You know that feeling on Sunday evening when your stomach starts to tighten? The one where you’re already mentally preparing for Monday morning before the weekend has even ended?
Or maybe you’re the person who opens their calendar every few weeks to count the days until your next vacation, like it’s a life raft you’re paddling toward.
I used to do both. And somewhere around my late twenties, during a particularly rough burnout period, I realized something uncomfortable. If I was constantly needing to escape my life, maybe the problem wasn’t that I needed better vacations. Maybe I needed a better life.
Seth Godin put it perfectly when he said instead of wondering when your next vacation is, maybe you should set up a life you don’t need to escape from.
That idea landed differently for me because it suggested something radical: what if the goal wasn’t to endure Monday through Friday so you could enjoy two days of freedom? What if the whole week could feel more livable?
Stop treating time off like a pressure release valve
Here’s what I noticed during my burnout phase. I wasn’t just looking forward to vacations. I was desperately counting on them to fix everything that felt wrong about my daily life.
The problem with that approach? Vacations end. And when they do, you’re right back in the same situation that made you miserable in the first place.
According to research, vacation benefits fade quickly after you return to work, often within just a week. That post-vacation glow you feel? It’s gone by the following Monday.
When you’re using time off as the only thing keeping you sane, you’re basically admitting that 50 weeks out of the year feel unsustainable. And honestly, that should be the wake-up call, not the vacation dates circled on your calendar.
The shift happens when you stop seeing vacations as the prize for surviving your regular life and start seeing them as a nice addition to a life that already feels manageable.
Your Monday morning feeling is telling you something important
Pay attention to how you feel on Sunday night. Really pay attention.
If you’re filled with dread, anxiety, or that sinking feeling in your chest, that’s not just a case of the “Sunday scaries” everyone jokes about. That’s your body trying to tell you something about how you’re spending the majority of your waking hours.
I had a health scare at thirty that turned out to be nothing serious, but it completely changed how I thought about the stress I’d been normalizing. The doctor asked me about my work habits and I realized I couldn’t actually remember the last Monday morning I’d woken up feeling anything other than resigned.
The question isn’t how to make Sunday nights more bearable. The question is what needs to change so that Monday morning doesn’t feel like walking into battle.
Small daily choices are building the life you’re actually living
The life you have right now didn’t appear overnight. It’s the accumulation of thousands of small decisions you made about how to spend your time, what to prioritize, and what you were willing to tolerate.
Which means it can also be changed by small decisions going forward.
After I went through burnout, I started making tiny adjustments. Nothing dramatic at first. I started having dinner with my partner most nights with our phones deliberately in another room. That came after too many evenings disappeared because I kept “just checking one thing” for work.
That single boundary shifted something. Evenings started feeling like actual rest instead of work with breaks.
The key isn’t making massive life changes all at once. It’s making small adjustments that point you in a better direction.
What’s one small thing you could change this week that would make your daily life feel slightly more livable? Start there.
The work that drains you isn’t always obvious
Not all exhaustion comes from long hours or difficult tasks. Sometimes the most draining work is the kind that conflicts with how you actually want to live.
I dated someone briefly whose entire identity revolved around hustle culture. Every conversation was about optimizing, scaling, grinding. And watching him operate made me realize how much I’d internalized those same narratives about work needing to consume you to matter.
The truth is, you can work hard at something and still have energy left over for the rest of your life. But only if the work itself isn’t constantly fighting against your values or pushing you to be someone you’re not.
Research seems to back this up. A study from MIT found that workplace culture was the single biggest predictor of employee turnover, even more than workload or compensation. People can handle difficult work. What destroys them is feeling like they have to betray their own values to do it.
If Sunday night dread is your reality, it might not be about the tasks you’re doing. It might be about the person those tasks are requiring you to become.
Your boundaries aren’t luxuries, they’re architecture
I used to think boundaries were something you set when you had the privilege of extra time or energy. Like they were nice-to-haves for people whose lives were already working.
Then I learned the hard way that boundaries aren’t about protecting your leisure time. They’re about protecting the life you’re trying to build.
Every time you answer emails at 10 p.m., or work through lunch without eating, or skip the things that make you feel human because you’re too busy, you’re not just having a rough day. You’re actively constructing a life you’ll need to escape from.
The boundaries you maintain, or don’t maintain, are creating your daily reality. They’re the difference between a life that feels chosen and a life that feels like it’s happening to you.
I started running a few years ago, not because I loved it, but because my brain works better when my body moves and I’m away from screens. That mid-afternoon walk I take? It’s non-negotiable now. Not because I have so much free time, but because without it, the rest of my day falls apart.
What boundaries would need to exist for your regular life to feel sustainable?
Designing a life means deciding what you’re designing for
Here’s where most advice about work-life balance goes wrong. It assumes everyone wants the same thing: less work, more leisure time, early retirement, financial independence.
But lifestyle design isn’t about following someone else’s template for the good life. It’s about figuring out what actually matters to you and building around that.
For some people, that might mean working intensely on something they care deeply about, even if it means less conventional downtime. For others, it might mean deliberately choosing lower-paying work that leaves mental space for other priorities.
I’ve interviewed over hundreds of people over the years. The ones who seem genuinely content aren’t necessarily the ones with the most impressive resumes or the highest salaries. They’re the ones whose daily lives reflect their actual priorities instead of someone else’s idea of success.
The question isn’t “how do I escape my life more often?” The question is “what do I actually want my daily life to feel like?”
You’re already designing your life, just maybe not consciously
Here’s the thing about lifestyle design that nobody tells you. You’re already doing it.
Every time you say yes to something, you’re saying no to something else. Every boundary you don’t set is a choice about what you’ll tolerate. Every hour spent on one thing is an hour not spent on another.
The only question is whether you’re designing intentionally or letting your life get designed by default, by whatever demands the most attention or causes the most guilt.
I watch workplace dramas and reality competition shows sometimes, and what strikes me is how they reveal our assumptions about success. The shows celebrate people who sacrifice everything for ambition, who treat relationships and health as acceptable casualties of achievement. And we absorb those narratives without questioning them.
But here’s what I’ve learned from studying actual successful people, not the dramatized versions: the ones who build sustainable careers and lives aren’t the ones who sacrifice everything else. They’re the ones who made hard choices about what mattered enough to protect.
You don’t need permission to want a life you don’t have to constantly escape from. You just need to start making choices that point toward that life instead of away from it.
Final thoughts
The Seth Godin quote that started this whole thing isn’t really about vacations. It’s about the radical idea that your regular life could feel good enough that time off is a pleasure, not a necessity.
That doesn’t mean every day will feel perfect or that work will never be difficult. It means building a life where the default state isn’t something you’re trying to escape from.
It starts with paying attention to what your Sunday night feeling is telling you. It continues with small choices that prioritize sustainability over optimization. And it requires letting go of the idea that a life you actually enjoy living is somehow less ambitious or serious than one that exhausts you.
You’re already designing your life through the choices you make every day. The only question is whether you’re designing it consciously, with intention, or letting it get built by default according to someone else’s blueprint.
What would need to change for you to stop counting the days until your next escape?















