When Resting Feels Like Failure: Social Media, Entrepreneurship, and Burnout Among Young Egyptians
For many young Egyptians today, work no longer ends when the workday finishes. Productivity has expanded beyond offices, universities, and formal employment into nearly every aspect of daily life, reinforced by social media that deliver constant motivation, entrepreneurial advice, startup success narratives, productivity “hacks,” networking strategies, and self-improvement content. Platforms such as Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, and Facebook increasingly frame success as something visible, measurable, and continuous like an outcome of relentless effort and constant self-optimization. Rest, including weekends, can feel emotionally unstable, because it brings guilt, anxiety, and fear of “falling behind.” Many young people do not merely rest less; they rest with discomfort. The act of resting starts to carry a moral charge, with feelings of guilt, anxiety, and a fear of “falling behind.” Even when individuals understand intellectually that they deserve recovery, the digital ecosystem around them keeps suggesting that slowing down will result in failure. What people do changes, and so does how they see it: rest stops feeling “normal” and starts to feel like failure, as if one is not living up to their potential. This phenomenon is particularly significant in Egypt, where inflation and…
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المصدر: Egyptian Streets