After he moved from Queens, N.Y., to Olympia, Wash., Steve Francks discovered backpacking. Long days on the trail allowed him to take in the beauty of the moment.

“If I think about work, it’s not about details and little things,” says Francks, RCE, CAE, CEO of Washington REALTORS®. “It’s about big-picture stuff. Being able to decompress like that lets me come off the trail with greater energy and enthusiasm for my job. I first experienced that in a big way when I hiked the Wonderland Trail, a nine-day, 93-mile trip around the base of Mount Rainier that is physically demanding and incredibly beautiful. I was so recharged that I made backpacking a priority every summer.”

According to the American Institute of Stress, 76% of American workers say their work-related stress has caused tension in their personal lives. Francks found a healthy way to destress and reconnect with loved ones. “My wife is an avid and strong backpacker, and we’ve done a lot of great trips together,” he says.

Hiking plays a part in Cindy Butts’ well-being, too, and she often incorporates her love of the outdoors when traveling for work. “The Code of Ethics includes the beautiful preamble, ‘Under all is the land,’” says Butts, RCE, CAE, CEO of Connecticut REALTORS® in East Hartford, Conn. She began by hiking Connecticut’s 52-mile stretch of the 2,190-mile Appalachian Trail, and then she was hooked. “I hiked parts of the Shenandoah National Park section over a series of years when traveling to D.C. for the REALTORS® Legislative Meetings, and parts of the Georgia section when traveling to Atlanta for the AE Institute,” she says. “When hiking, I’m so mindful of—and connected to—the gifts of clean air, clean water, natural resources and green space. Those don’t leave my head or heart as I work on real estate legislative and regulatory issues.”

Both Francks and Butts have managed workplace stress by practicing self-care through outdoor activities, but they might be in the minority. Many people do not recognize when they are nearing burnout or experiencing too-high stress.

“There has been [extensive research] on people who are in the helping professions,” says Amelia Roeschlein, a consultant at the National Council for Mental Wellbeing in Washington, D.C. That includes both association executives and their members. “If your job is dealing with people, and you’re good at it, often you have a high amount of empathy for others. The problem is that you may tend to be incredibly self-critical.”

Finding a Passion is Self-Compassion

Roeschlein suggests that leaders should observe how they are treating themselves during stressful times, pointing out that executives often push themselves to produce more and to accomplish more.

“What we find is that people who are kinder to themselves during hard times tend to fare much better,” she says. “Have a practice of well-being where you ask yourself, ‘Am I overwhelmed? How full is my cup?’ Even when it is full, you need to take care of yourself.”

One helpful tool that Roeschlein points executives to is an online quiz called The Self-Compassion Test, at self-compassion.org, that can help you measure how self-compassionate you are and offers practices to help you balance and decompress.

Francks says that he realized backpacking was positively affecting his work when he started coming off the trail with new creative ideas. “I’m convinced that we have lots of information and challenges overwhelming our brains every day, but we rarely have time to just sit and contemplate answers or strategies,” he says. “I find that getting away to the wilderness for days, or even a day hike, with no cell service, lets me forget about the daily stressful details of the job and lets crazy ideas pop into my head and percolate. Some of my best ideas have come to me on the trail with a sudden sense of clarity, as though they rose out of my subconscious.”

"Just like in golf, workplace mistakes that aren’t reckless or intentional are learning experiences. I always give my staff another shot." — Duncan MacKenzie, RCE, CEO of New York State Association of REALTORS®

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