EXAMINATION OF CONSCIENCE / REFLECTION EXERCISE
Before reading this chapter, answer the questions:
Taking an average from the last approx. 3 months and this moment of your life:
How do I rate my mental and physical condition, where:
0 – it costs me a lot just to get out of bed, I have no energy for anything, I don’t take care of myself because I have no strength, I’m scared how long I can go on like this
10 – I’m in great shape, I take care of myself and my rest, I have energy, ideas and creativity at work
However low you are on the scale – what is working anyway? Why didn’t you give yourself a lower score? What, in this area, is still ok, even if it’s just small things?
What simple thing do you feel would make a big difference in your functioning if you started it already today?
WHY IS THIS SUCH AN IMPORTANT TOPIC AND SO CLOSE TO US?
M: Given how tired I am, I thought maybe today we could talk about burnout, exhaustion and energy management?
A: I’m listening to another book about emotions and stress, and I can hear in it exactly all the symptoms of burnout that I experienced. I remember a day when I wondered: why does this hurt, and that hurt? Why is my body giving me such a hard time? And then I went back over the last two days, what had happened and how stressful they were, so no wonder the body reacted.
M: I understand that it still surprises you that it works like that.
A: You can really get scared listening to all these symptoms and consequences, because it’s like reading my own case — and everything matches. Loss of immunity – check, that matches, and that matches… I think, coming back to the point, we could write a bit about that too – about the consequences.
M: That’s an important piece. And you know, it would almost be unfair if we didn’t do it, because in a way that’s where you started your coaching journey. It’s a very important, very real experience of yours and also a topic very close to my heart and to my coaching and workshop work.
A: Considering all those guys and all those girls who enter this world thinking they’re kings of the world and can do anything, they also need to read a bit about how to manage their stress while “reigning”. Managing stress and your energy outside of work really matters in terms of how you cope.
M: I think this is one of our most important tasks, because otherwise what’s the point? What’s the point of all that effort, ambition, work? If in the end the bill to pay is loss of health and, along with it, the ability to enjoy the fruits of our work.
M: I recently heard a great line from Karolina, the therapist I work with: “It’s good when opportunity meets preparation.” This is very important in the context of mental resilience. I see with clients that people often turn to self-care methods and start getting interested in this topic only when they’re already in deep crisis and have no choice. And that was your case too – the crisis got you. So you reached for these methods, and they worked for you, which is great.
But the truth is, when it doesn’t hurt enough, it’s hard to reach for them at the moment when we are already weakened: our cognitive processes are weakened, our nervous system is weakened – and then learning something new is not the easiest thing in the world.
It’s much better when I practice this before I desperately need it, when it’s part of my routine. One deep breath before every new meeting, a two-minute meditation – all these things that you’ve also tested and you know what a difference they make.
A: But people can also learn them in a crisis.
M: Yes, but there’s a much greater chance that you’ll be able to reach for them more easily when you really need them if they are already practiced or part of your routine.
A: That’s absolutely true. The question is: how many people actually do that? I, for example, do it when I’m about to go into that kind of meeting. I always practice, because I know what it looks like. The question is: how many leaders reach that crisis moment before they realise they need this? Most leaders I’ve met had this so-called hero mentality. “What do you mean I can’t handle it? Hold my beer…”
M: “Of course I can handle it. I always handle it, after all.”
A: The truth is, everyone falls down at some point. I once talked to a multimillionaire friend who said to me: “Everyone eventually falls, and everyone will have to get up. There is not a single person in running a company or in a leadership role who won’t have a fall – bigger or smaller.”
M: It’s great to have then a backpack of resources and methods that help you get up more easily.
A: I remember when I worked at Dell and we approached it in a way that prepared leaders for a potential fall. We used the “Right First Time” methodology, which meant we prepared for all scenarios from the very beginning. Everyone was first trained, mentally prepared, and only then confronted with challenges.
M: In many companies I work with, leaders are thrown in at the deep end. Suddenly they step into a leadership role and it’s just: “Figure it out!”. It’s still not too bad if they get, for example, coaching or training. But if not, then it’s: “Well, you’ll somehow manage”, and they do somehow manage – but the question is how and at what cost, for them and for others.
This topic was the very beginning of your path as a coaching client, right? You said you really felt what it means to pay the price for the tension and stress that accompanied you, even though you were “swimming” brilliantly on the business side. And I also know that the coaching work on this with a wise person gave you a lot.
I wanted to bring this up because I feel like we always think it doesn’t apply to us – until we collide with it. It’s a bit like illness and death. It always happens to someone else, until it happens to us or to someone close.
