This might be a re-phrasing of some of the other comments, but I think you need to calibrate your approach to match your personality make-up. For instance I could easily spend hours reading, thinking, and writing about some socio-political issue, but the idea of joining a march or protest addressing the same issue sounds draining. Other people are the exact opposite of that. Maybe you like traveling, maybe you like telling stories, maybe you like statistics, maybe you like street-art. Any of these could be creatively leveraged to change the world.
If you link your goals to activities that you can’t get enough of, then burn-out is less of a problem. If you decide to equate the worth of your contributions with your degree of success in , because it’s the culturally accepted standard (or even because it’s the most effective tactic, all other things being equal), then you could end up both failing AND blaming yourself for it.
This might be a re-phrasing of some of the other comments, but I think you need to calibrate your approach to match your personality make-up. For instance I could easily spend hours reading, thinking, and writing about some socio-political issue, but the idea of joining a march or protest addressing the same issue sounds draining. Other people are the exact opposite of that. Maybe you like traveling, maybe you like telling stories, maybe you like statistics, maybe you like street-art. Any of these could be creatively leveraged to change the world.
If you link your goals to activities that you can’t get enough of, then burn-out is less of a problem. If you decide to equate the worth of your contributions with your degree of success in , because it’s the culturally accepted standard (or even because it’s the most effective tactic, all other things being equal), then you could end up both failing AND blaming yourself for it.