IT Stress Relief

Gena Frangina

Welcome to the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast! Are you an overwhelmed IT professional? Join us for stress management tips tailored to your industry, advice on work-life balance, and personal growth insights! 🎤 What to Expect:   Stress Management: Explore stress relief techniques customized for the IT industry.   Work-Life Balance: Strategies for balancing work and personal life.   Personal Growth: Elevate your potential for satisfaction and success. 🎤 Featured Interviews: Expect captivating interviews with senior and accomplished IT specialists sharing their experiences, work successes, and tips for aspiring and junior IT professionals.  Plus, talks with well-being, nutrition, fitness, and biohacking experts.  Discover a holistic path to a healthier, more satisfying IT career. 🎧 Subscribe Now: Hit 'subscribe' for a stress-free, fulfilling IT career journey with your host Gena Frangina as your guide.  Join us at the tech-psychology-wellness intersection.Your stress relief starts here. Subscribe to the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast and embark on a transformative IT career journey!

  1. LLMDay London 2026: Navigating the Human Side of AI and Tech Burnout

    5d ago

    LLMDay London 2026: Navigating the Human Side of AI and Tech Burnout

    Ever feel like you’re running a race against an algorithm that never sleeps? While the industry focuses on the dazzling potential of large language models and autonomous agents, there is a quieter conversation happening about the toll this rapid shift takes on the humans behind the keyboard. This episode dives into the upcoming LLMDay London 2026, moving beyond the technical specs to address the nervous system pressure and cognitive overload many IT professionals are feeling right now. From the shift in operational realities to the fear of becoming outdated, it is time to look at how to stay valuable without burning out. Discover why judgment and critical thinking are becoming more vital than raw technical output and how to approach continuous learning with curiosity rather than panic. Key Takeaways AI shifts cognitive load rather than removing it, requiring professionals to move from manual creation to high-level validation and judgment. Nervous system stability and adaptability are becoming more valuable than the speed of raw technical output in a non-deterministic engineering world. Human skills like contextual understanding, ethical thinking, and emotional regulation remain critical even as AI systems improve. Sustainable growth in a fast-moving industry comes from regulated, steady learning rather than urgent, panic-driven consumption of new tools. The transition to production AI systems brings new challenges in reliability, security, and observability that require grounded, practical engineering solutions. Direct Quotes "Your nervous system responds to change long before your mind fully processes". "The future may reward people who can combine technical capability with nervous system stability and adaptability, not just speed". "AI doesn't remove cognitive load. It changes it". "Sustainable growth happens from regulation, not panic". "Technology will always move faster than human nervous systems". Link to event: https://llmday.com/2026-london-q2/?utm_source=luma https://luma.com/llmday-2026-london-q2 DM me here https://linktr.ee/genafrangina for a special 50% discount!

    12 min
  2. Redefining High Performance in IT for Sustainable Success

    May 22

    Redefining High Performance in IT for Sustainable Success

    It is easy to get caught up in the grind, assuming success means answering messages instantly and handling multiple things at once. But constantly pushing through pressure comes with a heavy internal cost. We are challenging the traditional idea of high performance today, moving away from speed, visible effort, and constant availability. While intensity works for tight deadlines, it is not sustainable as a long-term baseline. Constant activation leads to decision fatigue, mental noise, and slower recovery. Instead, true effectiveness stems from a regulated nervous system, clear decisions, and meaningful impact. Slowing down might feel uncomfortable at first, but it is exactly what allows for cleaner code and more strategic thinking. Let's shift away from relying on adrenaline and build a foundation of consistent energy and sustainable clarity. Key Takeaways High output often looks like constant activity, while effectiveness is about the quality and impact of what is produced. Relying on adrenaline to perform creates focus through urgency, but long-term use leads to exhaustion and reduced cognitive capacity. A constant state of activation causes increased reactivity and shallow thinking, whereas a regulated system deepens focus and clarifies decisions. Slowing down is frequently misinterpreted as falling behind, yet it is essential for better architecture decisions and fewer rework cycles. Sustainable performance is less about intensity and much more about stability, consistent energy, and clear priorities. Quotes "In the last episode, we explored overthinking and how clarity doesn't come from more analysis, but from a balance between thinking and signal." "Output is how much you produce. Effectiveness is the quality and impact of what you produce." "When your system is in a constant state of activation, you react faster. You scan for problems. You switch tasks quickly." "Sustainable performance comes from consistency. Not spikes." "Real high performance includes clarity, regulation, focus, recovery, not just output. Because performance isn't just about what you produce. It's about the state you produce it from." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    11 min
  3. Why Your IT Brain Won’t Stop Overthinking

