The Journal

What Recovery from Burnout Actually Looks Like

Dr. Georgios Kallivretakis

  • April 5, 2026

Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

The honest timeline nobody in dentistry talks about.

Recovery from burnout does not happen in a weekend workshop.

I say this not to discourage you, but because false timelines are one of the most damaging things in the burnout conversation. If you expect to feel better in a fortnight and it takes two years, you will interpret your slow progress as personal failure. And that interpretation will make everything harder.

Here is what the research says, and what my own experience confirms:

Month 1–3: Crisis and Recognition

Something breaks. A 3am wake-up that will not stop. A patient interaction that strips you bare. Or the quiet, terrifying realization that you feel nothing.

Your HPA axis is dysregulated. Cortisol inverted. Your nervous system is locked in hypervigilance. Sleep is fractured. Motivation is absent. The things that once interested you outside work offer no relief.

This is not a mindset problem. This is biology. And the first phase of recovery is not about fixing it — it is about recognizing it. Stopping the interpretation of these symptoms as weakness and beginning to understand them as information.


“You are not weak. You are a system that has been running beyond capacity for longer than you acknowledged.”


This is also the phase where most dentists keep going. Because stopping feels impossible — financially, professionally, personally. The practice does not pause because you are unwell. So you manage. You get through the sessions. You perform.

If this is where you are: the most important thing you can do is get honest with at least one person about what is actually happening. Not a performance of wellness. The truth.

Month 3–6: Rebuilding and Recalibration

If you have created some space — reduced sessions, taken proper leave, changed something structural — your body begins slowly to rebalance.

Windows of genuine calm start appearing. Moments where the dread is absent. Days where you remember what it felt like to be interested in something.

The question shifts. Not ‘what is wrong with me?’ but ‘what do I actually want?’

This is where most people make the mistake of rushing. You feel slightly better and interpret that as recovered. You return to the same pace, the same structures, the same demands. And within weeks, you are back where you were — often worse, because the setback is demoralizing.

You are a post-operative patient at this stage. You do not sprint out of recovery.

Month 6–12 and Beyond: Integration and New Identity

The energy that returns is not the old adrenaline. It is quieter. More sustainable. It belongs to you rather than to the performance of being a dentist.

You may still be in practice. You may have changed your model significantly. You may have made decisions that once felt impossible — reduced sessions, a different role, a parallel path. Whatever the external changes, there is an internal shift that marks genuine recovery.

You are no longer running from something. You are building toward something.


“Recovery is not the absence of difficulty. It is the presence of honest choice.”


The Honest Numbers

The research puts median full recovery from clinical burnout at two to three years. The evidence is consistent across professions: no one recovers by pushing harder.

I know this timeline because I lived every phase of it. My own process took closer to three years — and it included a move across the world, a complete restructuring of my practice model, and the slow, uncomfortable work of understanding who I was when I was not performing the role of dentist.

It was worth every month of it.

If you are at the beginning of this — wherever the beginning is for you — I want you to know that the timeline is long and the path is real. One is not a failure. The other is not a fantasy. What matters is that you have started.

-Dr. Georgios Kallivretakis

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