If you ask your friends, family or colleagues how they are on any given day, chances are a number of them will respond with 'tired'.
Oftentimes 'tired' is a bit of an umbrella term. Do they mean they're feeling fatigued? Lethargic? Drained? Burned out? Maybe it's all the above, considering the mental load a lot of us are carrying with various responsibilities, familial obligations, the news, and the rising cost of living. It's no wonder!
But just how tired is normal? At what point does it tip into chronic fatigue territory?
Dr Brad McKay is a GP. Speaking with Mamamia's daily news podcast The Quicky, Dr McKay says there are certain ways to assess whether our tiredness is normal... or not.
Watch: an explainer on mental load. Post continues below.
Although it's common for many of us to feel tired at certain points of the day, it shouldn't be considered normal, he says.
"It's becoming very normal in society to talk about tiredness. I don't think it's just that we like to complain to each other, there's a little bit more going on."
Typically speaking, most adults are recommended to try and get seven hours or more of sleep per night. A lot of us don't get this amount, for various reasons. But interestingly, many who do get this amount of sleep still feel tired sometimes. Dr McKay says in conversations like these we need to try and differentiate between feelings of 'tiredness' versus 'sleepiness'.