Occupational callings: A double-edged sword for burnout and stress

Authors

  • Antonio Francisco Menezes da Silva Filho Fucape Business School
  • Bruno Felix Fucape Business School
  • Emerson Wagner Mainardes Fucape Business School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22491/1678-4669.20210006

Keywords:

vocational guidance, professional development, labour, occupational stress

Abstract

We evaluate the bivalent relationship between perceiving a calling and burnout syndrome and occupational stress. We suggest that although callings are negatively associated with burnout and stress, they produce a positive effect on both, having the perception of paradoxical tensions as a mediator. For this purpose, we conducted a quantitative survey of 539 individuals. The results showed a direct effect, according to which the more individuals perceive an occupational calling, the smaller the symptoms of burnout and stress. We also found an opposite indirect effect: the more individuals perceive a calling, the greater the symptoms of burnout and stress caused by increased paradoxical tensions that are experienced by individuals. Our findings show the importance of problematizing the idea of occupational callings as a necessarily positive antecedent for career development.

Author Biographies

Antonio Francisco Menezes da Silva Filho, Fucape Business School

Mestre em contabilidade e Administração

Bruno Felix, Fucape Business School

Doutor em Administração de Empresas

Emerson Wagner Mainardes, Fucape Business School

Doutor em Administração

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Published

2024-11-13

How to Cite

da Silva Filho, A. F. M., Felix, B., & Mainardes, E. W. (2024). Occupational callings: A double-edged sword for burnout and stress. Estudos De Psicologia (Natal), 26(1), 45–55. https://doi.org/10.22491/1678-4669.20210006

Issue

Section

Social Psychology of Work