The alarm rings at 6:00 AM. You reach for the snooze button — a reflex born of exhaustion that sleep cannot fix. You got enough sleep last night. Maybe even eight hours. But you woke up this morning feeling like you hadn't slept at all: a hollow, grey kind of fatigue that coffee won't touch and a vacation won't fix.
Does this sound like you? Keep reading.
This Isn't a Productivity Problem. It's a Soul Problem.
You scroll your phone before your feet hit the floor. Already behind before the day begins. You perform. You produce. You push through. And at the end of it all, you lay down with a question you've been too afraid to sit with:
"Is this it? Is this what I worked so hard for — this hollow, exhausted version of myself?"
If you've been feeling that way, you are not broken. You are not weak. You are living in what social theorists call a "burnout society" — and your soul is sounding an alarm that the world doesn't want you to hear.
We have become what they call "achievement-subjects" — people whose worth is measured purely by output. Your value is your productivity. Your identity is your grind. And the cruelest part? The chains are ones we put on ourselves.
The result: a generation that is hyper-connected and deeply alone. Hyper-vigilant and completely adrift. Exhausted from a race nobody agreed to enter — and terrified to stop, because stopping feels like losing.
of adults say they regularly experience physical symptoms caused by stress — yet most never address what's underneath.
Find What's Underneath →The Desert You Didn't Choose — And the One That Could Save You
Here's the paradox of Lent: it invites you into the desert voluntarily — the same place many of us have already been dragged by life.
Maybe your desert came in the form of a diagnosis. A relationship that fell apart. A career that collapsed. A grief that won't lift. You didn't choose it. But you're in it. And the question is whether you'll move through it alone — or let it become something sacred.
The Lenten journey mirrors the 40 days Jesus spent in the Judean wilderness — a barren, empty, dangerous place. The last place you'd want to be. And yet, it is precisely in this stripping away that something essential is uncovered.
"The desert removes everything that isn't real. Your title. Your productivity. Your carefully constructed image. What's left — if you're willing to sit with it — is the truest version of you."
Daily Motivation TVIf your spiritual life feels dry right now, that is not a sign God has abandoned you. In the desert, theologians remind us, "tears are the lenses we need to see Jesus." The dryness is an invitation, not a punishment.
Ash Wednesday whispers both truths at once — and Lent holds space for both. You are mortal and you are loved. You are finite and you are found.
The False Self Is Exhausting to Maintain
There's a reason you're so tired. You've been holding up a version of yourself that was never real to begin with.
Spiritual writers describe the "false self" — the collection of survival strategies and social masks we build around ourselves for safety, success, and belonging. We perform competence. We perform certainty. We perform happiness. We work hard to maintain the image, terrified that if people saw the real version, they wouldn't stay.
Lent calls this what it is: a kind of dying. Not dramatic, not metaphorical — a genuine dying to the illusions that have been running your life. And yes, it's painful. It cuts close to the bone.
"The only thing you lose is the false self. The real you — buried under years of performing and proving — cannot be taken."
Daily Motivation TVThe extraordinary good news is this: the real you is still there. Waiting. The one who was known and loved before the performance began — before the title, the output, the carefully curated image. Lent is the season that says: you are allowed to stop pretending. The door is open.
"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest."Matthew 11:28 (NIV)
For more on what the neuroscience of chronic stress reveals — and what consistent prayer specifically does to the overwhelmed nervous system — read our article on the serotonin secret mental health gurus ignore about prayer. The science and the theology are pointing in the same direction.
