The Modern Humanitarian and Development Leader: Make a Greater Impact by Creating a High Performance Team while Avoiding Stress and Overwhelm

The Difference Between Handling Stress and Hiding from It


Listen Later

Are you trying to reduce stress by changing jobs, teams, or organizations—only to find the same pressure showing up again somewhere else?

In the humanitarian and development sector, stress often feels unavoidable due to funding uncertainty, demanding workloads, and high expectations. If you’ve ever wondered why burnout patterns repeat even after changing roles, this episode explores a powerful shift that can help you handle pressure differently and lead with greater resilience and clarity.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

  1. Why changing your circumstances alone often doesn’t eliminate stress in high-pressure humanitarian environments.
  2. How shifting from avoidance to leadership growth can help you handle challenges without being consumed by them.
  3. Practical reflection questions that help you identify where stronger boundaries and self-leadership can transform your experience at work.

Press play now to learn how to break recurring stress patterns and become the kind of leader who can navigate pressure with confidence and control.

Watch on YouTube Here


Ready to Lead with Clarity — Even in Uncertainty?

If this episode resonated with you and you’re ready to stop reacting and start leading with intention, I invite you to join Becoming the Modern Humanitarian and Development Leader.

In this six-week course, you’ll clarify the impact you want to have, let go of habits that keep you overextended, empower your team, and gain back time while increasing your effectiveness.

The next cohort begins March 10th.

Learn more and register here: https://www.aidforaidworkers.com/modern-course

I’d love to support you inside the course.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Modern Humanitarian and Development Leader: Make a Greater Impact by Creating a High Performance Team while Avoiding Stress and OverwhelmBy Aid for Aid Workers

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

17 ratings