Productivity Hacks Don’t Work When You Have Mental Illness

But there are other strategies that can help you get things done

Jenny J. Chen
Elemental

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Photo by Ana Tavares on Unsplash

YYou’re sitting at your desk, unable to do anything but keep sitting as thoughts float like thick clouds through your brain. There’s a looming deadline ahead, but try as you might, you can’t bring yourself to pay attention to the computer screen in front of you. Everything feels dull and gray.

Staying focused for a full day of work is hard enough, but it can be impossibly overwhelming when you feel like your own brain is fighting against you. The fog of depression can sap your energy and creative thinking, while anxiety and post-traumatic stress can impede concentration. For people with mental health issues, popular productivity hacks don’t work. “We all have an emotional cup,” says Robyn Gold, a psychotherapist based in New York City. “When your brain becomes chemically imbalanced, your cup gets overloaded much more quickly and makes it difficult for you to complete daily tasks with efficacy.”

Of course, for many people with depression or anxiety, it’s still possible to be productive at work — particularly if you understand how your mental health is influencing the way you work, and can reconsider the usual advice on how to get things done.

Think small

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Jenny J. Chen
Elemental

Writer. Words in The Atlantic, NYTimes.com, Washington Post, NPR, Smithsonian, Pacific Standard, etc.