In 1981, Herbert Freudenberger coined the term "burnout" describing "a debilitating psychological condition brought about by unrelieved work stress, resulting in: depleted energy and emotional exhaustion, lowered resistance to illness, increased depersonalization in interpersonal relationships, increased dissatisfaction and pessimism, and increased absenteeism and work inefficiency."
In 2011, we teach you how to access the natural cures.

Christina Maslach describes burnout as "the index of the dislocation between what people are and what they have to do." This is the space where one is leaking power in an attempt to aid someone else. This draining of energy is unconsciously chosen and can be consciously corrected through strengthening your energy field. When social workers experience burnout they have neglected to connect their choices and their actions. Imaging through Self-authorship produces what is missing. Healer’s Portrait provides a focal point of attention for strengths-based comprehension that replaces problem-based labels that limit the social worker and the client s/he seeks to assist. It is a conceptualization of Higher Power Involvement that reforms the rules of interrelationship through empathy and compassion.
Investing one's whole Self into meaningful pursuits is more than following your heart's desire. Identifying the elements causing that flame to "burn out" returns the power of intentional learning to the source, the individual.
This three-step reproducible process disconnects burnout at its source, redefines self's need and desire for helping others, and implements evolved concepts of what it means to serve others. These steps are
1] Calming the emotions and nervous system of BODY,
2] Accessing deeper levels of MIND/consciousness through dream incubation,
3] Receiving the movement of SPIRIT in stillness.
The Body, Mind, and Spirit provide a natural feedback system that accesses stress levels for Self-actualization when the individual knows how to interpret its signs. Stress is a neutral state of being which in part categorizes all living beings. Unmanaged stress produces chaos leading to mental incoherency, emotional breakdown, and physical trauma. Managed stress opens the door to mobilize creative power toward the fulfillment of goals, resolution of limitations, and achievement of objectives. The difference is in the level of conscious wakefulness and engagement.