00:00:00
Hello, everyone!
00:00:22
Next up, we have Jamis Buck, who, as I mentioned yesterday, is the godfather of all things related to Ruby.
00:00:29
We wouldn't be here without him, and we're happy to have him back. Thanks, Jamis.
00:00:38
Alright, I wanted to start with a little exercise.
00:00:44
What I want all of you to do is try to relax the left side of your face. Just relax it.
00:00:50
In fact, put a hand on your cheek to ensure that you're not moving any muscles on the left side of your face.
00:00:56
Now, with the right side of your face, I want you to grin with all your might.
00:01:02
Raise your cheeks, bring out your smile, and open your mouth a little.
00:01:07
But keep the left side of your face perfectly calm. It's harder than you think, isn't it?
00:01:13
You probably look a bit goofy. Hold that thought, and maybe take a picture.
00:01:21
Okay, so what was that all about?
00:01:26
On January nineteenth, something interesting happened to me.
00:01:38
For several days prior, everything I ate tasted like wintergreen.
00:01:44
I like wintergreen, so it wasn't that big of a deal, but it was just weird.
00:01:51
I scrubbed my tongue with my toothbrush, thinking there might be some fungus.
00:01:56
But nothing fixed it; no mouthwash seemed to work. I was a little concerned, but I didn't freak out too much. I thought it would just go away.
00:02:10
On January nineteenth, I woke up and noticed a strange sensation in my face.
00:02:18
As I went into the bathroom to shave and brush my teeth, I realized the left side of my face was slow to respond.
00:02:27
I tried smiling, but the left side wouldn’t go up as far as the right side.
00:02:34
I started to freak out a little, thinking, 'tumor, stroke, what’s going on?'
00:02:41
It totally freaked me out, but it was the onset of something really bizarre that had happened to me since puberty.
00:02:52
I quickly got into the doctor, explained my symptoms.
00:02:59
I told him I wasn’t numb— I just couldn’t move it as much.
00:03:07
He diagnosed me with Bell's palsy.
00:03:14
How many of you here have ever had Bell's palsy? Anyone? Okay, so this will be news to a few.
00:03:20
How many of you know someone who has had Bell's palsy? A few others.
00:03:31
It is a really weird condition. Now, this was news to me, but apparently, there's a nerve that gets affected.
00:03:39
There's this thing called the seventh cranial nerve, and I’m not a doctor.
00:03:46
But apparently, some of the cranial nerve comes from behind your head, wraps around and goes through your inner ear.
00:03:53
It spreads across the face to control facial expressions.
00:03:59
This includes everything from blinking your eye to rolling your tongue.
00:04:06
Anything involving that side of your face is controlled by this seventh cranial nerve.
00:04:14
Weird things happen when that nerve malfunctions, and no one is really sure what causes it.
00:04:20
I think there are many different factors, but Bell's palsy happens when something pinches or traumatizes that nerve.
00:04:26
A few days before, I had had an earache in my left ear, and I wondered if that was related.
00:04:35
The doctor reassured me not to worry; he said it would go away.
00:04:42
He prescribed some medication to help speed recovery.
00:04:49
Essentially, he told me to just wait it out.
00:04:57
Sure enough, after a few days, it got worse.
00:05:03
I could smile just fine on one side, while the other side was a different story.
00:05:09
Together, it made my face look lopsided.
00:05:16
I would put my hand on my left cheek and strain with all my might just to get any movement.
00:05:23
There was nothing— it felt completely dead.
00:05:31
Within a few days, my face was entirely paralyzed on that side.
00:05:36
It's amazing how many things you can’t do when your face is half-paralyzed.
00:05:43
You can’t chew properly. It’s so awkward.
00:05:50
Food would just fall out of my mouth.
00:05:57
You feel like you’ve just been to the dentist.
00:06:01
You don’t want to go out to eat because you look ridiculous with food falling from your mouth.
00:06:08
You can’t blink. I would squeeze my eyes shut as tight as I could, but nothing happened.
00:06:13
Except for a slight closing of my eye.
00:06:19
I had to carry a tissue with me to close my eye so it wouldn't dry out.
00:06:25
But on top of that, my tears would water constantly.
00:06:32
At night, I had to tape my eye shut to prevent it from drying out.
00:06:42
If you've never slept with your eye taped shut, you're missing out.
00:06:47
It’s not as fun as it sounds.
00:06:50
I couldn’t wink; I couldn’t chew; I couldn’t roll my tongue.
00:06:57
I used to be a whistler. How many of you like to whistle?
00:07:03
I whistle all the time, and it probably drives people nuts.
00:07:09
But I couldn’t whistle. The left side of my mouth was just too weak.
00:07:17
Another crazy thing is that I couldn't say "p's" and "f's" with half a face.
