The trend for ‘quiet’ and ‘soft’ quitting is a symptom of our deteriorating relationship with work
- Written by John-Paul Byrne, Lecturer, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences

How do you feel about your work? Do its daily demands leave you burned out[1] and drained of energy?
Do you find yourself reducing how much effort you make to engage in some “quiet” or “soft” quitting[2]? Or maybe you dream of taking a more decisive step and joining the “great resignation”[3].
The prevalence – and popularity – of these responses suggests that there has been quite a change in many people’s attitude to the way they earn a living. Some think that this change stems from a post-COVID evaluation of work-life balance. Others say it’s an individual form of industrial action[4].
However, these explanations keep the spotlight firmly on workers rather than the work itself. Perhaps the truth lies in a fundamental deterioriation[5] in people’s relationship with their work and maybe the work needs to shoulder some of the responsibility.
Income and contract security can help here, although people working in insecure jobs often have little power when it comes to persuading their employers to make the necessary changes.
But addressing the deteriorating relationship between employees and their work means confronting certain core conditions. Reflecting on the psychosocial elements of employment can help to identify the gap between expectation and actual experience.
Before experiencing burnout or resorting to quitting (in any of its forms), this approach encourages employees and employers to reflect on two key questions. How does work make you feel? And what are the things that cause those feelings?
Research on psychosocial work environments provides some guidance. It suggests that workers are more likely to thrive when they have autonomy that feels like control rather than abandonment, and flexibility and clarity that allows for a good work-life balance. They also need security that offers certainty in the present – and confidence in the future.
References
- ^ burned out (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
- ^ quitting (www.forbes.com)
- ^ “great resignation” (www.bbc.com)
- ^ industrial action (theconversation.com)
- ^ a fundamental deterioriation (medium.com)
- ^ Sign up to our daily newsletter (theconversation.com)
- ^ yet important (doi.org)
- ^ “psychosocial work environment” (doi.org)
- ^ “precarity” (www.sciencedirect.com)
- ^ feel about their work (doi.org)
- ^ feeling overwhelmed (doi.org)
- ^ be detrimental (doi.org)
- ^ individual responsibility (doi.org)
- ^ overwhelming hours (journals.sagepub.com)
- ^ constantly on the clock (doi.org)
- ^ Boundary management (www.cambridge.org)
- ^ hybrid working (theconversation.com)
- ^ boundaries (doi.org)
- ^ blurred and unpredictable (link.springer.com)
- ^ rather than exploitative (www.cambridge.org)
- ^ “precarity” (journals.sagepub.com)
- ^ a harmful state (doi.org)
- ^ job insecurity (arnekalleberg.web.unc.edu)
- ^ uncertainty and insecurity (psycnet.apa.org)
- ^ stress and anxiety (www.taylorfrancis.com)
- ^ Aleutie/Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)