A Self-Care Checklist For Leaders

A Self-Care Checklist For Leaders

October 04, 2024

Despite the momentous rise in media attention given to care, resilience, and well-being since the pandemic began, many of us struggle to implement self-care practices. We know — from research, experience, and anecdotal evidence — that we need to care for ourselves for optimal functioning and to become healthier and more efficient leaders, but putting this into practice is another story. 

There are many reasons, personal and structural, why some leaders struggle to prioritize care for themselves. We all come to self-care with our own perspectives and challenges based on our personalities, experiences, socialization, and family contexts. Leaders also cite a lack of time and knowledge of what to do as barriers affecting their engagement with self-care.

But remember, the emotional labor of leadership alone consumes energy. 

So, how can we integrate self-care as part of embracing and modeling resilient and sustainable leadership? Changing behavior starts with changing your mindset. Then, you can adopt tactical strategies to put these ideas into practice.

Whether you find yourself leading a team at work, school, or simply influencing others in your household and community, the following tips can work for you.

Set yourself up for success
Before you get started, prepare for success by adopting a mindset that lets you:

Give yourself permission to extend care and empathy inward.
If you don’t currently tend to yourself, ask yourself, “why?” What stops you from caring for yourself? Whatever your reason, weigh this against the importance of good health for optimal human functioning. Give yourself whatever permission you need to practice and model what healthy leadership looks like for you in your organization.

Meet yourself where you are.
If this feels foreign or “woo-woo,” build on what you already have in place. Use your annual physical to review your health, identify diet and exercise improvements for when you travel, or use the next team meeting to identify areas where you can ask for help and support from others.

Avoid all-or-nothing thinking.
You won’t move from zero self-care to embracing everything perfectly. This is a dynamic process, offering moments of success and failure, which is normal. When you miss a day of exercise or get less than optimal sleep because of a deadline, you can recalibrate the next day.

Prioritize small and steady.
Identify one or two small changes you can make this week and commit to implementing them on a regular basis. For behavior change, consistency is key. For example, take the stairs at work or listen to your favorite music during some or all of your lunch instead of working through it.

Find an accountability buddy.
If you’d like to prioritize some growth time but have trouble, identify a trusted colleague or family member to remind you to take an hour Friday afternoon for some reflection or to learn something new.

Celebrate and savor.
Congratulate yourself for any efforts you make. Think about how you can extend or savor these moments of creation, satisfaction, or connection a little bit longer before you jump to the next thing on your to-do list.

Your Checklist
Now that you have prepared your mindset, here’s a simple checklist that covers five key components of your self-care: caring for your body, mind, relationships, capacity for choice, and growth.

Take 15 minutes once a week to reflect on your health in each of these five areas, noting what’s been working for you and where you may need to dial up or down to improve.

1. Body budget
Drawing on what professor of psychology Lisa Feldman Barrett refers to as body budgeting, your brain is always predicting your body’s energy needs, determining what is required to keep you alive and flourishing, by calling on past experiences as a guide. You expend energy when you move your body, you replenish it when you eat, drink, and sleep, and you reduce your “spending” when you relax. Other things that affect your energy and the quality of your life that day could be unexpected events, a particularly heavy workload, or times of stress.

Consider that you have a budget of energy that is affected by diet, stress, exercise, and sleep. Give yourself a score out of 5 for your exercise, sleep, and eating habits — at home and on the road — and then look for ways to improve your score.

Here are some leader-tested tips for balancing your body budget on the job:

  • Reduce the number of after-hours/early-morning meetings you take.
  • Invest some time in meal-planning to make healthy choices whether you are at home, in the office, or on the road. Pay attention to hydration and never leave home without your water bottle.
  • Incorporate micro-workouts. Whether it's a 15-minute HIIT or pilates session in your office, walking the stairs in your building throughout the day, or using the coffee or water stations on another floor, these are simple ways to increase movement throughout the day. 
  • When going on the road, plan exercise into your day. Ask if your hotel has a gym (stairs are also great), sign up for local fitness classes in advance, use your favorite workout app, or try a YouTube workout.
  • Practice mindful or no alcohol consumption on the road from airport lounges to client dinners. 

Investing in your diet, exercise, and sleep (however difficult) brings positive mental and physical rewards and improves your mood and functioning in all aspects of life. It is also an excellent way to model what healthy self-care looks like for others.

2. Emotional health
Two main areas that significantly influence leaders’ emotional health is their ability to regulate emotions and their ability to relax.

This ABC framework helps leaders process strong emotions:

  • A – Awareness. What happens when you feel big or strong emotions? What do you think, feel, and do? Are you able to call on your best and most creative thinking and problem-solving skills in this state? 
  • B – Build your intelligence base. Dig deeper. What’s sitting underneath this big emotion? Think: “How can I be more precise about what I am feeling, or what I’ve observed in others, to gain a more accurate view of what is going on?” 
  • C – Communicate. What conversation do you want/need to have? And with whom? 