00:07:27
Try it! Put your index finger in the left corner of your mouth.
00:07:32
Just try to say "feet" or "fiber". This is fun, right?
00:07:39
I tried to make the most of it. I tried to have fun.
00:07:44
I joked with my kids about it. My dad, who was living with us at the time.
00:07:51
He asked, 'I'm sorry, Jamis. I'm really sorry about your face.'
00:07:57
I found that so hilarious; I laughed and laughed.
00:08:05
I told him I would use that as a new greeting, 'Hey Joe, nice to meet you, sorry about your face.'
00:08:11
My kids thought it was the weirdest thing, especially because I couldn't close my left eye.
00:08:19
You just see the lights, and it can be a bit freaky.
00:08:25
I tried to make it fun. I would call it my 'super face.'
00:08:33
Except I couldn't say "p's" and "f's," so it came out as 'super face'.
00:08:40
Even now, when I'm fully recovered, my kids still say, 'Say, super face, Dad!'
00:08:48
But when you can only smile with half your face, it feels fake.
00:08:58
Even though I was trying to smile with both sides, it felt like a fake smile.
00:09:04
Not being able to smile genuinely— it messes with your mind.
00:09:10
I really struggled with depression because of it.
00:09:17
In reality, I was diagnosed on the nineteenth.
00:09:24
Within a few days, my left side became completely paralyzed.
00:09:30
By the thirtieth, I was able to twitch a muscle.
00:09:39
It reminded me of that scene in The Princess Bride.
00:09:43
Where the Man in Black has been mostly dead all day, and they try to get him to move.
00:09:55
I felt similar looking in the mirror, twitching my mouth a little bit.
00:10:02
By the fourth, I could almost whistle; it was a significant moral victory.
00:10:09
By the seventh, I had about fifty percent functionality back.
00:10:16
And by the fourteenth, I was as good as new.
00:10:24
The whole ordeal felt like it lasted an eternity.
00:10:33
Psychologically, it messed with me a lot.
00:10:41
I couldn’t smile, whistle, or do the things I loved to do.
00:10:49
I tried to puff my cheek out, but it always leaked.
00:10:56
My kids found that hilarious.
00:11:02
Every little thing I couldn’t do felt bizarre.
00:11:07
So what's the point of this story? Let’s rewind a few years.
00:11:14
Back in August 2005, I released a tool called Switched.
00:11:21
How many of you remember Switched? A few hands, great.
00:11:28
A few months later, it had to be renamed to Capistrano due to trademark issues.
00:11:36
How many of you are familiar with Capistrano? A few more this time.
00:11:42
This feels like ancient history, but it was an exciting project.
00:11:48
I had so much fun and loved the community that built around it.
00:11:54
I also loved the technical challenges.
00:12:01
Working with 37signals to create the tool was a fantastic experience.
00:12:08
They funded it, and I had creative control over it.
00:12:16
But by 2008, my circumstances began to change.
00:12:24
I was working with Mark Umbraco, and we were set to teach seminars about Capistrano.
00:12:32
It was really exciting at first, but then things took a turn.
00:12:38
When we mentioned this to DHH, he pointed out it was a potential conflict of interest.
00:12:44
He was well within his rights and ultimately, he was probably correct.
00:12:51
But in my mind, it felt like a punch to the gut.
00:13:00
This was something I loved, and suddenly, it felt taken away from me.
00:13:07
I blame no one but my own misplaced expectations.
00:13:13
It changed my perception of my work entirely.
00:13:19
That event marked the beginning of my decline.
00:13:25
In 2010, I did write a few blog posts that helped me a little.
00:13:31
But by the fall of 2011, I was so overwhelmed that I shut down my blog.
00:13:39
I just exported it as static HTML and left it behind.
00:13:46
In 2012, I stopped tweeting; I said, I'm done.
00:13:53
And by 2013, I realized something wasn't right with me.
00:14:00
I sought help from a psychiatrist.
00:14:07
I talked with my bosses about it.
00:14:14
They said, 'Just take care of yourself.'
00:14:20
The problem was I couldn’t find a specialist in my area.
00:14:27
So I kind of self-medicated. I wrote a lot.
00:14:35
I wrote stories for my eyes only, featuring first-person dialogues with my psychiatrist.
00:14:43
It sounds ridiculous, but it was remarkably therapeutic.
00:14:51
I learned a lot about what I was feeling, but it still wasn’t enough.
00:14:59
About a year later, I quit my dream job.
00:15:06
Leaving Basecamp was one of the hardest decisions I've ever made.
00:15:14
I loved that job more than any other I’ve ever had.
00:15:21
But I left not because I was dissatisfied, but because I couldn't do it anymore.
00:15:28
Here’s a code example. Can you see the bug?
00:15:34
It's an easy one. Raise your hand when you find it.