A: Usually, people who step into the role of leader are a bit tougher, they need to be able to withstand more, and they do withstand more, and generally cope well in difficult situations. I think that because they feel they can handle it, they might miss the moment when it’s one step too far. And suddenly it turns out something is wrong with them, there’s a price to pay – and it often shows up in the body.
M: So we need to listen to the body?
A: We need to listen to how our body behaves and be very attentive. I’m a perfect example of how you can work at full throttle. What do I mean? Sixty hours a week + business travel + lack of sleep + 12–15 meetings a day with no breaks to catch your breath. I’ve gone through this many times and it’s a huge exposure to stress. The worst thing is that leaders in such roles don’t realise where they’re heading. They think this is a normal routine, that everyone functions this way, that it “has to be like this”.
M: That’s called pathological adaptation to a stressful situation. And it also depends a lot on the company culture, right?
A: Many years ago, when I worked in a French automotive company, I felt guilty leaving work at 7 p.m., having started at 7 a.m., because all the cars in the parking lot were still there and I was the first one to get into my car for the one-hour drive home after 12 hours of work. I had this inner feeling that I was “leaving early” after those 12 hours. So the organisation also builds certain ways of looking at things.
In my case, it was very important to observe my body. I couldn’t help myself alone. That’s exactly what coaching sessions were for – not only with you but over many years with other coaches – they taught me to observe my own behaviours, to notice how my hormones function, what my stress reactions look like. And that’s crucial, because from that perspective, through emotions, you can observe what’s happening to you as if from a camera pointed at you.
And then, unfortunately, there may come a moment when you realise: this is the wrong direction and something needs to be done. And it would be foolish not to do anything. But it’s not easy.
M: How do you know that this is the moment when something needs to change?
A: In my case, my health simply started to deteriorate. I began to catch colds more often, I was terribly tired. I think the first moment for leaders comes when you get home and you could just “go to sleep in the packaging” – meaning you’re still in your work clothes. You’re not thinking about dinner, about taking care of the kids, taking care of yourself; you have no strength to go to a restaurant, no strength to eat anything. You just come home, throw your laptop bag on the couch, crash on the sofa and immediately fall asleep. You wake up three, four hours later, go to bed and sleep some more. The next day the alarm goes at five and you go to work…
M: The only thing you dream of is that nobody wants anything from you? You have no strength left for your private life, for pleasure, etc.?
A: There’s this model of life: 8 hours for work, 8 hours for life, 8 hours for sleep. That gives 24 hours. And if you’re at a point where you’re very tired with all of this, it’s good to literally draw this “three eights” (8-8-8) model on paper and realise how your body functions and how much time you give yourself, how much you give the company, how much you give your family in those three eights.
M: When did you hit the wall in these areas?
A: I went through such a crisis a few years ago when I was working in Germany, at Goodyear. I didn’t have my family with me on a daily basis – a standard expat contract. On Monday mornings I flew to the company, on Friday evenings I flew back to Poland. Expats are even more exposed to this kind of work because they don’t have family around, but they have unlimited time to devote to getting things done. Then it’s very easy to get into a situation where you work from morning till night, because, well, there’s nothing else to do…
SIMPLE INTERVENTIONS
M: What did you develop back then thanks to coaching?
A: Sometimes it’s very simple things, for example: I learned to make myself a solid breakfast. To actually give myself valuable fuel to function during the day.
For the first time, I worked on managing my life energy, and that was extremely important for me. I learned to eat regularly, take magnesium and so on. The work we did back then made me start noticing issues that had been completely non-obvious to me. For example, that our body runs at a certain “rpm”, but it needs fuel.
I also learned then that when you work at high revs as a leader, as a general manager, your brain consumes enormous amounts of energy. So if you work with your head, if the energy use is very high, you have to constantly refuel your mind and body. That means micronutrients, a good diet – but also working on positive hormones. You can’t function all the time on stress hormones, because that ends with massive overuse of the organism.
M: I remember a workshop with Wojciech Eichelberger where he explained that a manager in a higher position is like a professional athlete. Except that in professional sports such a person has a massage therapist, a dietitian, a whole team taking care of them so their performance is at the highest level. A leader usually doesn’t have that kind of support. In some companies they care a bit, but more often everyone is left to themselves – and either you take care of yourself wisely, or you realise at some point it doesn’t work the way you’d like.
A: Exactly. So there has to be a moment when the leader grows into this and realises it. I had many such moments in my career. A leader has to understand that their primary duty is to take care of themselves and their condition. Just like an athlete: when it’s time for recovery, it’s time for recovery – and then you don’t train.
