Direct Answer: Quiet quitting recovery involves identifying if your disengagement is due to burnout, lack of growth, or a toxic environment. Recovery steps include setting boundaries, having a “stay conversation” with your manager, or planning a strategic exit if the situation is unfixable.
The Truth About Quiet Quitting
In Singapore, “Quiet Quitting” is often a survival mechanism for over-worked mid-career professionals. It’s not about being lazy; it’s about being exhausted. But staying in a state of disengagement for too long can damage your professional confidence.
The Recovery Path
- Audit the Cause: Is it the work, the boss, or the pay? Or are you just Burned Out?
- Set Functional Boundaries: Instead of doing the bare minimum, do the *right* things exceptionally well during office hours, then log off.
- The “Stay Conversation”: Talk to your manager about your career path. Sometimes disengagement comes from a lack of “What’s Next?”
When to Actually Quit
If you’ve tried to re-engage and the environment remains toxic, quiet quitting is just delaying the inevitable. Start your 90-Day Recovery Plan and look for an exit.
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Further Reading for Your Career Path:
- The 90-Day Career Recovery Plan for Mid-Career Singaporeans
- How to Build a Sustainable Career Without Burning Out Again
Feeling stuck or ready for a change?
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