She left him last month. Not because she had stopped loving him. She told him, through tears, that she was leaving because for seven years she had been married to his calendar, not to him. He had missed their anniversary three times in a row. He had been on calls during the birth of their son. He had not taken a single uninterrupted holiday. He had promised, a hundred times, that things would slow down after the next deal, the next quarter, the next round of funding. They never slowed down. And now she was taking their son to her mother's house, and he was standing in an empty flat at 11 PM wondering, for the first time in his adult life, whether everything he had built was worth what it had cost.
If you recognise any part of this — whether you are the one on the calls or the one watching your partner disappear into them — this article is for you. At Bharosa, we want to say clearly that workaholism is not ambition. It is not a drive. It is not being committed. It is a recognised behavioural addiction with measurable clinical consequences, and it almost always destroys the relationships before it destroys the career. By the time the career finally pays the price, the marriage is usually already gone.
Workaholism was first described in the 1970s and has since been the subject of extensive clinical research. The World Health Organization, in the eleventh revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11), formally classifies burn-out as an occupational phenomenon and recognises behavioural addictions including gambling and gaming disorder. While workaholism is not yet a standalone diagnosis in the ICD-11, the clinical pattern is well documented and shares all the hallmarks of addiction — compulsive engagement, loss of control, withdrawal symptoms when the behaviour stops, and continued engagement despite mounting negative consequences.
The American Psychological Association, the leading body of psychologists in the United States, defines workaholism as an uncontrollable need to work incessantly, distinguished from healthy hard work by the presence of compulsion, guilt, and inability to stop even when the work is not required. The Harvard Business Review, one of the most respected publications on management and workplace psychology, has published extensive research on workaholism and consistently concludes that it is associated with elevated rates of depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, cardiovascular disease, marital discord, and family dysfunction. The brain reward circuits involved in work addiction are the same circuits involved in substance addictions — which is why pep talks and good intentions rarely fix it.
The answer is uncomfortable but important. Workaholism produces short-term external rewards — promotions, praise, financial success, social status — long before it produces external costs. The career appears to thrive for years while the marriage is quietly dying. Spouses and children absorb the invisible cost first, because they are the ones in the room when the workaholic is not. They are the ones eating dinner alone. They are the ones cancelling plans. They are the ones learning to expect nothing. By the time the workaholic's body or mind finally breaks — usually in the form of burnout, depression, anxiety, or a physical health crisis — the marriage has often already emptied out. The spouse is not angry any more. The spouse has stopped expecting anything, which is a much quieter and much more final form of loss.
Workaholism also damages the relationship with children in specific, measurable ways. Children of workaholic parents often describe feeling that love had to be earned through achievement, that their own emotional needs were a burden, and that the parent was physically present but never quite available. Many grow up to become either high achievers with their own anxiety and identity issues, or rebels who reject achievement entirely. Neither outcome is what the parent wanted.
Hard work is not workaholism. Passion for one's career is not workaholism. Building a business, reaching for a goal, even working very long hours during a specific intense period is not workaholism. The difference is compulsion. A committed professional can take a day off without spiralling into anxiety. A workaholic cannot. A committed professional can attend their child's school event without checking email five times. A workaholic cannot. A committed professional experiences fulfillment from work. A workaholic experiences relief — and only temporarily, before the next urge to work returns. If you feel guilty when you are not working, if you cannot enjoy a holiday without secretly checking in, if your partner has started asking you to put the phone down more than once a week, and if you have begun to hide how much you are working from the people you love — you are not committed. You are compulsive.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat workaholism as the clinical condition it is. We assess for underlying anxiety, depression, childhood patterns of achievement-based love, and obsessive-compulsive traits. We use evidence-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) to help the patient identify and interrupt the compulsive work patterns, rebuild a relationship with rest, and develop sources of self-worth that do not depend on external output. Where the marriage has been affected, we offer couples therapy to help both partners rebuild the connection that has been eroded over years. Where anxiety or depression has set in, we treat those directly.
Patients are usually surprised by how hard rest feels at first — the anxiety of not being productive, the guilt of enjoying a meal, the restlessness of a weekend without a plan. These are the withdrawal symptoms of a real addiction, and they fade with treatment. What replaces them, over weeks and months, is a different kind of success — the kind that can still walk into your own living room at 7 PM and be fully present to the people who waited for you.
Q: Is workaholism really an addiction?
A: Clinically, yes. It shares the core features of behavioural addictions.
Q: Can I recover without leaving my job?
A: Usually yes. Treatment focuses on the pattern, not the profession.
Q: Will my spouse be included in treatment?
A: If both partners agree, couples therapy is highly effective.
Q: Do I need medication?
A: Sometimes, when anxiety or depression is also present.
Q: Does Bharosa treat workaholism in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Confidential care for work addiction is available at our LB Nagar facility.
If your marriage is quietly dying while your career is loudly winning, the bill is already due. Speak to Bharosa in Hyderabad. Call +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.