Install
openclaw skills install @harrylabsj/burnout-checkinHelp users do a gentle burnout risk check-in by reflecting on exhaustion, detachment, overload, and recovery. Use when the user says they feel drained, emotionally flat, chronically tired, unable to recover, close to burnout, or asks for a quick burnout self-check. Results are for reflection only and must never be framed as diagnosis.
openclaw skills install @harrylabsj/burnout-checkinProvide a gentle, structured burnout self-check for everyday reflection.
Scenario 1 — 60-Hour Work Weeks Taking a Toll A software engineer working 60+ hour weeks feels constantly exhausted, emotionally numb, and unable to recover even after weekends. The skill walks them through a 6-question burnout check-in, scores their responses in the "high depletion" range, and provides practical next steps: reduce one avoidable demand, create one genuine recovery block, and monitor across the next two weeks. Outcome: user gains awareness that their depletion level warrants timely attention and receives a concrete stabilization plan rather than vague advice to "rest more."
Scenario 2 — Parent Juggling Childcare and Remote Work A working parent wonders if they are "just tired" or approaching burnout. The skill asks them to reflect over the past 2–3 weeks (not just today), evaluates signs of emotional flatness and reduced recovery, and returns a "noticeable strain" interpretation with suggestions to shift from push-harder to protect-energy mode. Outcome: user learns to distinguish daily tiredness from cumulative depletion, and commits to one small protective change — blocking a daily 15-minute no-demands window.
Scenario 3 — University Student During Finals Week A student feels detached, unmotivated, and irritable during exam season but dismisses it as normal stress. The skill performs the check-in, scores them in the "some depletion building" range, and suggests practical micro-recovery strategies and a self-scheduled check-back in two weeks. Outcome: student gains vocabulary to describe their state, adopts one small recovery practice (screen-free lunch), and schedules a follow-up self-check before the strain deepens.
Use this skill to help the user:
This skill is for self-observation and practical reflection. It is not diagnosis, psychotherapy, or medical advice.
Typical triggers include:
Do not present this skill as:
Avoid statements like:
Prefer wording like:
Default flow:
Use four options per item:
Suggested questions:
Suggested ranges:
Every result should include:
Your answers do not strongly suggest a burnout pattern right now. That does not mean life is easy — it suggests depletion may still be relatively manageable at the moment. A useful next step is to keep protecting your recovery rhythm before pressure builds further.
Your answers suggest some depletion may already be building. This can be a good moment to reduce one avoidable demand and create one real recovery block before the strain gets heavier. If you keep feeling this way across the next couple of weeks, it may be worth taking the pattern more seriously.
Your answers suggest a more noticeable burnout-like strain may be present. This may already be affecting motivation, patience, recovery, or emotional engagement. A helpful next step is to shift from “push harder” to “protect energy” mode and reduce at least one meaningful source of drain.
Your answers suggest your current depletion may be quite high. If this pattern is lasting, or it is clearly affecting sleep, mood, work, caregiving, or basic daily functioning, it may be important to seek support in real life rather than carrying it alone. Right now, stabilization and support matter more than forcing more output.
Prefer language that is:
Avoid language that is:
Stop normal burnout check-in flow if the user expresses:
Use a direct response like:
⚠️ Important: this is not the right moment for a normal burnout self-check. If you may be at risk of harming yourself or someone else, or you cannot keep yourself safe right now, please contact a trusted person immediately and reach out to local emergency care, a crisis line, a hospital, or a licensed professional as soon as possible.
Then stay focused on immediate safety rather than continuing the check-in.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This tool provides general self-reflection support only. It does not provide diagnosis, psychotherapy, psychiatric evaluation, or medical advice. If you are experiencing severe distress, worsening hopelessness, thoughts of harming yourself or others, or a clear decline in daily functioning, please seek help from a licensed mental health professional, a doctor, or local emergency support resources.
For most uses, prefer this pattern: