It’s Monday morning, and Michael, a senior executive at a global telecommunications company, faces the week utterly exhausted. Only 38, he’s been a high-level leader with the firm for more than a decade. Once, he was a wunderkind, an “energizer” on the fast track to become the company’s youngest-ever CEO. But those days are over. Now, Michael is perpetually depleted, and his pinpoint focus has given way to constant brain fog. He struggles with stress and anxiety every day—a state of mind (and body) that’s killing his performance capacity.
There are many “Michaels” out there, says Marcel Daane, a performance expert who synthesizes best practices from nutrition, exercise and neuroscience. As demands grow and resources shrink, we all struggle to do more with less—and without proper coping skills, we slide down a slippery slope of chronic exhaustion into debilitating burnout. That’s bad news for the middle-age-ish among us who must compete with the endless line of fresh-faced, energetic younger workers jostling for position.
“Working while fatigued once in a while is OK, but when this state becomes chronic, our resilience against stress drops,” notes Daane, author of “Headstrong Performance: Improve Your Mental Performance with Nutrition, Exercise, and Neuroscience.” “Enthusiasm and motivation plunge, and before we know it, we can no longer perform at our best.”
“What’s more, this endless fatigue ages us rapidly,” he adds. “You don’t just feel older than your age; you are older. Your capacity to regenerate the cells in your body and brain falls off sharply.”
That’s right: Stress is a potent cause of neurodegeneration. The brains of people who are chronically fatigued show signs of shrinking, which means stressed executives have about the same brain capacity as people decades older.
“This deterioration of critical brain regions hinders memory processing, strategic planning and the ability to manage anxiety, which are all crucial skills for the executive,” says Daane. “The deficiencies can knock you out of the game. Mental sharpness and the ability to innovate, collaborate and connect are the price of admission in today’s world.”
The good news is we can affect how fast our brain ages, depending on how we treat it throughout life. Research at King’s College in the United Kingdom shows the brains of elderly people who practice a healthy lifestyle are the same as people decades younger.
“The lesson is clear: Overworked executives can go a long way toward keeping their brains young and high-performing,” says Daane. “We may not be able to control our workload, but we can control our lifestyle choices.”
Daane says we may be committing predictable brain-aging “sins” on a regular basis. Here are nine of the most damaging:
Brain-Aging Sin #1: You regularly forgo a daily walk in favor of a flop on the couch. After a long day, it’s tempting to talk yourself out of exercise with a weary, “I’m just too tired.” But sedentary behavior doesn’t reward your fatigued brain and body—it makes you more fatigued. It may sound counterintuitive, but it’s true: Your brain recovers better and faster when your body moves.
Movement produces proteins and hormones in the brain that stimulate memory and make you more alert, notes Daane. One such protein is called brain-derived neurotrophic factor, which is produced only during exercise and works like fertilizer to help new brain cells grow. Thus, a daily walk on a job site, around the parking lot, or through the airport helps keep your energy level up and your brain awake.
“Even short bouts of exercise make a difference,” says Daane. “Just 12 minutes of moderate-intensity cardiovascular exercise, such as brisk walking, improves cognitive function and oxygenation and provides energy. You’ll feel the results right away.”
Brain-Aging Sin #2: You hit the snooze button (again) and run out of time for breakfast. While you’re still lying in bed, it may seem like a good idea to stay there for an extra 30 minutes at the expense of breakfast. But robbing your brain of essential nutrients in the morning is a big mistake. In the same way that an athlete needs fuel for the body to perform and recover from training, an executive needs fuel for the brain to perform and recover from stress.
In fact, says Daane, just as an athlete’s muscles shrink without proper refueling, so do the executive’s “mental muscles.” Neurons in the brain die with repeated exposure to stress, resulting in a loss of brain mass and ability.
To fuel and protect your brain, start your day with breakfast, advises Daane. But don’t zip through the drive-thru window for a biscuit. Instead, choose oatmeal topped with berries, cinnamon and walnuts. This takes only a few minutes to prepare. You may even be able to hit snooze once or twice and still have time to make and eat a healthy breakfast.
Brain-Aging Sin #3: You skip lunch to take an emergency conference call. If your workday includes last-minute meetings, emergency calls regarding material deliveries, staffing issues or other urgent craziness, taking time to refuel your brain can seem impossible. Interruptions can derail the most well-intentioned healthy meal plan. It may be tempting to skip a healthy lunch or snack and just keep working. But how can a brain perform without fuel? It can’t.
“The brain has a minimal capacity to store its own glucose, which is the primary brain fuel, so it relies on you to feed it regularly,” says Daane. “When you skip meals, the regions of your brain responsible for self-regulation, empathy and solution-based thinking begin to shut down. You become hyper-responsive to stress, brain cells in your memory processing centers die, and your brain ages more rapidly.
“Bring your own healthy lunch or snacks to work, so you have food available no matter how crammed your day becomes,” he suggests.
Brain-Aging Sin #4: You don’t stock up on good snacks (so you naturally grab bad ones when temptation strikes). Stress and fatigue are notorious triggers for bad-food binges. That’s why many people grab chips or cookies and mindlessly devour them while multitasking. Daane says the problem is that stress causes chronic brain inflammation, and processed foods like cookies, sodas and cakes only add fuel to the inflammation fire. They speed up brain cell destruction from stress, resulting in memory decline similar to what we see in Alzheimer’s patients.
“If your workplace (or your home) is stocked with cookies, sodas, candies and chips, of course you’ll reach for them when stress hits,” says Daane. “The remedy is to plan ahead. Bring your own healthy snacks—those that build memory capacity, improve physiological brain balance, help you perform complex mental tasks, reduce symptoms of stress and anxiety, and keep you focused—and eat them instead.”
Daane suggests an apple or banana with a handful of almonds or walnuts. Bananas are a quick source of glucose and potassium, and potassium improves physiological brain balance. Cottage cheese is another good option because it includes whey protein that’s been shown to remove symptoms of stress and improve cognitive function. Bring a container of chopped celery, carrots and broccoli with organic almond or coconut butter for dipping. Finally, you can top anything with almonds, which improve cognition and memory.
Brain-Aging Sin #5: You swill coffee and soda instead of water. You may think your morning jolt of caffeine is revving you up, but it really isn’t. Yes, it creates a momentary lift as it blocks neurons in the brain that make you feel tired, but the lift quickly declines and fatigue sets in. The more you consume, the greater the impact of stress on your brain, and the more dehydrated you become. The best hydration is water, which transports nutrients and oxygen into your tissues and brain cells.
“Without enough water, our bodies and brains can’t function properly,” says Daane. “Imagine your blood slowly turning to mud, making it difficult for nutrients to travel throughout your body. Imagine your brain cells turning from juicy grapes to dried-out raisins. Dehydration leads to serotonin deficiency, which means less stress-resilience, more depression, poor sleep and memory loss.”
How much water should you drink to keep your body and brain hydrated? Daane recommends a half-ounce to one ounce of water per pound of bodyweight per day. So someone who weighs 150 pounds needs between 75 to 150 ounces of water per day. An easy solution is to keep a 20-ounce water bottle with you at all times and refill it at least three times a day. Your brain and body will thank you.
Brain-Aging Sin #6: You regularly “relax” with an after-work beer or a nightcap. No one is saying you have to be a teetotaler. The occasional drink with friends is OK. But don’t go beyond one 250-ml glass of wine or two 8-oz glasses of beer a day—at most. Any more and you’re accelerating the aging of your brain.
Alcohol is not so much a relaxant as it is an anesthetic combined with a stimulant, notes Daane. During a stressful day, the brain cells in the hippocampus (our memory-processing center) are stretched beyond capacity. As we drink alcohol, our brains are anesthetized and overstimulated, which causes additional trauma to the hippocampus and compounds the damage. The brain can recover from the occasional trauma of drinking, but if it’s too much and too often, it loses its capacity to recover.
“There are more effective ways to recover from stress,” insists Daane. “You can practice mindfulness meditation, go for a walk or a run, or take a yoga class. All of them reestablish calm in the brain and body, and help you build brain cells rather than kill them. And if you insist on drinking alcohol, train yourself to do so only after relaxation exercises and rehydrating with water.”