00:15:42
'Raise area times radius plus pi.' Not a difficult bug.
00:15:50
But at that time, if I looked at that code, I just felt exhausted.
00:15:57
I would immediately check my email instead of focusing.
00:16:06
I'd say, 'Let me just play Kerbal Space Program for a bit.'
00:16:13
Anyone who’s played it knows you can’t just play for 15 minutes.
00:16:20
My productivity had dwindled to about ten percent of what it used to be.
00:16:30
I realized it wasn't fair to Jason and David to keep paying me.
00:16:39
It was terrifying to make that decision.
00:16:45
But Jason and David were incredibly supportive.
00:16:52
They helped me do what I needed to do.
00:16:58
This emotional paralysis brought everything back to mind.
00:17:06
Burnout is a form of paralysis as well.
00:17:14
When you can’t do what you used to love.
00:17:21
I couldn't motivate myself to work. I tried everything.
00:17:28
I tried Pomodoro, rewarding myself with Cadbury cream eggs.
00:17:34
Anyone who knows me knows I'm addicted to them.
00:17:42
I tried convincing myself to work for just fifteen minutes.
00:17:50
Nothing worked. I couldn't get motivated.
00:17:56
No matter how much I stared in the mirror, I couldn't make my muscles twitch.
00:18:04
I was totally done and it was terrifying.
00:18:12
This was an exciting time to be at Basecamp.
00:18:19
We were in the midst of releasing the new Basecamp.
00:18:27
They hadn’t just renamed the company back from 37signals; they were shutting down old products.
00:18:34
So many changes were happening, yet I couldn’t feel the excitement.
00:18:42
In my research, I discovered many signs of burnout.
00:18:50
If you experience one or two, it might not matter. I checked most of the boxes.
00:18:57
Impaired concentration? Absolutely.
00:19:06
Isolation? Definitely.
00:19:13
Lack of productivity? Oh, yes.
00:19:19
Depression? Anger? Anxiety? Loss of enjoyment? You bet.
00:19:26
I experienced almost all of it.
00:19:34
So what do you do about it?
00:19:42
First, you need to look at the cause.
00:19:49
There's a psychologist named Christina Maslach who identified mismatches.
00:19:55
People often think they get burned out from working too hard.
00:20:03
Work overload is one of the causes, but there are others as well.
00:20:09
I wasn’t overworked at Basecamp when I burned out.
00:20:17
It was actually my perception of control that caused the problem.
00:20:25
When the rug was pulled out from under me, I felt utterly helpless.
00:20:32
Lack of control led to my downward spiral.
00:20:40
If you feel a lack of control, you might also be at risk for burnout.
00:20:46
Another cause is insufficient reward.
00:20:52
Reward can be salary, but it can be a combination of things too.
00:21:01
At Basecamp, I had excellent benefits.
00:21:09
Every three years, I got a one-month sabbatical.
00:21:16
There was no insufficiency of reward for me.
00:21:24
Breakdown of community? Not a problem here.
00:21:31
I loved my coworkers; they formed an amazing community.
00:21:37
But maybe you feel isolated or disconnected.
00:21:44
Absence of fairness? If you feel things aren’t balanced, that can lead to burnout.
00:21:52
Conflicting values can cause burnout as well.
00:21:59
I love Basecamp and my bosses; they’re generous and amazing.
00:22:06
But I don’t like being around profanity.
00:22:14
Sometimes, it felt as if the culture glorified it.
00:22:20
It bothered me, and it might have contributed to my burnout.
00:22:26
If you feel your company’s values conflict with yours, it can lead to burnout.
00:22:35
However, the good news is you can overcome it!
00:22:43
I feel like I've overcome my burnout.
00:22:49
I've been productive with client projects, writing code for fun.
00:22:55
It has changed me, though. I'm different now.
00:23:02
I’m not the prolific programmer I used to be.
00:23:09
I realize there’s more to life than just coding.
00:23:15
So I program less but do other things more.
00:23:22
That’s a healthy reality.
00:23:30
How to overcome burnout? There is a path.
00:23:39
First, identify why you are feeling burned out.
00:23:46
You can use the Five Whys technique.
00:23:53
Ask why, get an answer, then ask why again until you uncover a root cause.
00:24:01
It won’t be a quick sit-down task.
00:24:08
This may take days or weeks of pondering.
00:24:15
Getting back to basics is crucial.
00:24:22
Look at your physical health: diet and hydration.
00:24:29
Studies show that exercise can reduce stress.
00:24:38
If you are feeling burned out, are you exercising? Are you eating well?
00:24:44
Take breaks. I took two sabbaticals.
00:24:51
The key was getting away for a whole year after quitting Basecamp.
00:24:58
I didn't touch a computer for three months.
00:25:07
That was essential for me to realize there’s more to life.
