ISSUE 75
25 FEBRUARY 2026 | READ ONLINE
Hi there Reader,
I just got home from a walk (I'm writing this week's newsletter on Tuesday afternoon, and the sun is shining). It was a beautiful hike through my local forest trails. I touched the trees as I passed them, watched the dogs run ahead like they had discovered joy for the first time (again), and caught that impossible blue of Lake Washington through the branches.
And I came home feeling like someone had quietly reset my nervous system.
Which is both lovely and mildly perplexing.
Because I spend a lot of time helping people build beautiful careers, make strategic decisions, and lead with purpose.
And yet, once again, the thing that helped most today was not a framework.
It was a walk.
There’s a part of me that still wants clarity to arrive like this:
A perfect insight.
A color-coded plan.
A 90-minute deep-thinking session with a notebook and a clever pen.
But lately, what seems to be truer is this:
Clarity shows up when I stop chasing it.
It arrives when my body catches up with my brain.
And I think this matters more than we admit, especially for purpose-driven people.
Because if you care deeply about your work, your impact, your family, your future, it’s very easy to start treating your mind like a 24/7 production facility.
Always processing. Always evaluating. Always deciding. Always figuring it out.
But a beautiful career is not built by squeezing harder.
It’s built by learning when to grip and when to release.
That’s what I realized today.
I wasn’t trying to solve anything on that walk.
I was just walking.
And then, without effort, a few things became obvious:
What I’m forcing.
What actually needs my attention.
What can wait.
What I already know but keep postponing because I want a more dramatic answer.
That’s the sneaky power of a walk.
It doesn’t always give you new information.
It gives you access to your own wisdom again.
And the research on this is getting stronger.
A 2024 study (link here) found that higher daily step counts were associated with fewer depressive symptoms, with prospective studies showing lower depression risk at 7,000+ steps/day, and each additional 1,000 steps/day was also linked to lower risk.
A 2024 systematic review in Current Psychology found that nature-based walking interventions improved mood, optimism, mental well-being, and nature connectedness while reducing stress, anxiety, and rumination. In some comparisons, nature walks appeared more beneficial than urban walks for anxiety and rumination.
And one of the most fascinating studies I read (published in Scientific Reports in November 2024) used EEG in a randomized controlled trial and found that after a 40-minute walk, people in the nature-walk group had a greater boost in positive affect and showed brain activity patterns consistent with less attentional strain than the urban-walk group.
In other words:
This is not just going outside because it’s nice, but a legitimate reset for attention, mood, and mental load.
Which brings me back to careers.
So many people I speak to are trying to make important decisions while cognitively fried.
- Should I stay or go?
- Should I apply?
- Should I pivot?
- Should I build something?
- Should I ask for more?
- Should I stop pretending this version of success still fits?
And they’re trying to answer those questions from the exact same state that created the confusion:
Overstimulated. Overcommitted. Overthinking.
No wonder it feels hard.
Sometimes, the next right step in your career does not come from more input.
It comes from creating enough internal space to hear yourself think.
That’s part of what we do at Purpose Pathfinders.
Yes, strategy matters. Yes, positioning matters. Yes, brave action matters.
But so does learning how to come back to yourself.
Because the most beautiful careers are not only well-designed on paper.
They are built by a person who can actually feel what is true for them.
And for me, today, that looked like wet trails, giant trees, happy dogs, and that flash of blue water through the leaves.
Honestly? I’ll take it.
A Small Experiment for This Week
Here are two options, depending on what kind of week you’re having:
Option A: The 20-minute clarity walk
Take a walk without consuming anything.
No podcast. No voice notes. No calls.
Before you go, choose one question:
What am I making harder than it needs to be?
What decision am I trying to make from a depleted state?
What do I already know, but keep avoiding?
Then walk, and notice what happens.
Option B: The 'beautiful career' reset (10 minutes after your walk)
When you get back, finish these sentences:
Right now, my life is asking for more _____ and less _____.
The part of my career that feels most alive is _____.
The part that feels heavy (and why) is _____.
One next step that would feel both brave and kind is _____.
That last line matters. Brave and kind.
Not just brave. Not just productive. Not just impressive.
Kind.
Because there is no prize for building a successful life, you’re too exhausted to enjoy.
If you try the walk experiment this week, hit reply and let me know what you notice.
See you next week,
Quick Links
Book a coaching call
Book a speaking engagement
Book me as a podcast guest
|