HYDERABAD: Yesterday, (that’s why I thought I must write about this today), a couple in their 50s walked into my OPD. The complaint? “My wife has no interest in housework, she sleeps all day, she’s tired and depressed, she’s fully secure and is a homemaker, she has two wonderful sons. What can she be depressed about? I think she has become too lazy,” said the husband.
“Who helps with the housework,” I asked. “No one, she is a homemaker. She has no job to worry about, so why does she need help?” “How about encouragement and appreciation?” I asked. “We are all working and come home tired. There’s no time for all that,” he said.
So, this is how it is. We believe that burnout happens only to those who are in high-stress and high-profile jobs, but can a homemaker burnout too? Excessive work, caregiving duties and lack of monetary, psychological and emotional resources may lead to burnout. The invisible work that people take for granted, the ambiguity of day-to-day routines -- all these can be major triggers. Lack of help, support, social ideologies of the ‘Griha Lakshmi’ and lack of appreciation are also major factors.
So, if you have always thought that burnouts happen to only working people, isn’t it time to think again? Depression, disenchantment, tiredness, inability to stay focused on family, withdrawal from daily activities, fatigue, mind block, emotional outbursts, anger management issues, insomnia and the inability to enjoy the activities they previously enjoyed are all too familiar signs of a burnout.
Burnout in homemakers can happen at any age.
What can one do? My advice to my fellow women:
And, to the rest of the world:
(The author is a consultant psychiatrist at Dhrithi Wellness Clinic, Hyderabad)