This overlooked self-care habit makes a world of difference.
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The start of a new year carries the promise of renewal on many fronts. One of them is self-care. As goals are mapped out, priorities clarified, and plans refreshed, CEOs and senior leaders often approach this moment with renewed focus and forward momentum.
Yet despite new intentions, most leaders don’t actually begin the year from a clean slate. While objectives may change, leaders’ internal carryover often remains. What wasn’t resolved in the prior season doesn’t disappear simply because the calendar turns.
And that matters, because what remains unresolved doesn’t stay neatly in the past: it travels into the first quarter, into early decisions, and into how priorities are interpreted and pursued. Starting the year strong isn’t only about setting better goals. It’s about ensuring that nothing unnecessary is carried into the decisions that follow.
The Cost of Carryover On Self-Care Is Rarely Obvious
Unresolved carryover rarely announces itself. Its effects tend to accumulate in the background, shaping how leaders operate long before they can pinpoint a specific problem.
The earliest signals are subtle. Mental sharpness isn’t quite where it should be. Focus feels inconsistent. Energy fluctuates without a clear explanation. These shifts are easy to dismiss in isolation. Over time, however, those internal disruptions begin to surface more visibly.
Leaders may notice changes in their health, resilience, or vitality that seem disconnected from their routines or intentions, without recognizing that those outcomes are often downstream from their unresolved internal strains and conflicts.
For leaders operating at scale, this matters, as minor distortions in judgment repeated over weeks and months compound. This steady compounding shapes outcomes that affect not only the organization, but the people and families who depend on it.
Why Self-Care for CEOs Isn’t About Doing More
When self-care is discussed in leadership circles, it’s often framed as something to add: another habit to adopt, a routine to install, or a discipline to layer onto an already crowded operating system. That framing misses a more consequential reality.
When unresolved weight persists—whether cognitive, emotional, or physical—it narrows a leader’s perspective and shows up in their everyday performance. Effective self-care, in this context, isn’t about accumulation.
It functions as a discipline of protecting the internal conditions that allow leaders to think clearly, act decisively, and remain aligned with their standards, especially as demands intensify. This notion is why, early into a new year, the most crucial self-care question isn’t what needs to be added, but instead, what needs to be cleared before moving forward.
The Forgotten Self-Care Habit
The most consequential, and often forgotten, self-care habit for CEOs and other top operators at the start of a new year is deliberate release.
This habit isn’t about blocking out the past or pretending missteps didn’t happen. It’s about closing internal loops—mentally, emotionally, and professionally—so they no longer tax a leader’s attention, energy, or internal state.
Leaders accumulate weight in many forms: unresolved outcomes, lingering frustration, disappointing quarters, failed ventures, unspoken tensions, personal matters, and decisions made under pressure that never entirely settle. Left unaddressed, those remnants shape how leaders assess risk, interpret priorities, engage with their teams, and respond to stress.
A deliberate release creates a separation between what happened and what comes next. Without that separation, even well-defined goals operate through the lens of the previous year and, often, the previous version of the leader.
Self-Care As A Leadership Imperative
What leaders choose to carry forward doesn’t just affect how they feel. It shapes how they interpret situations, what they tolerate, and how clearly they operate as the year unfolds. Entering a new cycle with unresolved weight means every decision that follows is filtered through something outdated.
That’s why deliberate release is part of maintaining the conditions required for sound judgment, sustained performance, and long-term health. Leaders who treat this often-overlooked self-care habit as a priority give themselves an underrated advantage: the ability to operate from the present rather than react through past residue.
Bruce Lee once shared, “There are no limits. There are only plateaus.” For leaders, moving beyond those plateaus often has less to do with adding more, and more to do with removing what no longer belongs. That act of release is the self-care habit that separates leaders who move through the year deliberately from those who spend it managing what they never put down.