    May 13

    Why Your IT Brain Won’t Stop Overthinking

    Sometimes the more you think, the less clear things actually become. In the world of IT, we are literally trained to anticipate every edge case and mitigate every risk, but there is a point where that analytical strength turns into a repetitive loop that keeps us stuck. This isn't an intelligence problem; it’s a signal problem. Real clarity doesn't come from having 100% of the data—because that data rarely exists—it comes from a regulated system that feels safe enough to choose. Discover the difference between cognitive logic and felt "signals," and why your overactive brain might actually be trying to protect you from uncertainty. Learn how to shift from the exhausting search for the perfect answer to making "good enough" decisions that allow you to move forward without the weight of constant second-guessing. KEY TAKEAWAYS Overthinking is often a signal that your nervous system doesn't feel safe with uncertainty rather than a lack of information. Thinking is cognitive and analytical, whereas signal is a felt sense of ease or hesitation that provides actual clarity. IT professionals are at a higher risk of overthinking because their environments train them to overestimate risk and anticipate constant failure. Clarity does not require 100% certainty; it requires a "good enough" signal and a regulated system to move forward. Trust is an experiential skill built by making decisions and adapting to outcomes, not a mindset you can simply switch on. QUOTES "Overthinking isn't a thinking problem. It's a signal problem." "Uncertainty is a nervous system experience, not a logical one." "Clarity doesn't come from perfect analysis. It comes from a regulated system making a good enough decision." "Overthinking gives a sense of control. It feels productive. It feels responsible. But often, it delays actions and increases stress." "The shift isn't think less. The shift is notice when thinking replaces signal." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    9 min
  4. May 4

    The Background Process Effect: Why You Can't Truly Unplug

    In this episode, Gina addresses the normalized culture of being "always available" within the tech industry. Gina discusses how constant notifications from platforms like Slack and Teams create micro-stress that negatively impacts your nervous system. The episode explores the "background process effect," illustrating how mentally anticipating work prevents true rest, even when you are officially off the clock.  KEY TAKEAWAYS The Cost of Constant Connection: The cultural expectation of constant availability in IT leads to a continuous stream of low-level stress. Nervous System Activation: Every notification you receive triggers a minor nervous system response and a moment of uncertainty, even if no action is required. The Background Process Effect: Mentally anticipating follow-ups, preparing responses, or scanning for issues keeps your brain partially engaged in work, making it impossible to fully rest. Availability vs. Effectiveness: Being constantly responsive fragments your focus. This habit ultimately reduces your overall effectiveness and sustainable performance. Intentional Disengagement: Reclaiming your time involves small, deliberate shifts, such as introducing minor delays before responding and distinguishing between urgent and non-urgent channels. BEST MOMENTS "Being always available doesn't just affect your schedule. It affects your nervous system." "Every notification creates a small moment of uncertainty. Is this important? Do I need to act? Am I responsible for this? Even if the answer is no, your system briefly activates." "Think of your mind like a system running background processes. Even when you're not actively working, you might be... anticipating follow-ups, mentally preparing responses, scanning for potential issues." "Being available is not the same as being effective. In fact, constant availability often reduces effectiveness because focus gets fragmented..." "The goal isn't to become unavailable. It's to become intentional about when and how you engage." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    9 min
  5. Apr 20