Another important component of well-being is the ability to relax. Research tells us that time in nature, human touch, stroking your pet, and gratitude practices are great for relaxation. 

If anything relaxing feels foreign to you, start by asking yourself what “relaxed” means for you, and imagine what it might look and feel like if you approached the new work week or an upcoming board meeting presentation in a relaxed manner.

Leaders able to identify and practice ways to relax can better cope with stress, maintaining a balanced body budget.

3. Relationships and collaboration
Think about your relationships with others — how you give and receive support, collaborate, and role-model. We are a social species, and leading is all about relationships and community, making it even more important to model positive relationships and collaborate with intention.

Think:

  • What kind of collaboration do you want to model as a leader? How can you facilitate that?
  • What kind of relationship support do you want/need? (E.g. a coach, therapist, mentor, challenge network, support circle, etc.)
  • Which relationships do you want/need to let go of?
  • How do you want to connect with loved ones?

While a raucous “hello” won’t solve all your leadership challenges, it reminds us that emotions are contagious, and that we can bring more intention to being in relationship and collaboration. Intention also extends to regularly reviewing our relationships to determine which are working, which are not, and what support is required to deliver your mandate and manage your energy.

4. Choice points
The research is clear: As humans we crave autonomy, which implies choice. In fact, one study found that autonomy and choice are key to happiness. We can take control by creating more choice points — moments where we recognize that choice is available to us. This might include choosing whether or not to ask for help, or whether or not to have a difficult conversation. We can further maximize our choices by being intentional about whether our decisions are based on our goals and values. Choice brings into focus our level of comfort with asking for what we want or need, as well as the consequences of action and inaction — ours and others’. 

So, how can leaders create more healthy choice points?

  • Ask yourself: What boundaries would support your well-being at this moment in time? Tip: Experiencing feelings of overwhelm or resentment usually indicates the need for some kind of boundary.
  • Identify three tasks you can delegate to support your time-management and give your direct reports a chance to grow. If you are resistant, lean in and identify what stops you from delegating. For example: Is it a lack of trust in others to deliver, a belief you must do everything yourself, or a lack of trust in yourself to provide the feedback required? Identifying what stops you from choosing to delegate helps you identify where and what you can do to become more skillful.
  • Bring in technology. If time is an issue, conduct a time inventory using either a low-tech method like logging how you spend your time over a week or a time-tracking productivity app (Toggl, Rescue Time, Time Doctor). This can help you understand how you spend your time, identifying patterns and where a boundary might be helpful for productivity and well-being.
  • Invest in your development. Training, coaching, practice, and utilizing online organization platforms all allow you to get more skillful and comfortable in delegating tasks, tracking progress, and ensuring accountability.

Almost everything involves an element of choice.  Mindfully practicing choice produces more resilient leaders.

5. Growth and nourishment
This is about your self-actualization — whatever feeds you at this point in your life and career. For some younger leaders, this is about cordoning off time for parenting, learning, or community mobilization; some mid-career leaders report nourishing activities like singing, mindfulness, and time with their parents.

Neuroscience tells us that learning improves our brain’s neuroplasticity, reshaping the brain’s structure and developing its functions. Creativity, too, builds neural networks, stimulating and enhancing the brain. Meditation also affects neuroplasticity, improving memory and well-being.

For many leaders, this area of self-care can both intrigue and alienate. They might say, "How can I possibly find time?” Yet neuroscience demonstrates that these practices make you more emotionally literate and contribute to a balanced body budget.

Here, the concept of “yes and” is incredibly important. Yes, you may feel time-scarce,andthis is important for your health and well-being and may contribute to greater efficiencies. So, what if you started small? For one CEO, this meant re-engaging in a new way with writing a novel he’d started years ago but never finished. Instead of only working on it when he had three-hour chunks of time, he committed to four 15-minute bursts throughout the week as a minimum — and if he exceeds this, all the better.

What would it feel like if you allocated time each week to something with no other purpose than to nourish you? For some, that may be learning a new language, taking up golf, learning to cook, painting, building, or a spiritual practice. Aim to:

  • Fan your flames. What lights you up or feeds your soul? If you are stuck, ask yourself: If you had all the money and time you desired, how would you choose to spend it?
  • Value your values. Which of your core values needs more attention? Conduct a values clarification exercise to identify your top three values, and review how well you are living in accordance with them.

Growth and nourishment help keep our body budget balanced and make us more well-rounded individuals and leaders. For that CEO, not only did he finish his novel; he also started an employee writing group in his tech startup with standing-room only at their first meeting.

Give yourself permission to practice self-care and remember, there is no one "best way" to do it. This checklist will help you plan your routine. Customize it and make it your own to create more healthy leadership choices, as well as to nourish and care for yourself. It’s vital for your health and well-being, and it’s the smart leadership thing to do.

Regardless of where you stand on self-care, physiology doesn’t lie: Having a balanced body and mind affects how you live, show up, and ultimately, how you lead.

< Previous ArticleNext Article >