It's the first time in my adult life that I won't have an income. I don't own an apartment and so I'm selling most of the stuff that I don't plan to take with me.
And I'm terrified. I have savings to finance that style of life, but I'm afraid that I'm doing a big mistake and a financial suicide. I'm afraid that it will set me back financially. I'm afraid that I won't be able to eventually return to the same lifestyle I have now.
I can't stay at my current job, nor look for any other job. I have severe burnout, and for a long time I wanted to focus more on myself and my hobbies, so I feel that this decision is the only one I have. I realize, rationally, that I can always stop the experience, come back, and find yet another job in tech. But my monkey brain is detached from it's rational part. And so I experience a lot of stress and anxiety. Especially when the apartment is becoming emptier, and this brings me closer to the realization that this is real, and is going to happen soon.
How do I cope with that feeling?
One thing we have to realize is that the anxiety is not going anywhere. You are trading one form of anxiety for another. But that doesn't mean anxiety is a signal of some sort.
If you don't quit, it's the anxiety of not taking action which you know is good for you. If you do quit, it's the anxiety of things not working out per plan.
I would also look closer into some of your "givens":
>"the same lifestyle I have now" - How do you define lifestyle? Money is one factor. Time, Energy, Identity are equally important, but often forgotten.
What you are attempting to do is by no means easy. But it's doable. It helps to have some frameworks in mind. I collected some over the years. You might find them useful: https://www.leadingsapiens.com/essential-career-change-frame...
To a lesser extent, so have serious road trips.
And quitting jobs.
Now I realize that that sense of being lost is part of how learning and growing feels for me as an adult. I think that's because my comfort zones get deeper as I age and my awareness of the vastness of the accessible unknown increases.
I deal with it through experience. I've moved several times and made multiple road trips. The existential dreads are familiar as is the experience of their dissipation once the adventure is underway.
Of course that's just what works on my machine.
Good luck.
Think of this as a sabbatical instead. It's unpaid, but your choice, and the pay from previous years is paying for it.
If you want to recover from burnout, I'd suggest that you don't add the pressure of starting side projects. Just enjoy some time off doing non-programming things. Maybe try setting a commitment of 1/2 year of no programming or side projects.
I felt terrified. I was/am quite an introvert and very shy. And my plan was to go backpacking by myself. A lot of my friends and colleagues thought I would be back within a week or so.
At times it was hard - but most of the time it was great and if you’re staying in hostels and you’re on one of the common routes then you are very rarely lonely.
There are some amazing places out there and it doesn’t have to cost a fortune to visit them.
Something that I've found really helpful to remember is that human beings as an organism are made to withstand stressful periods. Observe how your body and thoughts react to the stress. Don't try to get rid of the anxiety: Acknowledge it. Planning can help as others have mentioned, but be careful not to fall into the trap of trying to plan for any eventuality: You'll be so busy planning that you won't get to heal from your burnout.
Accept the anxiety and stress and find out what activities ground you/calm you down. I recommend doing this before leaving if possible. The big thing is to learn to trust yourself and accept that the anxiety exists because you worry for your future - however, you're doing this for your future: If you continue on being burnt out it's worse for you in the long run. Your anxiety and stress is trying to protect you.
I wasn't able to just stop working, but I walked away from a 'good' job and worked retail for a while. Having the time to focus on myself, who I am, what I value, and why I wasn't happy before have put me in a much better place going forward. So that's where my advice is coming from - grains of salt etc.
If that doesn’t work get a therapist.
Source: personal experience
Just a comment on burnout. I'd say - burnout is a fact of life. In many professions, over 50% of people in them report as "burned out". We in IT can just quit and have fun for a couple of years, whereas people in less-paid professions can't and just have to trudge along, in spite of their burnout. Which indicates that it' wasn't as bad as one may think.
Make it based on the amount of runway you want to spend exploring this sabbatical and what you want to accomplish with your time while you're off.
E.G. a list of things to see, experience, and hobbies to pursue (possibly with specific goals/outputs, but then again I don't want that to stress you out).