    The Nervous System Trap: Why Smart IT Pros Stay in Draining Jobs

    In this introspective episode, Gina explores a quiet but pervasive issue in the tech industry: why highly capable, self-aware professionals stay in roles that completely drain them. Moving past the assumption that staying is a logical choice, Gina explains how remaining in an exhausting environment is actually a nervous system response rooted in a desire for safety, predictability, and identity preservation. KEY TAKEAWAYS It’s Biology, Not Logic: Choosing to stay in a draining role is rarely a rational, paper-based decision; your nervous system is simply prioritizing predictability and perceived safety over the risks of the unknown. The Comfort of Familiar Stress: To our brains, a highly stressful but familiar environment often feels much safer than the uncertainty of a new job, new expectations, and new people. The High Performer's Burden: Top performers are more likely to stay in draining environments because their ability to cope and solve problems means they tolerate pressure longer, often turning "handling it" into "carrying it." The Sunk Cost and Identity Traps: Many IT professionals hesitate to leave because they have built their identity around being the reliable problem-solver, or because walking away feels like losing years of invested time and internal reputation. Awareness Over Action: You do not need to quit your job immediately to create change. Shifting your mindset from self-judgment to understanding drops anxiety and opens the door to smaller boundary shifts, like renegotiating workloads. BEST MOMENTS "Because staying is rarely a rational decision. It's a nervous system decision." "Familiar stress feels safer than unknown change. Even if your current role is stressful, it's predictable." "If you have built your identity around being reliable, being the one who handles complexity, being the person who delivers under pressure, then leaving or even stepping back can feel like losing part of who you are." "Because they are capable, they often think, 'I can handle this.' Until handling it becomes carrying it, and carrying it becomes exhausting." "The shift isn't 'I must leave'. The shift is 'I understand why I'm staying.' That removes self-judgment. And when judgment drops, clarity increases." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    12 min
  6. Identity and Sustained Performance

    Mar 30

    Identity and Sustained Performance

    In this final installment of her mini-series on crunch culture and burnout, Gena dives deep into the subtle force that keeps IT professionals tethered to overwork: Identity. We explore how being the reliable one or the fixer can transition from a badge of honour to a source of immense pressure, making recovery feel like losing a part of oneself. This episode challenges the hero mode mentality and offers a roadmap for evolving your professional identity toward intentional, sustainable excellence. KEY TAKEAWAYS Many IT professionals adopt an unspoken identity as the ‘problem solver’ or ‘fixer’, which can lead to a sense of guilt or loss when they try to slow down. Burnout rarely stems from a lack of capability; rather, it happens when high capability is met with unsustainable levels of responsibility. Recovery can feel unsettling because it triggers deep-seated fears of becoming less valuable or falling behind the industry curve. True value in tech leadership doesn’t come from constant availability, but from clarity, judgment, and the ability to see patterns under pressure. Sustainable performance is built on a regulated nervous system and clear boundaries, not on the adrenaline of ‘hero mode’. BEST MOMENTS "You’re not just someone who works in IT; you’re the reliable one." "Slowing down can feel like losing part of yourself, not just reducing workload." "Burnout rarely happens because someone lacks capability. It happens because someone has too much capability combined with too much responsibility." "Your value doesn't come from constant availability. It comes from clarity, judgment, and insight." "Hero mode is not sustainable leadership." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    11 min
  7. The Nervous System of ‘No. Why Boundaries Feel Like Danger

    Mar 18

    The Nervous System of ‘No. Why Boundaries Feel Like Danger

    Gena takes a look at the physiological and psychological barriers that prevent IT professionals from setting effective boundaries. Moving beyond surface-level ‘just say no’ advice, Gena explores why boundaries often trigger a survival response in the tech world, where being responsive is often equated with reliability and worth. She discusses the three hidden fears that lead to over commitment, how to reframe boundaries as ‘capacity signals’ rather than emotional outbursts, and why protecting your cognitive clarity is the ultimate move for long-term career sustainability and leadership. KEY TAKEAWAYS For many in IT, setting boundaries feels unsafe because the nervous system has been conditioned to equate safety with performance and constant approval. Weak boundaries are often rooted in the fear of irrelevance (falling behind), the fear of letting people down (becoming a bottleneck), and the fear of losing identity (losing the ‘fixer’ persona). Clear boundaries, like specifying off-line hours or re-prioritising tasks, are not aggressive; they are professional capacity signals that actually reduce stress for the entire team. Feeling guilty when setting a boundary doesn't mean you are doing something wrong; it means you are breaking an old pattern of self-sacrifice. You can retrain your nervous system by starting small, delaying a non-urgent response by 15 minutes or creating a defined shutdown ritual at the end of the day. BEST MOMENTS "Your nervous system doesn't respond to logic; it responds to perceived threat." "Boundaries are not emotional outbursts; they are capacity signals." "In high-stakes IT environments, [focus and creativity] matter more than constant availability." "Guilt doesn't mean you’re wrong; it often means you’re breaking a pattern." "Sustainability is what separates short-term performance from long-term leadership." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    11 min
  8. Why Your Time Off Isn't Fixing Your Burnout

