Definition
Burn Lag
noun · time & energy / psychological
Burn Lag describes the delayed arrival of burnout symptoms after the conditions that caused them have already passed.
The term is formed from temporal lag applied to exhaustion. The nervous system continues functioning under load, then collapses only once safety or pause appears.
Burn Lag explains why people often feel worse after stopping, succeeding, or escaping pressure, rather than during the peak of demand.
This delay commonly follows periods of Functional Exhaustion or prolonged Emotional Overdraft, where recovery was repeatedly postponed.
Rating on the term
An individual rates high on Burn Lag when:
- collapse occurs after relief rather than during strain
- symptoms feel out of proportion to the present moment
- rest initially worsens experience
Lower expression appears when recovery is interleaved rather than deferred.
Examples in use
“Burn Lag hit once the deadline passed.”
“He couldn’t understand why stopping made him worse. Burn Lag explained it.”
“The relief arrived first. Burn Lag followed.”
The danger ended. The body caught up.
Variants
burn-lagged (adjective)
burn lag effect (noun phrase)
Classification
Domain: Time & Energy
Archive: Departmental Linguistics – Qrious Vernacular
Defined by The Department of Qrious Threads.
