He still goes to work every day. He still hits his deadlines, mostly. He still attends the meetings, mostly silent. He no longer puts in extra effort. He no longer cares about being noticed. He no longer hopes for the promotion he once dreamed of. His manager calls it disengagement. The internet calls it quiet quitting. He calls it survival. What none of them are calling it — and what it usually is — is depression with a polite face.
Quiet quitting became a viral term a few years ago and was widely discussed as a generational protest against hustle culture. Some of that framing is true. But at Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, we see a more complicated picture in our LB Nagar outpatient department. Many of the people who describe themselves as quiet quitters are not making a lifestyle choice. They are slowly slipping into clinical depression that nobody around them has named, and the workplace disengagement is the most visible symptom of a much deeper problem.
Most discussions of quiet quitting focus on the behavioural surface — doing the bare minimum, declining extra work, refusing to be available outside office hours, withdrawing emotionally from colleagues. From a clinical perspective, this same surface is one of the most reliable presentations of moderate depression in working adults. The American Psychological Association, the leading body of psychologists in the United States, identifies loss of interest, reduced motivation, social withdrawal, and emotional flatness as core symptoms of major depressive disorder. The behavioural picture of a quiet quitter often overlaps with this list almost completely.
The World Health Organization, in the eleventh revision of its International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11), formally recognises burn-out as an occupational phenomenon characterised by exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced professional efficacy. Untreated burn-out commonly progresses to clinical depression. The Harvard Business Review, one of the most respected publications in management research, has noted that what looks like a workplace trend on the surface is often a public health crisis underneath, and that managers who simply punish disengagement without asking what is causing it are usually accelerating the slide.
Healthy boundary-setting looks like leaving work at a reasonable hour, declining unreasonable demands, and protecting personal time without losing engagement during working hours. It is associated with stable mood, intact relationships, and continued investment in things that matter outside of work. Hidden depression looks like reduced output across the board, loss of interest in personal hobbies, social withdrawal, sleep disruption, appetite changes, and a flat, numb emotional baseline that does not lift even on weekends or holidays. The first is a recalibration. The second is an illness.
If you have noticed that your disengagement at work is mirrored by disengagement at home, that you feel flat rather than relaxed on Sundays, that activities you used to enjoy now feel pointless, that you are tired in a way that sleep does not fix, and that the future does not feel exciting anymore, you are likely looking at something more than a lifestyle choice. You are looking at a clinical condition that responds extremely well to treatment if it is identified early.
Depression in working adults rarely arrives as obvious sadness. It usually arrives as flatness — a slow draining of colour from things that used to feel meaningful. Because there is no dramatic crying, no obvious crisis, the person experiencing it often interprets the change as growing up, getting realistic, becoming wiser, or finally seeing the world clearly. The internal narrative becomes I just do not care anymore, and care less every week. By the time the person admits something is wrong, the depression has often been entrenched for months or years and recovery takes longer than it would have if treatment had begun earlier.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists assess each patient carefully. We do not assume the disengagement is laziness, weakness, or political. We assess for clinical depression, anxiety, burnout, sleep disturbance, and any underlying physical contributors. Where depression is identified, we treat it with evidence-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and where appropriate, medication. We do not pressure patients into quitting their jobs, demanding promotions, or making dramatic life changes. We treat the underlying illness first, and then the patient is in a much better position to decide what they actually want their next chapter to look like.
Patients who complete proper treatment often describe a return of colour to their lives that surprises them. The work becomes manageable again, sometimes meaningful again. The relationships at home improve. The sleep returns. The flatness lifts. Many realise, looking back, that they had been depressed for far longer than they admitted to themselves, and that the quiet quitting story they had been telling was a way of making the illness sound like a choice.
Q: Is quiet quitting always depression?
A: Not always, but it is more often than people think. A clinical assessment can tell.
Q: Will treatment make me overwork again?
A: No. Treatment restores your ability to engage. You decide how much.
Q: Should I tell my manager I am in treatment?
A: Not unless you choose to. Medical confidentiality is a legal obligation.
Q: Do I need medication?
A: Sometimes. A psychiatrist will assess severity and recommend accordingly.
Q: Does Bharosa treat workplace depression in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. We see working professionals regularly at our LB Nagar facility.
If you have stopped caring about work and stopped caring about most other things too, that is not a lifestyle choice. Speak to Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad on +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.