    Mar 9

    Why Your Time Off Isn't Fixing Your Burnout

    Today, Gena explores the vital difference between escape and true recovery. While many high-achievers in tech rely on vacations or ‘over-correcting’ with strict discipline to combat burnout, these methods often fall short because they don't address a dysregulated nervous system. Gena explains why ‘survival performance’ fueled by adrenaline is unsustainable and offers a more effective path: micro-regulation. By introducing small, predictable signals of safety throughout the day, you can retrain your brain to shift from a constant state of threat to a baseline of steady, sustainable performance. KEY TAKEAWAYS Simply stepping away from work (vacations) is often insufficient if your nervous system remains braced for stress the entire time. Swinging from overwork to total withdrawal or imposing even stricter ‘productivity systems’ can actually increase tension rather than relieve it. Real recovery happens through repeated, small signals of safety, like a 60-second breathing break or a consistent end-of-day ritual. The nervous system relaxes when it knows what to expect. Establishing ‘islands of consistency’ in a chaotic workday is essential for down-regulation. Just like infrastructure maintenance, you shouldn't wait for a total system failure to fix yourself. Small, daily maintenance is more powerful than occasional, drastic resets. BEST MOMENTS "Recovery isn't the same as escape, and it's not the same as time off." "Discipline cannot override a dysregulated nervous system." "Recovery isn't about doing nothing; it's about reducing activation in layers." "Survival performance is fueled by adrenaline; sustainable performance is fueled by regulation." "You don't wait for total failure to check systems; you maintain continuously. Your nervous system works the same way." HOST BIO Gena Frangina, a seasoned software engineer with over a decade of industry experience, is your trusted host on the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast. Her unique background includes a profound passion for psychology, culminating in the attainment of a Business Psychology MSc. Gena's diverse skill set extends to accreditation as a Hypnotherapist, under the tutelage of Paul McKenna and his renowned team, as well as expertise in wellness coaching. This extensive blend of technical acumen and psychological insight positions Gena as an exceptional host in the IT world. She not only understands the intricacies of the field but also excels in guiding IT professionals towards holistic well-being. Tune in to Gena's podcast for enlightening interviews with IT specialists, and gain access to a wealth of knowledge. https://genafrangina.com/podcast/ https://www.facebook.com/gena.frangina IG: @gena.frangina

    9 min

About

Welcome to the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast! Are you an overwhelmed IT professional? Join us for stress management tips tailored to your industry, advice on work-life balance, and personal growth insights! 🎤 What to Expect:   Stress Management: Explore stress relief techniques customized for the IT industry.   Work-Life Balance: Strategies for balancing work and personal life.   Personal Growth: Elevate your potential for satisfaction and success. 🎤 Featured Interviews: Expect captivating interviews with senior and accomplished IT specialists sharing their experiences, work successes, and tips for aspiring and junior IT professionals.  Plus, talks with well-being, nutrition, fitness, and biohacking experts.  Discover a holistic path to a healthier, more satisfying IT career. 🎧 Subscribe Now: Hit 'subscribe' for a stress-free, fulfilling IT career journey with your host Gena Frangina as your guide.  Join us at the tech-psychology-wellness intersection.Your stress relief starts here. Subscribe to the "IT Stress Relief" Podcast and embark on a transformative IT career journey!