4 Effective Strategies for Preventing Burnout at Work

4 Strategies for Preventing Burnout at Work

For Leaders Who Cannot Afford to Run Out of Capacity

Burnout is not a personal failure. It is the predictable result of sustained pressure without adequate recovery — and for leaders carrying significant responsibility, the cost is not just personal. When a senior leader burns out, the effects ripple through every team they touch.

These four strategies are not about slowing your ambition or lowering your standards. They are about building the physical and cognitive foundation that sustained high performance actually requires. Leaders who apply them consistently do not just feel better — they think more clearly, decide more soundly, and lead more effectively over the long arc of a demanding career.

1. Protect Sleep as a Leadership Performance Asset

Sleep is not rest. It is the primary mechanism by which the brain consolidates memory, clears metabolic waste, regulates emotion, and restores the prefrontal cortex function that executive decision-making depends on. When leaders consistently sleep fewer than 7 hours a night, the cognitive impairment that results is measurable — and largely invisible to the person experiencing it.

The research is not ambiguous. The WHO has considered classifying fewer than 7 hours of sleep per night as a carcinogen. Fewer than 6 hours does not give the brain sufficient time to detoxify — a deficit associated with significantly elevated risk of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease over time. At a performance level, sleep deprivation impairs the exact capacities leaders rely on most: strategic judgment, emotional regulation, and the ability to read a room accurately.

What protecting sleep looks like for leaders under pressure:

  • Remove screens from the bedroom — blue light suppresses melatonin and signals the brain to stay alert
  • Stop consuming work content — email, news, social media — at least 60 minutes before bed
  • Establish a consistent wind-down routine: reading, light stretching, or brief meditation signal the nervous system that the day is ending
  • Keep the bedroom cool and dark — both have measurable effects on sleep quality
  • Consider a 20-minute midday rest when possible — even brief recovery periods restore alertness and decision quality without disrupting nighttime sleep

The leaders who treat sleep as negotiable are borrowing cognitive capacity from their future selves. The debt compounds.

2. Hydration: The Simplest Performance Variable Leaders Ignore

Approximately 80% of North Americans are chronically dehydrated. For leaders spending long hours in climate-controlled offices, back-to-back meetings, and high-caffeine routines, the deficit is often significant — and the effects are direct: a 5% drop in hydration produces a 25–30% drop in energy and a measurable decline in concentration and mood.

Caffeine, which most leaders use as a primary energy management tool, is a diuretic — it accelerates dehydration. The 2pm energy collapse that sends many leaders reaching for another coffee or a sugar hit is frequently a hydration problem, not a caffeine deficit.

A practical hydration framework for leaders:

  • Drink half your body weight in ounces of filtered water per day as a baseline target
  • Drink at least 8 ounces of water before your first cup of coffee — you lose water overnight and caffeine compounds the deficit
  • For every cup of coffee, tea, or caffeinated beverage, add a glass of water to offset the diuretic effect
  • Use a glass or stainless steel bottle — plastic bottles, especially those exposed to heat, leach compounds into the water
  • When the afternoon energy drop hits, drink water before reaching for caffeine or sugar — the result is often faster and more sustained

3. Exercise: The Single Most Evidence-Backed Burnout Intervention Available

Every major stress researcher in the world agrees on this: exercise is the most reliably effective intervention for stress, burnout risk, cognitive performance, and emotional regulation available to leaders. It is not a supplement to other strategies. For many leaders, it is the load-bearing pillar of sustained performance.

Physical activity releases endorphins that directly counteract stress hormones, clears cortisol from the bloodstream, improves the quality of sleep, and strengthens the prefrontal cortex function that executive decision-making depends on. Just 30 minutes of aerobic exercise four times a week measurably reduces cardiovascular disease risk and improves mental clarity.

For leaders who struggle to protect exercise time:

  • Treat exercise appointments as non-negotiable commitments — schedule them with the same authority as board meetings
  • Use micro-movement when full sessions are not possible: a 10-minute walk after lunch, a brief stretch between meetings, a set of bodyweight exercises in the morning
  • Add resistance training — even light weights build the physical resilience that high-demand roles erode over time
  • Find an accountability partner — leaders who exercise with a peer or coach are significantly more consistent than those who rely on willpower alone
  • Consider walking meetings for one-on-ones — the cognitive benefit of movement applies during the meeting itself

Leaders who protect exercise are not taking time away from performance. They are investing in the physiological substrate that performance runs on.

