
Pageturn: The Pophet by Khalil Gibran: Why Your Job Feels Like a Situationship
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We often think burnout comes from too much work.
But what if it comes from the wrong kind of work?
Or worse — from doing the right work with the wrong intent?
I found this one line in The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran:
“Work is love made visible.”
It doesn’t preach. It just quietly exposes the gap between what we do and why we do it.
Most of us are efficient, consistent, even high-performing.
But rarely are we present. Rarely do we bring love — not the fluffy kind, but the kind that shows up in attention, effort, and care.
This episode isn’t about passion or purpose.
It’s about what happens when work becomes disconnected from meaning —
and how that silent disconnection builds up as fatigue, doubt, and emotional debt.
If Mondays feel heavier, if the calendar looks full but the heart feels flat —
this might be worth a listen.
Not to find answers, but to ask better questions about the thing we spend most of our life doing.