A government employee is not just a profession. It's a front line. A front line where every day is a battle with endless reports, contradictory instructions, dissatisfied citizens, and a bureaucratic machine that crushes under its weight. Stress is not an exception here, but the norm. The question is not whether it will be, but how to live with it and not burn out.
Stress for a government employee is multi-layered. The first layer is paper. Piles of documents that need to be processed yesterday. Burning deadlines. Laws that change faster than you can learn them. The second layer is human. Citizens who come with pain, resentment, aggression. They don't see a person in the official, they see a barrier. The third layer is intra-systemic. A boss who pressures, a colleague who shunts work, intrigues that drain energy. And all this at the same time, without the right to make a mistake.
Chronic stress is not psychology, it's biochemistry. Cortisol and adrenaline don't let you relax even at night. First comes insomnia, then headaches, then stomach problems. The heart beats faster, blood pressure spikes. Your hands tremble when you pick up another file. The body is saying: "I'm at my limit." And if you don't listen, it will find a way to stop itself — in the form of a heart attack or a panic attack. Therefore, resilience begins not with meditation, but with attention to your body.
It doesn't mean "not feeling." It means "feeling but not being destroyed." Be like a rock: you take the blow but don't crack. When a visitor shouts, you don't shout back, but wait for a pause and speak calmly. When the boss demands the impossible, you don't panic, but look for options. When everything goes off the plan, you don't break down, but adapt. This is a skill that can be trained like a muscle. But for this, a system is needed.
The most common sin of a government employee is to take work home. Mentally, in conversations, in correspondence. In the end, there is no zone of rest. Stress becomes background. To avoid this, you need a "switching off" ritual. As soon as you step through the door of your home, turn off your phone with work notifications. If you can't do it immediately, make a rule: "I don't discuss work after 20:00." Learn to tell yourself: "Now I'm not a government employee, I'm a father, mother, friend, a person." It sounds simple, but it requires strength. Especially when the habit has already settled in.
Stress is energy that doesn't find an outlet. It accumulates in muscles, in the neck, in the shoulders. Therefore, an official needs not only rest but also movement. A walk after work, the gym, running, yoga. It's not necessary to be an athlete. 20 minutes of activity is enough for the body to release cortisol. Some government employees develop a habit — "I'm angry, I'm going for a run." This is better than eating stress with buns or drinking tranquilizers.
In the moment of acute stress, the brain shuts down rational thinking. You can't think because the body is in a "fight or flight" state. To regain control, you need breathing. A simple exercise: inhale for 4 counts, hold for 2, exhale for 6. Repeat 3-5 times. This works faster than any words. It's like a system reboot. Many government employees I've worked with have admitted that this little exercise saved them from a breakdown in front of a boss or visitor.
A government employee often ends up alone with stress. It's not customary to talk about problems. But silence is the best friend of depression. You need to learn to talk. Not on the operational meeting, but in a safe environment. Tell a colleague you trust. Write in a diary. Go to a psychologist. Now there are psychologists in many departments. It's not a shame. It's a sign of maturity. A person who knows how to ask for help is stronger than one who pretends to be an unyielding robot.
Bureaucracy is absurd. It's a fact. Sometimes the only way to survive is to laugh at its absurdity. Not cynically, but lightly. "Today I signed 50 papers, and 49 of them no one will read." Such a joke doesn't devalue the work, but helps maintain distance. Humor is armor against burnout. It reminds you that you are a living person, not a cog in a machine.
Resilience of a government employee is not an innate quality. It's the ability to take care of yourself in conditions that don't take care of you. It's the ability to remain human when the system presses on humanism. It's the art of being effective without becoming a robot. And most importantly, it's the right to be weak. Because only by admitting that you are tired can you find the strength to go further.
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