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How to Manage Your Energy as a Leader

manage your energy as a leader

How to Manage Your Energy as a Leader

If you are trying to manage your energy as a leader, you already know rest alone does not fix it. You have tried the earlier bedtime and the long weekend, and still feel hollow by Wednesday.

Here is the short version. The fix is not more rest. It is mapping what drains you, what restores you, and what quietly leaks your capacity, then acting on one category at a time.

Why Doesnt Rest Fix a Leaders Energy

Rest fixes tiredness. It does not fix depletion caused by misalignment, which is the leak most advice misses entirely.

Because of this, a leader can sleep eight hours, take the vacation, and come back just as hollow. The gap was never physical. It was the distance between the role you perform and who you actually are underneath it.

Picture the leader who takes two weeks off, sleeps in every day, and walks back into the same meeting feeling exactly as flat as before. Nothing about the trip failed. The mismatch simply followed them home.

That said, this is not permission to skip sleep and nutrition. Those are the floor. They are just not the ceiling, and treating them as the whole fix is why rest keeps failing you.

What Actually Restores a Leaders Capacity

In Monday’s piece, The Energy Problem Rest Cant Fix, I walked through the full Energy Architecture behind this. Today’s piece is the short version, built for one thing: what to actually do.

Name Your Drains

Be specific. Not meetings. The Tuesday standup with the person who relitigates every decision. The report nobody reads. Vague categories produce vague fixes.

Protect Your Sources

Name what actually restores you, not what should. Then treat it like a real meeting on your calendar, since an unscheduled source is just a hope, not a practice.

Even so, most leaders can list their drains instantly and go blank on sources. That gap alone is worth twenty minutes of honest thought this week.

Close Your Leaks

This is the one leaders skip. The favor you said yes to eighteen months ago. The project you keep out of guilt instead of conviction. Leaks drain slowly and rarely show up as one bad day.

In fact, leaks are usually the most expensive category, precisely because nothing about them looks urgent enough to fix.

How to Manage Your Energy as a Leader This Week

Skip the full audit. Start with one leak. Give yourself twenty minutes and name the first commitment you are doing out of guilt, not conviction.

Next, pick one to end this week. Just one. The goal is proof that ending a leak does not collapse anything, not a complete overhaul.

From there, name your top drain with real specificity. Ask a harder question than how to avoid it: is it actually necessary, or have you simply never questioned it?

Finally, protect one source deliberately, on the calendar, at the same priority as a client meeting. That single scheduling decision does more than a week of good intentions.

In practice, that is the whole shift. You are not managing your calendar for balance. You are managing three specific categories, one at a time, starting this week.

Every week I send frameworks like this one to mid-career leaders who are still building. Join free.


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