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Ivan Danilov
Ivan Danilov

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How I Prepare for Fall Burnout Season (as a Dev Who Barely Sees Sunlight)

Every September I go through the same cycle: energy crashes, I get sick right when a sprint deadline hits, and I spend October wondering why I feel like garbage. Turns out it's not just "back to school energy" or coincidence — there's actual physiology behind it, and as developers we're honestly more exposed to it than most people.

Here's the thing nobody tells you: if your job is 8+ hours indoors under artificial light, staring at a monitor, you're already starting fall at a disadvantage compared to people with outdoor jobs. Less incidental sunlight, less movement, more stress, worse sleep from blue light — and then the season itself piles on top of that.

So here's what I actually looked into after one too many "why am I sick during code freeze" moments.

The Core Problem: Everything Drops at Once

Summer masks a lot of deficiencies. More sunlight = more vitamin D synthesized in your skin. More daylight hours = your circadian rhythm mostly regulates itself. More fresh produce in season = easier to eat well without trying.

Once fall hits, all three of those props get pulled out simultaneously:

Sun exposure drops → vitamin D synthesis drops
Shorter days → melatonin/serotonin regulation gets thrown off → sleep quality tanks
Cold/flu season ramps up right as your diet gets less varied

If you already work indoors year-round, you're not starting from the same baseline as someone who's outside all summer. Worth factoring in.

Vitamin D — This Is the One to Actually Track

This is the big one for anyone in a desk job. Most devs are already borderline deficient by the end of summer just from working indoors — the shift to fall just makes it worse. Deficiency is sneaky because it builds slowly; you don't feel a sudden drop, you just feel gradually worse and blame it on "the sprint."

If you can get a blood test (25(OH)D) before it gets cold, do it — it removes the guesswork. If not, starting supplementation in September beats waiting until you're already fatigue-stacked in December.

B Vitamins — For When Coffee Stops Working

If your fix for afternoon energy crashes is "more caffeine," it might be worth checking B1, B6, and B12 levels instead — they're directly involved in how your cells actually produce energy, and caffeine just masks the deficit rather than fixing it. Chronic fatigue that shows up every fall, every year, is a signal to get B12 and ferritin checked rather than just increasing your caffeine intake.

Magnesium — For the "Tired But Wired" Feeling

Sound familiar: exhausted all day, then can't fall asleep once you're actually in bed staring at the ceiling replaying a bug you couldn't fix? Magnesium plays a role in nervous system regulation, and low levels are a commonly overlooked contributor to that specific "tired but wired" pattern — which gets worse in fall as daylight (and the sleep cues that come with it) shrinks.

Zinc — Actually Relevant for Cold Season

Directly involved in immune function, and worth having in check before conference season / release crunch / cold season all overlap, which for a lot of us happens right around the same few weeks in fall.

Omega-3 — The One Everyone Skips

If your diet is mostly meal-prepped or delivery, there's a decent chance you're not hitting fatty fish twice a week. Omega-3s are linked to mood and cognitive function, not just heart health — relevant if you've ever noticed your focus getting noticeably worse in the darker months.

The Actual Mistake: Timing

The biggest mistake isn't which vitamins you take — it's when. Most people (myself included, historically) start "taking vitamins for immunity" right after they get sick, which is basically too late to matter. Your body needs weeks to correct an actual deficiency, not days. If you wait until you're sick during a release week to start caring about this, you've already lost.

What I'm Actually Doing Differently This Year

Getting vitamin D and B12 tested before it gets cold, instead of guessing
Setting a recurring calendar block to actually go outside during the day — even 15 minutes helps more than people think
Starting vitamin D supplementation in September, not waiting for the "I feel awful" trigger
Not treating any of this as a replacement for actual sleep and stepping away from the screen — it just fills specific gaps, it's not a fix for burnout on its own

Fall exhaustion isn't mandatory. But like most things in this field, it's way easier to prevent than to debug after the fact.

Not medical advice — just what I looked into and found useful. If you have existing health conditions or take medications, talk to an actual doctor before changing your supplement routine.

Top comments (1)

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hayrullahkar profile image
Hayrullah Kar

The "test before you supplement" framing is the part most people skip, good call. One thing I'd add — D pills fix the deficiency but not the circadian mess, morning light does. Even 10 min outside before you open the laptop resets the whole day for me.