4. Eat for Cognitive Performance, Not Just Energy

The standard American diet — processed foods, refined carbohydrates, excess sugar — is designed for convenience, not performance. For leaders whose most valuable asset is clear thinking under pressure, what they eat has a direct and measurable impact on the quality of judgment, mood stability, and sustained energy throughout the day.

The burnout-prevention nutritional framework is not about perfection. It is about eliminating the inputs that most directly undermine cognitive performance:

  • Omega-3 rich foods — wild-caught salmon, flaxseed, and walnuts support brain function, reduce inflammation, and improve mood stability under sustained pressure
  • B-vitamin rich foods — leafy greens, eggs, and legumes support adrenal health and energy production — the adrenal system is the first system stressed leaders deplete
  • Antioxidant-rich produce — brightly colored fruits and vegetables combat the oxidative stress that accumulates under chronic pressure; aim for variety across the color spectrum
  • Stable blood sugar — eliminating spikes and crashes from refined sugar and processed carbohydrates is one of the most direct ways to stabilize energy and mood across the leadership day
  • A high-quality morning start — a breakfast built around protein, healthy fat, and fiber (rather than sugar or nothing) sets the cognitive baseline for the entire morning

Why These Four Strategies Are Not Enough on Their Own

Sleep, hydration, exercise, and nutrition are the physical foundation of burnout prevention. But they address the body, not the system. For leaders whose burnout is being driven by structural issues — chronic overcommitment, inadequate boundaries, decision fatigue, or an organizational culture that normalizes depletion — physical recovery practices alone will not close the gap.

Sustainable leadership performance requires designing recovery, focus, and boundaries into how work itself is structured — not just managing the body’s response to an unsustainable workload.

If you are a leader who is implementing these strategies and still running on empty, that is important information. Explore practical approaches to preventing leadership burnout, take the burnout self-assessment to understand where you currently are, or learn how leadership resilience coaching addresses the root causes rather than just the symptoms.

The leaders who sustain the longest careers at the highest levels are not the ones who push through depletion. They are the ones who have built the systems that make depletion less likely in the first place.

Reduce Holiday Stress by Setting Boundaries

Set Boundaries to Cut Down on Stress this Season

Stress Express; Family FightingThere’s no question that the holidays can bring out the best and the worst in people, particularly families.  There’s so much pressure to decorate, get the right gifts, prepare for visitors, cook and clean and handle excited children, all on top of work.

So how do you reduce holiday stress?  Set boundaries and say no more often.

• if you’re hosting an event at your home, ask those coming to bring a dish or a beverage.  Be specific and clear about what you want.  Don’t try to do it all.

Limit sugar intake yourself and for your children.  Sugar just adds another layer of craziness to the stress.

Say no when asked to attend an extra event or make a batch of cookies.  Take care of yourself first.

Ask for help– from your partner, your children, etc.  Ask them to help decorate, clean up, do the laundry, etc. at this busy time of year.

Avoid familial conflict.  If two family members always fight during festivities, speak to them in advance and ask them to avoid each other or be kind.  Tell them if they can’t, then they are not welcome in your home.  If they start trouble, they will be asked to leave.  Make it clear your home is a “no fighting” zone.

The holidays can be joyful and meaningful times to celebrate faith, love and hope.  Take care of yourself and reduce your holiday stress by setting boundaries that support you and your peace of mind.

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Could Ecotherapy (Being in Nature) Relieve Your Stress?

Nature:  Free and Easy Cure to Anxiety and Depression

Did you know that most Americans suffer from nature deficit disorder?  A typical American spends 80-90% of their time indoors- and sadly too much of that time is spent sitting.  The more time people spend inside, the more anxious an depressed they get.  The solution is simple and free: spend time outside in nature.   Doing so can:

• Cut anxiety and depression

• Boost feelings of well-being

• Improve your health and reduce blood pressire

• Increase your social interaction with others

• Improve your breathing and intake of Vitamin D if you spend 20 minutes in the sun

Gardeners have long understood this, as having your hands in soil relieves stress and connects you to the earth.  Doing so helps you get out of your head and your worries, and enables you to focus on the present- one of the keys to being happier.

