The Meaning Gap: Why Yoga Reduces Stress but Not Burnout, and What Might Be Missing
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) March 25, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19217445 via OpenAlex
Summary
Yoga effectively reduces stress and anxiety but fails to reduce burnout severity. This article explains the paradox by arguing that modern Western yoga has lost meaning-making mechanisms present in traditional practice. Drawing on yoga history, the 4E cognition framework, and burnout as existential crisis, it identifies five lost mechanisms and introduces the awareness–identity–agency chain: yoga produces self-awareness but not narrative coherence or purposeful action. Reintegrating resilience practices from Narrative Therapy, ACT, Logotherapy, Expressive Writing, and Focusing into yoga programmes may address this gap, and a sequential mixed-methods design is proposed to test this hypothesis.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Modern Western yoga lacks the meaning-making mechanisms of traditional practice, which explains why it reduces stress and anxiety but not burnout severity. |
Abstract
Yoga has strong evidence for reducing stress and anxiety, yet a recent health technology assessment found no significant effect on burnout severity. This article proposes a theoretical explanation for this paradox, arguing that modern Western yoga has been systematically stripped of the meaning-making mechanisms that were historically embedded in traditional practice. Drawing on the history of yoga's decontextualization (Singleton, 2010; De Michelis, 2004), the 4E cognition framework (embodied, embedded, enacted, extended), and clinical models of burnout as existential crisis (Pines, 1993; Längle, 2003), the article identifies five distinct meaning-making mechanisms in traditional yoga practice and traces how each was diminished or lost through Western adoption. It introduces the awareness–identity–agency chain to explain why somatic interventions may be necessary but insufficient for conditions involving existential crisis: yoga reliably produces self-awareness but not narrative coherence (identity) or purposeful action (agency). The article proposes that reintegrating structured resilience-building practices — informed by Narrative Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Logotherapy, Expressive Writing, and Focusing — into yoga-based programmes could address this gap. A sequential mixed-methods research design is outlined to test this hypothesis with burnout survivors. The central contribution is novel: no prior work has examined why a practice with demonstrated efficacy for the individual components of burnout shows no aggregate effect on the condition itself.