulated, and at the same time, incredibly bored. Everything seems urgent, but nothing really feels all that important. That kind of emotional contradiction drains people in ways that are hard to measure.
Is This A New Kind Of Burnout, Or Something Else Entirely, Making People Depressed At Work?
Is This A New Kind Of Burnout, Or Something Else Entirely, Making People Depressed At Work?
Burnout used to be about overwork. Now, it's often about emotional disconnection. You can be working fewer hours and still feel burned out if you've lost your sense of purpose. During the pandemic, a lot of people had time to reflect on what mattered. For some, that created positive change. But for others, it created awareness without a path forward. They saw what was missing but didn't know how to fix it.
I've had jobs where everything looked great on paper, with perks, promotions, and travel. But I dreaded Mondays. My skills were not well-aligned to my job responsibilities, and I wasn't challenged in a way that felt meaningful. I didn't feel like I could say that out loud without sounding ungrateful.
What's Fueling People Feeling Depressed At Work Beneath The Surface?
What's Fueling People Feeling Depressed At Work Beneath The Surface?
People tell me several things have caused them to feel depressed at work, including the following.
Where Do You Go When You're Depressed At Work And Just Drifting Through Your Days?
Where Do You Go When You're Depressed At Work And Just Drifting Through Your Days?
Where do you start when you feel like you're drifting? That feeling is a signal that something needs attention. It usually means there's a gap between what matters to you and what you're doing. That doesn't mean you need to make drastic changes overnight. But it might be time to ask questions you haven't asked in a while. When was the last time you felt excited about something at work? What small thing could you change this week that would make you feel more alive?
It always comes back to curiosity. When people lose it, they start going through the motions. When they find it again, they start asking better questions, having better conversations, and noticing opportunities they didn't see before. Then their energy starts to come back.
Technology can be part of the solution. Try asking ChatGPT or another tool to give you new ideas. Ask for projects, hobbies, or fun things to explore. You might be surprised at what you find.
How Can Leaders Help People Who Feel Depressed At Work Without Making It Worse?
How Can Leaders Help People Who Feel Depressed At Work Without Making It Worse?
At work, leaders can start by listening to people, not with a survey, but with real conversations. Don't ask employees how satisfied they are. Ask what they wish they could spend more time doing. Ask what would make them feel like their work matters again. And then listen without interrupting or trying to fix it right away.
The best leaders I've interviewed all had one thing in common. They didn't rush to solve everything. They made space for exploration. They knew that when people feel safe to be honest, they become more invested, more creative, and more motivated.
If someone on your team is just getting by, don't assume they're disengaged. Ask what they're missing. Ask what they're curious about. That shift in how you lead could change everything.
What Does It Take To Get Over Feeling Depressed At Work?
What Does It Take To Get Over Feeling Depressed At Work?
People want something real, something that connects to their values and gives their work meaning. You don't have to overhaul your entire life to find that again. But you do have to pay attention to what you've been ignoring. If something feels off, it probably is. That awareness might be the very thing that brings you back to life. If you've been feeling depressed at work, you're not alone. You're also not stuck.
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CBS News
31 minutes ago
- CBS News
How Lady Liberty became a beacon for immigrants
At the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., stands a 46-inch-tall model of an American icon – the Statue of Liberty – whose origin story may surprise you. "When this idea began, it was really about liberty; it wasn't about immigration," said Lonnie Bunch, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, That's right: Lady Liberty had nothing to do with immigration when she was first proposed in 1865. "The United States had ended slavery," said Bunch. "That's why, if you look, she's standing on the chains and shackles." A model of Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi's statue "Liberty," at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. Lucia RM Martino/Smithsonian American Art Museum But it would take more than two decades for the idea to be realized. While the statue itself would be paid for by the people of France, the Americans would be responsible for its prodigious base. "Almost anything you do involving culture or art, you gotta raise money for," said Bunch. And so, this model came to our shores in 1883, three years before her full-sized sister, to drum up support. She stood in the Capitol Rotunda, to no avail. Congress declined to foot the bill. "Many people in the United States thought, you know, what is this? Is this a New York City thing? And why should we care about it if it's just New York City?" said Bunch. One supporter, 34-year-old poet Emma Lazarus, concerned about the plight of Russian Jews seeking asylum in America, penned a sonnet called "The New Colossus" for a fundraising auction. In it, she imagined Lady Liberty as a "mother of exiles" welcoming the "huddled masses" through