David Strayer, a psychologist at the University of Utah, takes students out in nature  to reconnect with their creative problem-solving and mental clarity.  With so many distractions and constant technological stimulation, our brains get tired and don’t function as clearly as they should.  His backpacking group of Outward Bound participants did 50 percent better on creative problem-solving after only three days in the wilderness.1

So the next time you are feeling down or overwhelmed, get outside in nature.  Just 20 minutes can revive your body, mind and spirit.

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  1. http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2017/07/13/ecotherapy.aspx?utm_source=dnl&utm_medium=email&utm_content=art1&utm_campaign=20170713Z1_UCM&et_cid=DM150364&et_rid=2078706039

Are You So Busy That Nothing Gets Done?

“Busy is a drug that a lot of people are addicted to.” — Rob Bell

Exhausted woman from Stress Express!Too Busy for Life?

Chronic busyness is not a sign of effectiveness. It is often an early warning signal of overload, decision fatigue, and eventual burnout. When responsibility is high and boundaries are weak, activity replaces progress and stress accumulates quietly. This is why many leaders eventually seek structured ways to prevent burnout before performance, health, and clarity begin to erode.

  • Do a complete data dump.
    Write down everything that is occupying your mental space across work and life. Seeing it on paper reduces mental noise immediately. Once listed, organize items into categories such as Urgent, Important, Someday, Next Week, and Next Month. Schedule what matters and release what does not.
  • Evaluate your calendar honestly.
    Ask where your time is actually going. Which commitments are essential and which are habitual or unnecessary? Many leaders discover that saying no to low-value obligations restores both energy and effectiveness.
  • Use tools that reduce friction, not add complexity.
    Time and task management tools can be helpful, but only if they simplify decisions. Choose systems that reduce repetition and help you see priorities clearly rather than creating more inputs to manage.
  • Accept what cannot be completed.
    There will always be more to do than time allows. Sustainable performance requires discernment. Delegate when possible, consciously decide what will not be done, and protect space for recovery and perspective.

Busyness fades when clarity increases. When leaders regain control of their attention and commitments, stress decreases and meaningful progress returns.

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Stressed about Money? Focus on this…

As the new year starts. many of us are looking at holiday bills and worrying about money. Anxiety and stress about money can cause anxiety attacks, sleepless nights and depression.

As the new year starts. many of us are looking at holiday bills and worrying about money.  Anxiety and stress about money can cause anxiety attacks, sleepless nights and depression.

Stressed about Money?So what’s the solution?

Focus on gratitude!
The next time you start feeling poor or experiencing lack, pull out paper and pen or use your cellphone and make a list of everything in your life that you are grateful for.  Include the fact that you have access to clean water, clothing, shelter, food, friends, healthcare, etc.  Those are all luxuries to a large portion of the world.

You will notice that as you do this, your stress abates.  It may even disappear.

There’s a simple reason for this. What you focus on manifests, and when you focus on lack or scarcity, yu create more of that.  But when you focus on abundance and gratitude, you attract in more to be grateful for.

And if you’ve done this exercise several times and are still super-stressed, go volunteer at a soup kitchen, or work with the homeless.  Your perspective will change, I guarantee it.

 

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Energy Drains Create Stress; Try This Instead

Stressed woman pulling her hair
Are you out of energy and stressed?

All of us are subject to various energy drains from time to time. Review the list below to determine which eare sapping your vitality and positive outlook. The good news is you can change your behavior and your actions to support yourself and your energy.

Negative people. You are the result of the 5 people you spend the most time with. They impact your energy levels. Avoid complainers, Debbie Downers and bad news mongers.

Incompletions. Projects you have left 1/2 finished, books half read, newspapers and magazines opened but not finished. All of those are sapping your energy. Here’s what to do about it: http://firedupnow.com/could-your-incompletions-be-stressing-you-out/

Lack of sleep. You need 7 hours a night or you are at a cognitive disadvantage.

Sugar Check the research out yourself- sugar is terrible for you and contributes to cancer, diabetes, weight gain and so much more. That candy bar you eat at 2:00 will crash you at 3:00. Avoid it and boost your energy.

