#straightfromcait: Top 6 Environmental Factors that Burn You Out
Sep 1, 2024
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Discover how your environment influences burnout levels. From the calming effects of natural light to the mental boost provided by green spaces, small adjustments can make a big difference. Learn how clutter affects your stress and how even the arrangement of your cutlery can impact your mood. Find out which colors promote calmness and explore ways to enhance safety and beauty in your home. Each tweak you make can reclaim your energy and joy, helping to cultivate a supportive atmosphere, even if you live alone.
Access to green spaces or incorporating plants into your home is crucial for reducing stress and enhancing mental well-being.
Natural light exposure, especially during key hours, regulates hormonal cycles and significantly improves sleep quality and mood stability.
Deep dives
The Importance of Green Space
Lack of access to green spaces significantly increases vulnerability to stress and burnout. Engaging with nature, whether through parks, forests, or even just observing the sky, can decrease stress levels and enhance the function of the parasympathetic nervous system. Research suggests that walking outdoors for at least 40 minutes three times a week can improve cognitive functions affected by chronic stress, including the prefrontal cortex. For those in urban settings without easy access to such areas, bringing plants into the home serves as an alternative to foster a connection with nature.
Harnessing Natural Light
Exposure to natural light, particularly during dawn and dusk, plays a critical role in regulating hormonal cycles and promoting overall well-being. Engaging with the natural blue light during these hours can help set a healthy rhythm for cortisol and melatonin secretion, which contributes to better sleep and mood stabilization. Individuals can improve their routines by minimizing screen time during key hours and incorporating outdoor time to maximize their exposure to natural light. Even small adjustments, like avoiding phone use first thing in the morning or taking breaks outside, can make a tangible difference in stress management.
Creating a Safe and Beautiful Environment
Feelings of safety within one’s home environment are essential for mental well-being, as a lack of safety often contributes to chronic stress and burnout. Simple adjustments, such as decluttering and evaluating storage methods, can enhance feelings of safety and improve overall mental clarity. Additionally, enhancing the aesthetic appeal of one’s space—through paint, decorations, or better-quality furnishings—can profoundly impact stress levels, fostering a more relaxing atmosphere. Making these changes doesn't have to be overwhelming; even small steps, like rearranging furniture or introducing new lighting, can significantly enhance one’s quality of life.
“Making yourself feel good in your own space is really important,” urges host Cait Donovan on today’s episode of FRIED, the second in a six-part series dedicated to the various factors that make us more vulnerable to burnout. Following the episode which covered factors in the workplace, today’s episode discusses the impact of our environment—both interior and exterior—on our parasympathetic nervous system and our ability to handle stress. Today, Cait will cover the importance of light exposure—and lack thereof—as well green spaces, clutter piles, and when. You’ll learn why even the way you store your cutlery can change the way you feel in your own space.
No matter how much time, energy or money you have to devote to changing your environment—every little adjustment makes a difference. Cait shares research and science behind her suggestions, while also encouraging you to cater to your own individual preferences. She’ll share the three colors that are proven to inspire calm in the home, how to increase the function of your prefrontal cortex and how to create community around you even when you live alone.
Ready to leave burnout behind for good? Join UNFRIED: A Small Group Burnout Recovery Program and start reclaiming your energy and joy. Apply today! https://bit.ly/unfryapply
What small shift can you make in your environment in the next week? With that one small change you will begin to buy yourself the energy you will need to make the larger changes in your burnout recovery.
Quotes
“A lot of times, this is something that we have a lot of control over for relatively low cost—if not totally free—and we’re not thinking about it because so much of the “self-help” work out there is about fixing your mindset, and managing your perfectionism and doing something about your boundaries. Sometimes, when you can’t do any of those things, I want you to know there is still something you can do, some changes you can make, some influence you can have without having to be focused on doing all this work all the time.” (2:02 | Caitlin Donovan)
“When you view the sunrise and view the sunset and your eyes are exposed—there are actually cones and rods in your eyes that are exposed to a particular level of blue light that’s given out during those hours, that help to set off your hormonal cascade, the circadian rhythm of your hormonal cascade properly.” (6:49 | Caitlin Donovan)
“When we’re thinking about burnout recovery, we [often think] ‘Go boundaries, and have these conversations and maybe even quit your job or talk to your manager,’ and do all these big life things. Sometimes, the first thing you need to do is buy a round nightstand or something else equally seemingly insignificant in your world that will help lower your stress level so that you can manage the other things in your life with more ease so that you have more buffer in your stress response system to be able to handle the rest of life.” (13:41 | Caitlin Donovan)
“You should feel community within your household if there are other people who live with you, and/or around your household. So, if there is no community at all in your neighborhood, even if the only community you have is that you have a dog and the fellow dog walkers say hello to each other when they’re out, that matters.” (17:32 | Caitlin Donovan)
Burnout doesn’t have to be your story. Apply to UNFRIED: A Small Group Burnout Recovery Program and start your journey toward lasting recovery. Spots are limited—apply now! https://bit.ly/unfryapply