I’ve been using a Garmin watch for many years, and last Friday, when I wanted to go to the “Run for the Elephant” event in Chorzów, my watch told me: “Training is not recommended today, you’re overworked, you should rest.” And that’s exactly the moment of an overworked leader, manager, senior executive – when either you have a watch like that, or you have enough awareness that an inner voice says: “Stop. Hold your horses.” It’s time to rest, go for a walk or a bike ride, meet friends for a beer and talk about nonsense, just to recover a bit.
You can’t live only for work and you can’t devote all your life energy solely to achieving the goals of the organisation you work for.
M: Sometimes I hear people say: “But I like it. This is the only thing that excites me. This is the meaning of my life. I don’t have a problem with that.”
WHY DO WE NEED BALANCE? IS IT AN OUTDATED CONCEPT?
A: We need balance. I could say the same thing to you: every few years I start work in a new organisation and I fall into the same whirlpool of responsibilities, new people, new fun and adrenaline. But I now know that everyone falls at some point. Everyone has their limits and we need to be aware that when we’re approaching that limit, something has to change.
M: I asked that a bit provocatively, because I don’t believe in such a thing. I think it’s a kind of over-doing it and a lack of balance which, if that’s your choice, then fine – but there is a specific price to pay and it’s simply unhealthy, just like any other kind of excess or addiction. Brzeziński spoke of the “three gardens of life”. Work can be the dominant garden – and for many of my clients it is – but there is also the garden of relationships, like family, close ones, and the garden called “me”.
In your case, I know that means music, running, pleasure connected with travel, nature. In my opinion, you can’t cheat those gardens. If you live in only one, the important question is: why? What are you so afraid of that you don’t reach for the others?
I totally understand that in the “work garden” I can feel very competent. And the more tired I am, the more the other gardens suffer, because relationships and myself also need some energy. So when you’re exhausted, it’s easy to settle permanently in that one garden. At work, the to-do list is always endless. And even if I finally get everything under control, I can always develop it further.
A: I agree – and Brzeziński described those three gardens brilliantly. I remember when we worked with that book a few years ago, I then gave it to all the leaders in the organisation to read. And I heard from many of them: “What a great book! Thank you so much for giving it to me.” It was a great inspiration for them.
And that brings us to those 4,000 weeks we have in our career to use. You said beautifully that whatever we do and however much we work, there will always be something unfinished. So even if you’re a productivity master and you manage to complete all your tasks and carve out an extra hour in your 12-hour day, the organisation will still schedule some “super important” meeting and fill that slot in your calendar.
M: From my clients I know that the first health signals often appear when we lower our guard – when the weekend or a holiday comes. The body exits that mobilisation state and then starts reminding us it exists – precisely at the moment we’d like to rest, and suddenly it “hits us” with illness or some discomfort, headache, migraine, etc.
A: That’s exactly how it is. Unfortunately, I know several examples where the health of young people under forty collapsed. A stroke at work, sitting at a desk. A heart attack at work, sitting at a desk. A heart attack while jogging after work.
M: From the position you were in in the organisation, did you react when you saw someone on the edge?
A: Yes, of course. That’s a very important role of the leader. If a leader sees something starting to happen, they should react. I’ve had such situations several times in my team – and not because I was tightening the screws too much, but precisely because of the mechanism we talked about earlier. You’re young in the organisation, super eager to achieve results, you become addicted to your work and you tighten the screws on yourself.
In such a situation, the role of the leader is hugely important. A manager who, during a 1:1 meeting or any informal conversation says: “Stop. Tomek, this is time for your family. Honestly, I don’t know how else to say it. This is an official instruction: you’re to spend the next two weeks on sick leave (L4). Take a vacation or do nothing.” That’s extremely important.
Agata – therapist, entrepreneur, business trainer and coach with extensive business experience:
“Martyna, one of the things I regret most in hindsight is that when I ran my own company as a young CEO, I would leave work at, say, 6 p.m., and everyone was afraid to leave before me – which I only discovered later, when I realised they packed up a few minutes after 6 as soon as I drove off. I theoretically never told anyone they had to stay, but that’s exactly how ‘management by example’ works.”
IRREPLACEABLE PEOPLE
M: I understand it’s not easy to do that, because there’s pressure. This person usually plays an important role. Often the people I talk to feel like: “How? If I didn’t show up at work or went on sick leave for a week, the company would collapse, the world would end” – and somehow it never does.
A: We have this hero mentality – “Without me it won’t work”. But how can I sit on sick leave if the CEO of the corporation is coming in two weeks and I have to prepare that damn presentation? So I ask: “So what? You’re on sick leave and preparing the presentation?” “Well, yesterday I worked 16 hours” – and that’s a guy who just got out of the hospital with neurological issues. So we often wind ourselves up, and it has consequences.