Dehydration– 40% of North Americans are dehydrated. Drink 10-12 glasses
of pure water a day, more if you drink soda, coffee or tea. A 5% drop in hydration means a 25% drop in energy.

Sitting and lethargy Many people are now sitting for over 9 hours a day.
(Which is why I am writing this from my stand up desk!) Get up every hour and move around, Get exercise every day. Walk frequently, take the stairs.
For more on sitting, go here: http://firedupnow.com/why-sitting-is-so-bad-for-you/

You make the choices as to who to spend time with, what to put in your body and how much to move. You can be energetic and Fired Up! starting now.

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©2016, Snowden McFall All Rights Reserved. You may share this post and reprint with author reference and copyright.

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Is Lack of Boundaries Stressing You Out?

Why High Performers Burn Out Without Limits

Stress Express; Family Fighting Mary’s mother demanded enormous amounts of her time, even though she was healthy and independent. Instead of declining the constant requests, Mary said yes. Again and again. She ignored her work. Neglected her health. Strained her marriage. Eventually, her body intervened. She became ill and could not work. Mary did not have a time problem. She had a boundary problem. This pattern is common among high-achieving professionals. With demanding careers, family responsibilities, volunteer work, and aging parents, many leaders operate at full capacity with no margin. Stress is not always caused by workload. Often it is caused by unprotected energy. Boundaries are not selfish. They are structural safeguards for sustainable leadership.

Why Boundaries Matter for Performance

When you consistently override your limits:
  • Stress hormones remain elevated
  • Sleep quality declines
  • Decision-making deteriorates
  • Resentment quietly builds
Without boundaries, burnout is not a possibility. It is a timeline. Sustainable leadership requires intentional limits.

How to Set Healthier Boundaries

1. Value your time before you commit it.

Before saying yes, ask:
  • Do I genuinely want to do this?
  • Am I capable of doing this well?
  • Is this the highest and best use of my time?
  • What will I have to sacrifice to accept this?
  • What happens if I decline?
  • Will this increase my stress beyond sustainable levels?
Pause before responding. Space creates clarity.

2. Learn to say no without apology.

A simple response works: “I appreciate you thinking of me. I want to give my best effort, and right now I’m at capacity. May I suggest someone else who could help?” Clear. Professional. Calm.

3. Protect recovery time.

Downtime is not indulgence. It is neurological maintenance. Sleep, quiet reflection, creative play, exercise, and mental detachment restore cognitive function and emotional regulation. If you feel constantly depleted, explore practical strategies to prevent burnout before it escalates at Prevent Burnout. You can also strengthen long-term clarity through the Leadership Resilience System and practical stress management strategies. Boundaries are not about pushing people away. They are about protecting the energy required to lead well. ©2026, 2016, Snowden McFall All Rights Reserved. You may share this post and reprint with author reference and copyright.

Overwhelmed? How to Regain Focus

Do You Have Cognitive Overload?

“Information overload is a symptom of our desire to not focus on what’s important. It is a choice.” Brian Solis

http://www.dreamstime.com/stock-images-business-woman-cubicle-overworked-stressed-image5934154We receive so much data that we can barely comprehend all that is coming into our minds. Right now, you may be thinking about your next meeting, responding to a text, planning your tweets for the day and answering a call. Whew- no wonder we have information overload. Our brains are overwhelmed with stress with all the distractions.

A recent Stanford study found that those who spend lots of time on social media, surfing the Internet and multi-tasking had poor cognitive skills. They could not distinguish well between what was important and what was trivial. “They are suckers for irrelevancy.” Learning to reduce cognitive overload and restore focus is central to leadership resilience, especially in environments of constant distraction and demand.

How to Regain  Focus:

In his book, Search Inside Yourself. Chade-Meng Tan of Google, shares some keys to regaining cognitive clarity.

Monitor what you read and how you do it– If you find your mind wandering while reading, bring your attention back to what you are doing. Keep practicing this skill.

Use active listening Have someone speak for 3 minutes and you listen, Then repeat back to the person with the preface ” What you said is important. Do you mind if I repeat it back to see if I have it right?” (People LOVE this- they love to be heard.)

