The signs are everywhere. Students feeling anxious before exams, professionals glued to screens late into the night, and even high performers quietly burning out.
But here’s the problem. We are calling all of it “stress”.
But it is not.
Stress and burnout are not the same thing, yet we treat them as one. Stress can push you to perform. Burnout, on the other hand, drains you to a point where even basic tasks feel overwhelming.
And right now, what many people are experiencing is not just stress, but burnout.
Stress today is not limited to one group. It cuts across classrooms, offices, and homes. What is changing is not just the amount of pressure people face, but how normalised it has become, and how deeply it is affecting both mind and body.
On the sidelines of a recent interaction at a mindfulness event in Delhi, one idea kept coming up again and again.
Stress is constant. Burnout is rising. And most people don’t realise the difference until it’s too late.
As Anuradha Joshi, Principal of Sardar Patel Vidyalaya, New Delhi, put it simply, “Every day in life is an exam.” But somewhere along the way, exams stopped being about learning and started becoming about proving.
WHEN LEARNING BECOMES PRESSURE
In schools and colleges, the shift is clear. Education is increasingly seen as an outcome rather than a process. In today’s high-stakes environment, studying often feels like a full-time job.
“An exam is just a test of your planning ability,” Joshi said. “But when you turn education from a process into a product, you’re driven by a certain image.”
That shift comes at a cost to students.
“When it is a product, then you have to have a yes and a no. But that product kills creativity, kills originality, and kills thinking,” she explained, speaking at ‘Mindfulness for All’, held at the India International Centre in New Delhi by Escapades for the Soul.
This is where stress begins. But when this pressure becomes constant, when there is no break from comparison, expectations, and fear, it slowly turns into burnout.
For students, that means not just anxiety before exams, but exhaustion, loss of motivation, and emotional fatigue that does not go away with rest.
In time, this burnout gets transferred from school, to college, to workplace. It just never seems to end.
HOW STRESS SHOWS UP IN THE BODY
One of the biggest myths is that stress is “just in the mind”.
But it is not.
According to Dr Sanjiv Saigal, President of LTSI and Vice Chairman and Head of Hepatology and Liver Transplant Medicine at Max Super Speciality Hospital, Saket, emotional strain directly impacts physical recovery.
“The moment psychological stress takes place, even if there’s a disease which is like malaria, the patient is completely shattered mentally, he will not recover well,” he said.
Stress triggers a chain reaction in the body. Hormones spike, sleep is disrupted, and healing slows down.
But burnout goes further. It keeps the body in a constant state of stress.
“Diagnosis leads to shock and denial. Then fear and uncertainty, and finally acceptance,” Dr Saigal explained.
That emotional cycle is natural. The problem begins when people get stuck in the earlier stages, constantly anxious, uncertain, and drained.
This affects not just patients, but also caregivers and doctors. Burnout, emotional fatigue, and moral stress are quietly becoming part of the system.
This shows that no matter what the industry is, burnout has turned into a constant companion.
THE SILENT BURNOUT IN WORKPLACES
If classrooms are intense, workplaces are often relentless.
Long hours, constant notifications, and the pressure to always be available have created what many now recognise as burnout culture.
“We are not just working anymore, we are actually always on,” said Pallavi Singh, Vice President (HR) at a leading foreign bank.
At first, this feels like stress. Deadlines, targets, long days. But when it becomes continuous, without recovery, it turns into burnout.
“I see professionals across every age group silently paying the price,” she said.
What makes this worse is that workplaces are designed to track output, not exhaustion.
“We have built very sophisticated systems to measure output, but we have not built a single system to measure what producing all of this output is quietly costing,” she said.
Burnout does not always look dramatic. It often looks like people continuing to work, just without energy, focus, or connection. It can even look like something to be emulated or admired.
“Success at the cost of the self is not success. It’s a very expensive way of failing slowly,” Singh said.
WHAT DISCIPLINE AND SPORTS CAN TEACH
One space where this difference between stress and burnout is understood better is sports.
Athletes train under pressure, but they also learn recovery, focus, and control.
“Mind is equally important in any sport,” said Master Narender S Rawat, Vice President and Chairman, Umpire Committee, Taekwondo Association of India.
“What martial art can teach you, you cannot learn in the school. That is life skills,” he said.
He shared how even strong performers can fail if the mind is not trained.
“I was better than my opponent in practice, but I still lost because I froze. Then I started working on my mind,” Rawat said.
His account showed a high-pressure moment – stress.
Burnout is when such a state becomes constant.
Sports teach something critical. You cannot perform without recovery.
“I was a very short-tempered person, but when you start training, you use that energy in the training,” he said.
“It’s easy to become a champion, but it’s very difficult to stay there. So I was not competing with my opponents. I was competing with myself,” he added.
That balance between effort and recovery is what most people are missing today.
If you don’t ever switch off and remain in stress mode, it turns into burnout.
THE POWER OF PAUSING
So what is the way out?
In today’s world you cannot remove stress completely. That is unrealistic.
So the answer lies in recognising burnout early and building the ability to pause.
For Debika Mitra, Co-founder of Escapades For The Soul and a certified mindfulness coach, that pause is mindfulness.
“When we are here, we keep thinking about 10 other things. Mindfulness is basically staying in the present moment,” she said.
Stress pulls you into the future. Burnout traps you in constant overwhelm.
Mindfulness brings you back to the present.
“If you realise that something you are doing is not what you wanted to say or do, you are actually an aware individual. It is just that that awareness needs to be worked upon,” she explained.
That awareness is what breaks the cycle.
Simple acts like noticing your breath, stepping away for a minute, or just observing your thoughts can interrupt the constant mental load.
“Mindfulness helps us to train our minds to be in the present moment. It improves focus, reduces reactivity, and builds resilience,” she said.
The practice of mindfulness is something so basic, that people of all ages can turn it into a routine habit that doesn’t need any extra effort. It can become a part of our lives.
WHY THIS MATTERS NOW
With a young population and rising ambition, the pressure to perform is only increasing.
But the bigger risk is not stress. It is burnout that goes unnoticed, unaddressed, and normalised.
The shift that needs to happen is simple, but not easy.
Stop treating all pressure as the same.
Understand when stress is pushing you, and when burnout is draining you.
Because the solution is not to keep going harder, but to know when to pause.
And more importantly, to actually do it.










