Burning Out while Abroad

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Burnout. Why is it so hard to admit to others and to yourself that youโ€™re experiencing burnout? I guess itโ€™s because we have been raised to pretend that things just come naturally to us. โ€œOh, my A on last weekโ€™s exam? I totally didnโ€™t even study for it!โ€ โ€œYeah, I got the summer internship, but itโ€™s whatever, I didnโ€™t even apply until the night before.โ€ For a lot of people in my generation, we struggle and work hard for every opportunity, but we present the faรงade that success comes effortlessly to us. We must never, ever show the actual amount of sweat, blood, and tears that we poured into the end result. Because what if you care so much and work so hardโ€ฆbut still fail? Clearly, then, itโ€™s an innate problem with YOU. So itโ€™s better to pretend that you didnโ€™t even try. That way, if you fail, then itโ€™s fine because you never cared anyway; but if you succeed, then itโ€™s just another thing youโ€™re naturally gifted at, how great.

My home university in America has a reputation of everyone humble-bragging their successesโ€”internships at Microsoft, independent research with professors, executive positions in student governmentโ€”without admitting the physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion that comes with the constant pressure to succeed. The competitive undercurrent among students doesnโ€™t let them admit to each other that theyโ€™re experiencing burnout. Because if youโ€™re burning out then that means youโ€™re weaker and dumber than the rest who are so clearly succeeding effortlessly. And if you’re struggling, then do you even belong here?

Iโ€™m not going to pretend that Iโ€™ve never humble-bragged or downplayed my hard work. Iโ€™m definitely as guilty as the rest. But this is the chance for me to admit that studying abroad in New Zealand hasnโ€™t been one zany adventure after another; the image of me off doing amazing things and getting amazing grades and having amazing friends and going on amazing adventures is a half-truth. I have the chance to be honest about the newfound insomnia and stress, the falling grades, the frustration that comes with adapting to a new university and new professors. And if I admit the real truth about burnout today, then maybe a future study abroad student will feel less alone or guilty about burnout.

So what finally brought forth this admission of truth? My Genetics mid-course test. Now, if you havenโ€™t been reading my posts from week 1, a quick summaryโ€”I got an A- on my pre-requisite test, have been averaging B to As on the semesterโ€™s assignments, and made attending the weekly labs a priority over CVOC. I thought my strategy for studying was going to be fineโ€”I took 5 days off from CVOC to revise, I printed off all the lecture notes and wrote them out, I completed the mock quizzes the professor put online, etc. I buckled down and prepared and studied my hardest for Geneticโ€™s mid-course lecture and lab tests on May 22. On the day of the tests, I woke up at 7 am and revised until the exam at 6 pm. In the test room, the professor said that the first 30 minutes was going to be the lab test (9 result interpretation questions) and the remaining 1.5 hours was the lecture test (3 work problems with subquestions). As I was working through the tests, my brain justโ€”stopped. Everything was just processing slower, a headache developed, my mood dropped. And I realizedโ€ฆ I was going to fail.  And I did. Both tests, I failed. I got a 42 on my lab test and a 57 on my lecture test.

Now, it might be because I stretched myself too thinly this semester. It might be because I straight-up didnโ€™t understand anything on the exam. It might be because having two tests on the same day was too overwhelming. It might be because not knowing the test formats was too off-putting. Honestly, probably a combination of all of these factors resulted in those grades. But it doesnโ€™t change the fact that I had been performing alright throughout the semester while working at CVOC, so why did I perform so badly on these two exams after I specifically set aside the days to prepare? My conclusion: burnout.

I had been denying how tough itโ€™s been to juggle school and CVOC work, both to my supervisors/professors and myself. I waved away suggestions that interactions with victims would emotionally burden me in any way. I ignored the physical toll that the semester has had on meโ€”insomnia, loss of appetite, lack of concentration. But burnout doesnโ€™t always happen immediately in one major destructive instance. It doesnโ€™t have to be as obvious as a mental breakdown with crying and screaming. Burnout results from a build-up of stress and can simply look like more and more frequent headaches; more and more bouts of irritability; more and more periods of apathy.

When I was still young and fresh my second day on the job all those long weeks ago

What can you do? You can admit that youโ€™re burnt out. Once youโ€™re no longer in denial, you can speak to your professors and supervisors to see how you can solve this together. You can work through the periods of irritability and apathy by changing your environment or doing something creative and unrelated to work. Studying abroad can be as, if not more, stressful as attending your home university. Believe me, I know how strange and guilty it feels to admit that youโ€™re not having the best moment of your life every single second abroad. Not everyone gets the privilege to study abroad, and here you are, complaining about how much harder it is than what you thought it would be. And yes, you have had the promised whimsical adventures, but itโ€™s still okay to admit that itโ€™s not all fun and games. Living in a new country will always have unforeseen stresses and obstacles. Therefore, be prepared to work hard, and address any feelings of homesickness or burnout before itโ€™s too late.

So what is my battle plan now? Well, finishing CVOC duties as soon as possible in order to focus solely on my exams in the upcoming weeks. Being honest about my availability to work. Saying yes to an activity as completely random as โ€œPainting with Bob Rossโ€ to turn my brain off for a while. And acing my final Genetics exam in a few weeksโ€™ time, of course. Wish me luck!

What I’ve learned:

  1. It’s okay to admit the challenges of studying abroad.
  2. I am not good at following Bob Ross’ painting instructions

What I need to learn:

  1. All Genetics’ course material for the upcoming final in three weeks
  2. How to seek help from professors
Free canvas and paints? Sign me up!
Until the very last package is made
Lia Quach

<i>Hello in your host country language</i>: Hello; Kia Ora <i> University</i>: Vanderbilt University <i>Expected graduation year</i>: 2019 <i>Destination</i>: Christchurch, New Zealand <i>Program Provider</i>: IFSA-Butler <i>Major / Minor</i>: Anthropology / Islamic Studies, Arabic, Biology <i>Demographic background</i>: First-generation, Asian-American <i>Future career aspirations</i>: Foreign Service Officer <i>Top 3 goals for study abroad</i>: To gain work experience at my internship; To be more active and experience New Zealand's beautiful landscapes; To make life-long memories.