M: We need people on the outside who point out that this is not okay. And it’s best if those people are from work, not only family.
A: Yes. Once, many years ago, when I still worked at Dell, my manager Krzysztof said to me: “You know, Olo, no one is irreplaceable.” And I remember I didn’t sleep all night. It hit me hard. But later came the reflection: damn, he’s right. There will always be someone in the organisation who can complete the priority tasks. That’s what a wise boss is for – to redistribute responsibilities within the team so that what needs to be done gets done.
It’s much better to have people in good shape and condition than to drive them so hard that you work with exhausted, sick people who then quit because of their health.
WHAT IF THE COMPANY HAS A “GRIND TILL YOU DROP” CULTURE?
M: But look, sometimes we have a culture that’s healthy and still I see people who drive themselves into the ground and tighten the screws on themselves just to prove how much they can handle. They should work on that – but they should also hear it from others in the organisation: “Hey, you’re overdoing it. Do something about it, work on yourself.”
There are also situations where the organisation tightens the screws so much that even if I’m competent and self-confident, it’s not easy to be assertive and set boundaries – especially when I live in such a toxic environment.
A: I’m a supporter of transforming companies by transforming people.
M: So I land in such an organisation. Today I like it in many ways, but I think it’s “sick” in terms of what it demands of me, how it pushes people. What options do I have then?
A: The options are these. Option one – I adapt. Then it’s a slippery slope and I’m heading towards the wall. At some point there will be a crash, because we simply cannot deliver all the goals.
Option two – I start to influence and use my sphere of influence in the organisation. And if I have such a sphere, I start changing the company from the inside. I believe that’s the right direction, because the more of us start to influence organisational culture in our companies, the better it will be in the country and beyond.
And option three – I say “stop”. That’s the moment I say: “Stop. I’m leaving this company and I’ll find another organisation, taking my experience into account.” And there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that – sometimes that’s simply what needs to be done.
WHEN IS IT WORTH SETTING BOUNDARIES?
M: I often see how hard it is for people to do that. I’m thinking of many of my clients. I get the impression that they grit their teeth and endure – and one day they throw their resignation on the table. But along the way they lacked that earlier assertiveness and courage to give feedback as things were happening.
A: And that’s extremely important.
M: I always think of this question: What if you went to your boss today and said: “I’ll deliver at the same level as before, you’ll get the same standard. But I’m looking for another job.” Or: “I’m not going to deliver at that level anymore. I’ll be doing 70% of what I used to do, but I’m staying, in this role, with these people.”
I know that in the case of a huge number of good specialists and leaders, the organisation would really want them to stay. Because recruiting, onboarding and so on is an enormous effort. And when I talk about this in workshops, what I hear from people is: “If I set a boundary, they’ll thank me and show me the door.”
A: It’s not that simple.
M: It seems to me we lack a bit of courage to say that something isn’t okay when it comes to boundaries for ourselves. Especially when we earn a lot and have a senior position – somewhere in the back of our minds we hear: “No one said it would be easy.”
A: Yes. In several organisations where I gave very clear signals that I wasn’t happy, there came a moment when I handed in my notice – and I was met with total shock. The organisation did everything in its power to keep me.
And it’s really not like they immediately fire you for going down to 70%. Very often it turns out that you still deliver your goals at 120%. Sometimes slowing down to 70% means much better work automation, better delegation to your team and developing their empowerment. So in reality, when you slow down, the whole organisation starts to speed up – to adjust to the fact that the whole load is no longer on one person.
M: And if you, Aleksander, were to look at yourself through this lens – if you had the superpower to talk to yourself as a young guy entering the business world, from the perspective of taking care of yourself, managing your time and energy – what advice would you give that young man who was pushing hard, had big dreams and ambitions, and was stepping into business? What would you say to him?
A: I’d say: “Take care of yourself.” That would be my first piece of advice. You are the most important person for yourself in this whole process. And set priorities in the right way – not at any cost. Don’t devote all your energy exclusively to the company. Remember Brzeziński’s three gardens – devote the right amount of your life energy to work, to family and to yourself and your recovery. There has to be the right balance.
M: Do you feel you can honestly say that, with that advice, you would still have got to where you are now? If you had actually followed that principle?
A: I think I’d be further. I think I wouldn’t have had my crashes and disappointments, the frustration connected with not being able to deliver what I “should” have delivered.
As we said earlier – whatever we do and however many hours we work, we still won’t be able to meet all expectations. Those expectations will always grow. Every single hour freed up in your calendar will always be filled with additional tasks, meetings – more or less important – that will consume your life energy.
And only by combining all three aspects – family, self/recovery and work – can we function in harmony. Then the energy is distributed properly and the mind works completely differently.
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