00:25:14
Reassess your goals—what do you want?
00:25:21
Is your current position helping you fulfill those?
00:25:28
Maybe it’s time to say no politely.
00:25:34
Don’t take on more work than you can handle.
00:25:41
I’ve struggled with saying no, wanting to help everyone.
00:25:48
But when you’re recovering, you need to rest.
00:25:56
Positive thinking can help. When you're depressed, the world seems dark.
00:26:02
I’m fortunate not to struggle with chronic depression.
00:26:09
But if your burnout leads to depression, focus on positive thoughts.
00:26:16
Lastly, find a role that fits you.
00:26:24
If your current position isn’t fulfilling your needs, look elsewhere.
00:26:32
It’s terrifying switching careers at first, but take control.
00:26:39
Many of you are self-employed. Life goes on.
00:26:47
How do you prevent burnout? Keep a stress diary.
00:26:58
Identify what stresses you out and why.
00:27:05
Over weeks, look for patterns related to your stressors.
00:27:12
Track your progress. Monitor what you accomplish daily.
00:27:19
Mindfulness meditation has gained a lot of attention lately.
00:27:27
It’s a great tool to relieve stress and understand your feelings.
00:27:37
Schedule downtime. Don't burn out!
00:27:43
Take a 20-minute nap; it's remarkably rejuvenating!
00:27:50
Get out; read a book, or take a walk.
00:27:54
Change your location.
00:28:01
And here’s a unique idea: write yourself a fan letter.
00:28:07
Express gratitude to yourself for being awesome.
00:28:13
There's a wealth of literature on job burnout available.
00:28:20
There's even a journal dedicated to burnout research.
00:28:27
But there are ways to brace for it.
00:28:35
Get savings! You might need to take significant time off.
00:28:42
Do you have savings to support you during that time?
00:28:48
If you’re out of work with no savings, it’s terrifying.
00:28:54
It's easier to leave a toxic situation if you have a nest egg.
00:29:01
Learn new hobbies—keep yourself engaged.
00:29:09
Always be learning! When I was in Utah, I became obsessed with birds.
00:29:16
I learned to identify bird species in my backyard.
00:29:24
It became a brief obsession, but it prepared me for when I had to stop working.
00:29:30
If you're burned out, your responsibility is to recover.
00:29:38
You don't owe it to anyone but yourself to get better.
00:29:45
If you’re okay now, your responsibility is to prepare.
00:29:52
You owe it to yourself and your employer to remain healthy.
00:30:01
Thank you for listening!
00:30:05
Are there any questions?
00:30:12
Is it true that burnout is more prevalent in developer communities?
00:30:19
Not exactly. It’s prevalent in many professional realms.
00:30:26
I read an article about burnout among professional women.
00:30:34
Burnout exists in various fields; it’s not just related to programming.
00:30:42
How did I recognize my burnout?
00:30:48
I was in denial for a long time. It took a while to acknowledge it.
00:30:55
When I became my own psychiatrist, everything became clearer.
00:31:01
That realization came during 2013.
00:31:09
It was a gradual decline from that Capistrano incident in 2008.
00:31:16
I worked along with David and Jason; they supported me through everything.
00:31:24
To help ease my stress, I returned to recreational programming.
00:31:30
I wrote my book, 'Mazes for Programmers', and that was therapeutic.
00:31:38
Gradually, the joy returned when I found other interests.
00:31:45
Yes, it took about a year before I felt fully recovered.
00:31:54
Do you need more than one of those mismatches to face burnout?
00:32:01
You can be at risk for burnout from just one mismatch.
00:32:07
It can vary in severity; minor issues can accumulate.
00:32:14
If there’s discontent, address it before it spirals.
00:32:20
Could my reaction in 2008 have been prevented?
00:32:28
It’s possible I could’ve incorporated techniques to ease stress.
00:32:36
Ultimately, burnout has helped me discover new passions.
00:32:43
It taught me that I could be self-employed.
00:32:49
That's been an enlightening experience for me.
00:32:56
Burnout affected my family too.
00:33:04
The warning signs of burnout impacted my home life.
00:33:11
Anger and irritability crept in; I withdrew from my family.
00:33:19
My wife was worried. We talked about quitting since 2012.
00:33:27
The fear of uncertainty kept us from making that leap.
00:33:34
Even though I didn't know if it affected my children.
00:33:40
My wife had concerns, and that's all that really mattered.
00:33:47
Ultimately, through the year when I wasn’t working, we talked a lot.
00:33:55
Talking through our issues became a key part of the healing process.
00:34:01
Thank you for your attention. Any more questions?
00:34:07
I appreciate being here to share my story!
00:34:14
Let’s continue these discussions and support each other.
00:34:21
Life can be challenging, but so rewarding when we work through it together.