Brain-Aging Sin #7: You sacrifice sleep on the altar of work. On occasion we all have to burn the midnight oil to finish a project. Yet many executives and business owners think it’s a badge of commitment to regularly sacrifice sleep in favor of working late or starting up in the wee hours of the morning. The irony is that a bit more sleep would make them far more effective by allowing the body to recuperate and super-compensate (a fancy word that means to store excess energy for the next day).
A chronic lack of sleep has serious effects on brain health and function. One study showed a single 90-minute reduction in sleep decreased performance and alertness by a whopping 32 percent, and another study showed that a chronic lack of sleep caused significant decreases in brain volume and memory. To top it off, poor sleep has also been associated with body fat gain, high blood pressure, heart disease and diabetes.
“We all need different amounts of sleep at different stages of our lives, but the magic number still seems to be around the eight-hour mark,” says Daane. “Aim for eight, but if you find yourself needing to pull an all-nighter, try taking periodic naps during the day. A 30-minute nap can greatly increase alertness, focus and memory.”
Brain-Aging Sin #8: You skip water cooler chats. In today’s always-on technology-fueled culture, it can be tempting to lock yourself in your office or hide away in your cubicle, chasing the rabbits of deadlines all day. No wonder research suggests that more than 50 percent of employees suffer from feelings of isolation at work. And that’s bad for organizational and personal performance.
Humans need interaction and connectivity, just as we need food and water, insists Daane. One study showed that social isolation results in reduced capacity for planning, communicating, impulse control, imagination and empathy. Conversely, social interactions help us learn and see other perspectives. They help us relax and feel happier. They make us more effective when we do return to focusing on work.
“Plan regular social sessions for yourself and your team when you can bond, share and laugh,” says Daane. “Structure your day to allow social time even if your brain tells you it has too much work to do. Some people need much more social time than others, but we all need some form of social connection for optimal brain function.”
Brain-Aging Sin #9: You sit and sit (and sit some more). Every day, millions of executives and office workers suffer the ill effects of sitting too much. Scores of research show that sitting more than six to eight hours a day increases brain stress and early mortality, not to mention exhaustion, stiff necks, heavy limbs and aching backs. If all that isn’t disturbing enough, consider that too much sitting actually thickens your connective tissue over time until you lose your range of motion (not unlike the Tin Man character in “The Wizard of Oz”).
Fact is, the human brain was designed to function best in an environment that required physical movement such as foraging and hunting for food. Many of the brain regions involved in our current daily functions are directly linked to the brain neurons involved in movement. While sitting for hours, the neurons switch off, and your brain’s capacity drops below that of a person who is decades older than you.
“Hardworking neurons need oxygen and nutrients to function, build memory, remain alert and stimulate creativity,” says Daane. “That’s why you must stand up and move around during the day. Stand at your desk, conduct stand-up or walking meetings, take regular walks away from your desk, walk or stand while thinking. These small changes will greatly increase oxygenation and reinvigorate the neurons needed for your brain to excel at any cognitive task.”
It’s unfortunate and ironic that almost everything about our workplace and our culture conspires to harm our performance and make us less competitive, says Daane. That’s why we must make a conscious and deliberate effort to maintain the youthfulness of both mind and body.
“If you’re guilty of any brain-aging ‘sin,’ start now to incorporate small changes that can boost your mental capacity, reverse brain-aging, and give you a competitive edge,” says Daane. “Anyone can become an ‘energizer’ in the workplace. It just requires making a commitment to stop some bad habits before they stop you.”
Marcel Daane is the author of “Headstrong Performance: Improve Your Mental Performance with Nutrition, Exercise, and Neuroscience.” He is considered a pioneer in integrating health and neuroscience to improve performance in executives. As the CEO of Headstrong Performance, a Singapore-based, globally operating boutique consulting firm, Daane helps organizations, leadership teams, and executives transcend their current performance plateaus, manage stress, improve focus, ignite creativity and drive change.
To learn more, visit www.marceldaane.com and www.headstrongperformance.net, and follow the author on Facebook and Twitter.