the "golden door" to America. "That's a great poem," said Bunch. "It's important, but it really became, more than anything else, the best way to understand the possibilities of immigration in America." At the time, the poem got little notice. At the statue's dedication in 1886, not a single speaker mentioned immigration. A parade of ships marks the inauguration of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor, Oct. 28, 1886. Library of Congress But Lazarus' poem turned out to be a prophecy. In 1892, within sight of the statue, America's first-ever immigration facility opened at Ellis Island. By the 1920s, more than 12 million immigrants from Europe had come through Ellis Island. "There are stories of people pulling into this harbor, seeing that symbol, and just dropping to their knees and weeping," said author and journalist Jia Lynn Yang. And very few people were turned away, even if they lacked documents. "If you can get to the border, you're in," said Yang. But, she notes, not all Americans were prepared to welcome them: "You have to remember, the country is still relatively small at this time. So, it's pretty shocking to the American people to have millions of people showing up from Italy, Eastern Europe, different religions, they're Catholic, they're Jewish, different foods, different languages." And while it might strain credulity today to imagine people back then thinking that Italians couldn't assimilate, Yang said, "People were writing columns and long essays saying these people don't belong here." And so, in 1924 President Calvin Coolidge signed the Johnson-Reed Act, which created a system of ethnic quotas that essentially banned immigration from countries outside of Western and Northern Europe. It was the first major immigration restriction since 1882's Chinese Exclusion Act, which barred the entry of Chinese laborers. But the 1924 law didn't apply to countries on this side of the Atlantic. Yang said, "The thinking was, these are our neighbors. We need to make it feel like they're welcome to come and go." So while there were no "illegal" immigrants from Mexico during this period, for more than 40 years – through a global depression, a world war, and the Holocaust – the door was virtually shut to everyone else. By the 1950s, the number of immigrants was getting smaller and smaller. "Talk to somebody in, like, 1955, they're like, Yeah, immigrants, that's old news," said Yang. And that would've been the case forever and ever, except that for 40 years, a group of lawmakers and activists felt that the law was discriminatory, and they wanted to change it. Among them: Brooklyn Congressman Manny Celler. He voted against the 1924 quotas as a first-year representative, and for decades fought to make America more welcoming to immigrants. Then, in 1958, a Massachusetts senator with his sights on the White House published a pamphlet calling for a change to the nation's laws. John F. Kennedy's "A Nation of Immigrants" would introduce the now-ubiquitous phrase. Yang said, "The book is trying to establish almost a new American history that says these people who came, you know, decades ago, you may have forgotten them; this is what makes America American. It's the fact that we are a nation of immigrants" – a sentiment new to a lot of Americans' ears. After Kennedy's assassination, at the height of the civil rights movement, the reformers (including Manny Celler, who was still serving in Congress) seized the moment, and on October 3, 1965, at (where else?) the Statue of Liberty, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Immigration and Nationality Act, which ended the ethnic quota system. "Those who do come will come because of what they are, and not because of the land from which they sprung," he said. But even the law's most ardent backers didn't anticipate just how many people would end up coming from all over the world. Since 1965, when that law went into effect, the share of foreign-born people living in America has slowly crept up to about 14 percent of the U.S. population – roughly the same as it was back in 1924 when the ethnic quotas were imposed. Yang says that today, if you meet someone and their family is from Africa, the Middle East or Asia, it's likely because of the paper that Johnson signed in 1965. "This law really transformed the whole country," she said. In a twist, the 1965 law limited immigration from Mexico and the rest of the Americas, setting the stage for the illegal immigration crisis at the Southern border. But it also allowed Jia-Lynn Yang's own parents to come to the U.S. after escaping the civil war in China, a fact she hadn't realized until writing a book about this chapter of the immigration story. She said, "When I looked into this history, I really understood how contingent my family's presence is here. I took it completely for granted, right? I grew up steeped in Statue of Liberty, Emma Lazarus poem, nation of immigrants – of course we were allowed to come here. It's a nation of immigrants." Yang said her parents felt deeply lucky to have come to America. "And I have two children now," she said. "Our family's entire story changed because we were allowed to come here. And now everything after me in the family tree is an American story." Surmising the posture and demeanor of Lady Liberty, Secretary Bunch said, "She's not a warrior. But she is powerful." And that power remains undiminished, says Bunch, who believes it is the immigrants themselves who gave the Statue of Liberty its meaning. "They imbued it with this notion that this is a symbol of the possibility of America," he said. "That's why I call it a statue of promise." FROM THE ARCHIVES: Charles Kuralt on the Statue of Liberty (Video) The reopening of Ellis Island to the public during America's bicentennial year prompted CBS News' Charles Kuralt to offer his thoughts on the sight of Lady Liberty as viewed by generations of immigrants, and on the diversity of a nation that welcomed those from every land seeking a safe haven and opportunity. For these new Americans, Kuralt said, "They carried our greatness in their baggage." (Originally broadcast May 28, 1976.) For more info: Story produced by Mark Hudspeth. Editor: Ed Givnish. See also:
Yahoo
42 minutes ago
- Yahoo
People Are Sharing The One Product They Bought That Turned Them Into A Total Snob, And Now They Can Never Go Back To The Cheap Stuff
These days — especially with prices rising — it seems like everyone is always on the hunt for dupes or cheaper alternatives to their favorite products. But sometimes, the "real deal" is so good that the budget version just cannot compete! So much so that once you experience that kind of quality, there's just no going back. Recently, redditor Wonderful-Economy762 wanted to know which purchases completely leveled people up and made them unexpectedly picky when they asked: "What's one product you bought that turned you into a total snob — like, you can never go back to the cheap stuff?" From butter to bedsheets, here's what people said made them raise their standards for good: 1."High-quality headphones. Once you hear music on good headphones, cheap ones sound like static." —ColdAntique291 "This! After using great headphones, you try your old ones and suddenly it sounds like your music is coming out of a haunted bucket." —Random_NameGenerated 2."High-quality butter." —Calm-Sea-5526 "Kerrygold is my fave." —pereuse 3."Balsamic vinegar." —U_kiddingme "The thick, expensive kind." —nycvhrs 4."Really good olive oil." —WeirdcoolWilson "I married an Italian and learned of this liquid gold. When it goes on sale, the family gets the word out and some buy it by the case." —dbrackulator 5."Whole coffee beans. No pre-ground coffee for me, keep your freeze-dried coffee to yourself, thanks!" —blondehairedangel "Came here to say this. Grinding your own has no substitute." —stairway2000 6."Maldon Sea Salt Flakes." —tyrannosaurus_eh "Their smoked salt is amazing too." —Smallloudcat 7."My fancy coffee machine. I'm never going back to instant coffee." —0ld_skool "I was just telling someone I can't drink drip coffee anymore. It just doesn't taste good to me now." —leese216 8."My KitchenAid stand mixer." —rushX33 "Mine runs great. Got it in 1999 or 2000." —Necessary_Internet75 9."Heated seats in my vehicles. It's pretty common across most models these days, but I first got them in 2005, and I told myself, 'There's just no going back now...'" —TravelEven1789 "Also the heated steering wheel!" —Fragrant_Turnover_38 10."Maple syrup!!!" —FlapDoodle-Badger "True Vermont maple syrup is on another level. We have a vacation home near many sugarhouses. No chemicals, no flavoring, no additives. Just pure syrup is ridiculously better." —imonlinedammit1 11."Quality fabrics — cotton, linen, and wool." —Jadey006 "I never thought I would be checking fabrics as much as I do now. Cotton seems to be becoming a thing of the past." —VivelaVendetta 12."Birkenstock sandals. I have knee problems, and they redistribute weight just enough to make a BIG difference — so much so, that I bought a slip-in style and ankle boot for when the cooler weather comes." —nycvhrs "Agreed. I've bought similar cheaper brands and they are not the same support at all." —catashtrophe84 13."Vanilla extract for baking. I cannot use the 'imitation' crap anymore, even if it is half the price." —L0st-137 "Real vanilla is expensive and worth every penny." —Transcontinental-flt 14."Rao's Homemade Marinara Sauce." —bebenee27 "Oh hells yes. It's pricey, but it's damn good." —Yankee6Actual 15."My perfume. The specific scent I wear, I've worn almost every day for the past 25 years. I won't change it." —Ecjg2010 "Exactly! I may have on a thrift store shirt and a pair of jeans I bought at a yard sale, but Imma have on one of my expensive perfumes with them." —ALmommy1234 16."Really great cookware. Most people start out on T-fal, but once you can afford the good stuff, your cooking will never be the same. I personally love my Scanpans. Oh, and quality knives like Wüsthof." —Adorable_Complaint36 "Solid advice. Great cookware and great knives are so worth it and will last a lifetime given proper care and use."—UnsafeAtEverySpeed 17."Coca-Cola. I never buy the cheap shit." —ricst "Off-brand cola is the worst. I can handle off-brand orange, citrus, or ginger ale, but any brown soda needs to be brand." —Pizzaisbae13 18."Q-tips." —Foxingmatch "True. Generic ones are crap." —FireBallXLV 19."Aesop body wash and hand soap. Smells so good and doesn't dry skin." —mega_star_ "That's a level of rich I aspire to." —Careless-Ad8346 "High-quality sheets with a great thread count.' —Heebyjeebees "And silk pillowcases." —vernongodlittle_ You can read the original thread on Reddit. Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity.


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Solution to Evan Birnholz's July 6 crossword, ‘Borderlines'
Since I know there's been a lot of discussion about it already, I felt that I should address the new online crossword format. The short story is that I don't have many definitive answers for you at this time. What I can encourage you to do is, first, to remain patient. Second, if you feel particularly strongly about things you would like to see implemented or changed on the crossword page, please let The Post know by emailing games@