You may have trouble getting out of bed, and past conundrums may enervate you.
From the kansas.com
Rather than enervate wealth's creators, it's better to energize the creation of wealth by letting producers reap rewards.
From the forbes.com
Like Meddlers, Pontificators distract boards from the business before them and enervate their colleagues in the process.
From the businessweek.com
At that stage, the brain strengthens selected axon synapses that correctly reach and enervate their target cells.
From the sciencedaily.com
It is nonsense that a public official must attend receptions and eat the food, both of which further enervate him.
From the time.com
If we ignore how all forms of giving can enervate their alleged beneficiaries, it should be said that the most charitable act of all is to show an individual how to avoid it.
From the forbes.com
There seems to be no end to the stream of texts intended to inform, enervate, shock, exasperate and, just occasionally, reassure a public increasingly aware of the environment.
From the newscientist.com
The central nervous system is based on a hollow nerve tube running along the length of the animal, form which the peripheral nervous system branches out to enervate the various systems.
From the en.wikipedia.org
That's exactly the kind of business ethos assured to enervate Montebourg-a crusading leftist cabinet member who has repeatedly locked horns with bosses over job cuts.
From the world.time.com
More examples
Weaken mentally or morally
Faze: disturb the composure of
(enervated) adynamic: lacking strength or vigor
(enervating) debilitative: causing debilitation
(enervation) lack of vitality; "an enervation of mind greater than any fatigue"
(enervation) surgical removal of a nerve
(enervated) Weakened, debilitated or deprived of strength or vitality