I'm a programmer, like many of you. I'm 31 years old, working as team lead where I luckily still get to do lots of coding.<p>On days where I do well at my job I feel good, optimistic and motivated in my life, including non-work related activities.<p>Unfortunately the same is true when I don't have a productive day. It makes me feel depressed, worthless, unable to plan ahead and unable to look at the positives in life.<p>How do I learn to separate the two? I think I have a good work-life balance, but work seems to disproportionately affect my mood. On a day where I can't solve a bug or my progress is slowed down due to some distraction, I feel like shit and I can't seem to shake it off.
Sounds corny but this book has a lot of practical advice on how to process emotions and build healthy habits. It’s written by a psychologist and it’s a lot of CBT with explanations of the stoic origins of the current recommended CBT practices. Helped me out.<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/How-Think-Like-Roman-Emperor/dp/1250196620" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.amazon.com/How-Think-Like-Roman-Emperor/dp/12501...</a>
You seem to be defining your self-worth as your performance at work. At work you are simply a replaceable employee, whether you do well or not is defined by a bunch of managers and higher ups at your job. Why are you letting them define your self-worth? I'm pretty sure you are worth way more than that. Define your self-worth yourself don't let others decide, there is more to life than work.
Meditation and/or exercise. It's very human to ruminate over a negative experience. Both meditation and exercise can help refocus your mind on more important things.