A few tips from me:

Do 1 thing at a time. That’s it. One thing and do it well and complete it. Take satisfaction and then move on to the next one thing. Your focus will improve. Multi-tasking is terrible for your brain.

• Go tech free for a day this weekend. Lots of research show the value of this. It’s like rebooting your brain.

• Get quiet and go outside in nature.  Life becomes much simpler away from the office and computer.

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Stressed? Get More Sleep

The best bridge between despair and hope is a good night’s sleep.
~E. Joseph Cossman

Sleeping Well Can be a Puzzle

Exhausted woman from Stress Express!

Why Sleep Matters for Leaders Under Pressure

That you can put together. Most of us are sleep deprived, which can lead to all sorts of dangers to your health and the health of others (when you drive tired.)

The World Health Organization says less than 7 hours a night may cause cancer and you are likely to carry an extra 20 pounds of weight. With less than 7 hours, you are functioning at a cognitive disadvantage and are 3x more likely to get a cold or flu. Neurobiology of Aging says those who get less than 6 hours of sleep are 4 times more likely to have a stroke. Check out these practical tips to sleep well tonight!

Sleep is not just a health issue. It is a leadership issue. When you are sleep deprived, your ability to think clearly, regulate emotion, and make strategic decisions declines. Leaders who prioritize sleep protect their clarity, their judgment, and their teams from reactive mistakes.

How to Get a Good Night’s Sleep

Turn off all computers, cellphones and screens an hour before bed. Stop looking at them. The blue light from these devices interferes with your body’s ability to relax and keeps you hyper. Be sure your alarm clock is red light. Lower the temperature in the room and make sure it is cool and dark.

No electronics in your bedroom. Your bedroom is for sleeping and making love. That’s it.

Get ready for bed an hour before you go to sleep. Actually get in bed 30 minutes before you want to sleep and read something uplifting on paper. (Not an electronic reader.) Reading helps relax you.

Take a hot bath with epsom salts before bed. Or get your legs wet up to your knees in warm water.

Try all natural sleep remedies at health food stores. Check with your doctor. I have used these successfully at different times- most are herbs: passion flower, valerian root, holy basil, L’theanine, calcium, magnesium, etc.

Exercise is a great sleep inducer, if you do it several hours before bedtime.

Sleep better and perform better in every area of your life!

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Here’s an Instant Stress Reliever

meditation as stress reliever from Stress ExpressStress is occurring at an alarming rate, and with our 24/7 world. more and more people are experiencing stress, anxiety, overwhelm and depression.  So what can you do, right now?

The Astonishing Power of Breath

Try this. Hold your breath for as long as you can- until it almost hurts to let it out. Unless you are a professional athlete or extreme yogi, you probably couldn’t hold it for long. Without breath, the body, mind and spirit cannot function.

And yet we all forget what an incredible resource this is. Breath literally keeps us alive, fuels our interactions and enables us to function. Without it, we are severally hampered. Having had pneumonia a few years ago, I learned quickly how very debilitating lack of breath can be. We all take it for granted.

The Instant Stress Reliever: Breath

Breathe deeply at least 3 times. Put your hands on your lower belly, fill it up all the way and let it out…slowly. Do this several times to regain control and calm your system. Notice how you feel.

Use breath to monitor emotions. We are not our feelings and when our emotions take over, we are not our best selves. When experiencing anger, upset, frustration, fear, stop and breathe deeply. Visualize a positive scene in nature, perhaps mountains or beaches. Focus on that. Let go.

• Learn how to meditate. Meditation is a powerful healing agent; it:
-lowers blood pressure; increases circulation
– improves immune function and memory
-shortens hospital stays
-decreases insomnia
– helps relieve stress, ADHD
-helps reverse heart disease

There are many different ways to meditate. Here’s one:

Start with the deep breathing above and focus on the breath. If thoughts come up, observe them, let them drift by like leaves in the wind. Picture a beautiful nature scene in a forest, visualize a waterfall. Imagine you are standing in the gentle waterfall and let all your worries and fears wash away. Practice this over and over until you can meditate for at least 10 minutes. It can make a huge difference in your well-being.

You can control your stress rather than having it control you.  Try deep breathing as a solution.  It’s fast, easy and free!

 

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