@levampyre I've burnt out and can give a few pointers from the other side of therapy.
sometimes it's a question of self worth. Most chores aren't actually worth feeling awful for. You are important, and thus, taking breaks is important. Maybe not more important than putting food on the table, but definitely more important than cleaning windows or tidying up before your parents visit.
@levampyre Then there's also internalized judgment, having to be useful all the time. Taking breaks is actually perfectly okay! This can be internalized capitalism, or you only got loved conditionally when you did good.
This is tricky to deal with and what helped me can't be explained properly in a short post. I give hugs to my inner child and ask her if she would like to take a break.
@levampyre giving away responsibility: yeah... There's more than one way to do things actually. Getting things done at all is better than not doing them, but perfectly.
I hate the way my husband stacks the dishes in the dishwasher. But they come out clean anyway and I objectively don't have time to do everything. So I only re-stack the dishes in my weak moments. ;-)
@levampyre all the above, that @lizzard listed and clearly learning on an emotional level, that it is ok to not do the thing.
I love the dishwasher example, as it fits perfectly, I'm also not rearranging things on the drying rack, latley I'm even ok with using the dryer and not beating myself up about it.
What helped most, was saying it out loud. I know on a mental level, that me beeing hard on myself is of no value. But I was only able to start to change things, when I verbalized them, kind
@levampyre of using my partner as a second correcting instance, verbalizing (e.g. with methods of nonviolent communication towards myself), what bugs me, what I think must be done and what would actually help me right now.
Also cutting of big parts of the family and the internalized guilt that came with expectations actually helped a lot, though that is a totally different route and one I might not recomment for everyone.