Headstrong Performance: Improve Your Mental Performance with Nutrition, Exercise, and Neuroscience (Marcel Daane, 2015, ISBN: 978-981-09-3098-1, $29.95) is available at www.headstrongperformance.net and Amazon.com.
BONUS
Stand Tall: Five In-Office Exercises to Build Stress-Resilience and Improve Posture
Most executives sit too much. Waaaay too much. We sit in meetings. In front of the computer. During the daily commute. And all this sitting, along with a lack of physical activity, has devastating effects on the body and the brain. Ready for the sitting list of doom? Too much time in the chair leads to a decline in health, an increase in stress, poor posture and related aches and pains, and an unfocused brain that has a hard time thinking critically and processing memory.
The good news is that it’s not too late to turn these effects around, says Marcel Daane, author of “Headstrong Performance.” By incorporating five simple exercises into your day, you’ll increase the resilience in your body, build muscle strength and reduce aches and pains. You’ll also burn away stress, build brain cells and increase neuron connections that make you more adaptable, self-disciplined and focused.
“These five exercises make you feel better, and most likely look better too,” says Daane. “They don’t require any equipment, and you can do them throughout the day from a private office, a hotel room or at home around the edges of your workday.”
Ready to get started? Daane suggests you start with 10 reps of each of the exercises listed below and gradually increase at your own pace.
Exercise #1: Push-Ups
Main Benefit: Push Away Back and Neck Aches
Too much sitting leads to a weak core, which creates back aches, neck pain, chronic headaches and poor posture. Performing the classic push-up activates core muscles that keep your body straight and ultimately reduces aches and pains. Push-ups also increase your ability to, well, push, which is a required movement in daily life—from opening or closing doors to catching yourself in a fall. “If not practical to do push-ups on the floor during the workday, try doing push-ups against a desk,” Daane suggests.
Exercise #2: Squats
Main Benefit: Pump Oxygen into Your Brain to Help You Stay Calm
During a stressful day (or week or month), the accumulation of stress hormones makes you perceive that stressors are larger than they really are. Performing squats activates the large muscles in your legs and quickly stimulates blood flow and oxygen in your body and brain. This helps to remove stress hormones and allows the brain to remain calmer even in challenging situations. On the practical side, doing squat exercises will make it easier to do movements like getting in and out of chairs and picking up a heavy suitcase.
Exercise #3: Retractions
Main Benefit: Straighten Rounded Shoulders and Pull Life Back into Your Spine
Sitting in front of a computer for hours can result in rounded shoulders and a hunched back. No surprise, but these create back and neck pain, decrease oxygen flow to the brain and ultimately decrease performance. Performing pulling exercises like retractions activates the muscles in your back that are essential for good posture.
They’re not hard to do: Simply stand or sit with an erect spine and your arms outstretched, and imagine holding onto a rope and pulling it toward you without bending your elbows. Squeeze your shoulder blades together, making sure to keep your shoulders relaxed and down. Squeeze every fiber of your back from the base of your neck to your buttocks.
Exercise #4: Lunges
Main Benefit: Melt “Frozen” Connective Tissue and Regain Mobility
Here’s a disturbing thought: When you’re sedentary, the connective tissue that surrounds the muscles, bones, tendons and ligaments becomes thickened over time, making it more difficult to move freely. This increases the risk of chronic back and neck pain, headaches and muscle tension. But the tissue is adaptive to our movement. When we exercise, we actually melt the connective tissue back down to its thin and pliable form. Performing lunges increases our ability to move more dynamically. Lunges also work the muscles that enable us to walk and climb stairs effortlessly.
Exercise #5: Overhead Lift
Main Benefit: Improve Shoulder Mobility and Lift Posture
Too much sitting can lead to a slouching posture with a curved upper spine. Performing exercises that raise your arms overhead results in an upper spine that can maintain its natural erect position, and increases your ability to lift and raise objects.
To perform a basic lifting exercise, stand with your back to a wall and raise your elbows to shoulder height, with your elbows bent at 90 degrees and your palms facing down. Squeeze your elbows into the wall, then raise the backs of your hands to the wall and squeeze them in that position without dropping your elbows.