Episode story
Panel 1: The office after midnight
The office was dark except for one laptop, one desk lamp, and one tower of coffee cups that had clearly lost the battle.
Hana Resources walked in holding her clipboard.
The screen blinked. A new message appeared. Then another. Then five more.
A translucent blue figure floated above the keyboard.
“Just one more reply,” whispered Burnout Ghost.
Panel 2: The chat channel wakes up
The channel had no official emergency. No client disaster. No payroll run. No benefits deadline.
But someone had asked a question after dinner. Someone else had answered. A manager had added “quick thought.” Then a second manager had written “not urgent,” which somehow made everyone feel urgent.
Burnout Ghost drifted through the message bubbles.
“If I do not answer now,” the ghost said, “tomorrow will be worse.”
Panel 3: Hana checks the pattern
Hana did not scold the ghost.
She checked the pattern.
Late messages. Weekend updates. Calendar blocks with no breaks. Employees apologizing before asking for time. Managers praising “responsiveness” without noticing that the same three people were always online.
Policy Goblin appeared behind a monitor and held up a sticky note that said nothing useful.
Hana gently lowered the note.
Panel 4: The boundary spell
Hana opened a clean page on her clipboard.
“We need norms,” she said. “Not vibes. Norms.”
She wrote: define true emergencies, use scheduled send, avoid performative late-night replies, protect focus time, watch workload concentration, and let employees disconnect without guilt.
Burnout Ghost looked at the list.
“Can a message wait until morning?” the ghost asked.
“Many messages can,” Hana said. “That is why morning exists.”
Panel 5: The channel goes quiet
The next message appeared at 12:03 a.m.
Hana hovered over the keyboard, then clicked scheduled send for 8:30 a.m.
The laptop dimmed. The notification bubbles faded. The office returned to the sound of air conditioning and one very tired ghost exhaling.
Burnout Ghost floated away from the desk.
“What do I do now?” the ghost asked.
Hana pointed to a glass of water, a closed notebook, and the exit.
The real HR lesson
Burnout is not only an individual resilience issue. It can also be a workload, communication, staffing, management, and expectation problem. HR can help by looking for patterns instead of treating every exhausted employee as a one-off situation.
Healthy workplace boundaries need visible habits. Leaders should model reasonable response times, clarify what is truly urgent, avoid rewarding constant availability, and make it safe for employees to raise workload concerns before the situation becomes a crisis.
Hana’s field notes
- Define urgency. Make clear what requires immediate action and what can wait until business hours.
- Watch the same names. If the same people are always online late, the team may have an allocation problem.
- Model the boundary. Managers set the real rule by what they do, not only what the handbook says.
- Use scheduled send. It keeps work moving without making everyone feel summoned at night.
- Document workload concerns. Patterns are easier to fix when they are visible, specific, and tied to work volume.
Final panel
The channel was quiet by 12:19 a.m.
Hana turned off the desk lamp.
Across the office, a stack of compliance folders began to tremble.
A figure stepped through the paper storm with a scroll in one hand and a stare sharp enough to organize an entire handbook.
Compliance Samurai had arrived.