56 min

NACAC CEO Angel Pérez—Self-care for counselors, leaders, and professionals in helping roles The College Essay Guy Podcast: A Practical Guide to College Admissions

    • Education

On this episode I chat with Angel Perez to discuss his personal journey with burnout, self-care, and therapy, and I even share some of my own personal journey — and we connect on what it might mean to find more ease, purpose, and joy in our own lives.
This is part 1 of a series I’ll be doing on self-care this year. You’ll notice Angel mentions a morning routine — in part 2 you’ll meet wellness coach Sage Simpson, who will get into the practical specifics of how to create a morning routine for yourself.  
 
On the episode you’ll hear Angel and I discuss:
Angel’s personal experience with burnout How did he address it in writing an article on self-care in college admissions Why self-care is especially important for caretakers and professionals in helping roles Strategies and techniques Angel (and Ethan) use for self care Ways to address shame, and why therapy has been important for Angel What to look forward to at NACAC 2023  
Why these episodes?
Self-care has become a bigger theme at CEG in the past couple of years, particularly coming out of the pandemic—and in my own life. Anxiety and depression are at an all-time high in students, while counselors, leaders, and educators are burning out and switching jobs (Chronicle of Higher Ed reported on a study by the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, or CUPA-HR” noting that 71 percent of coordinators and counselors in the college admissions field have been in their jobs for just three years or less.  
Resources:
Blog post Angel wrote: One CEO's Story of Executive Burnout  
Play-by-play:
[00:00] Intro [2:34] Who is Angel Perez? (Spoiler: he’s awesome) [4:44] What led Angel back towards self-care in recent years? [8:10] How did Angel’s childhood affect his work life today?  [10:15] What inspired Angel’s article on burnout?  [12:30] What are Ethan’s boundaries and personal habits with work? [13:30] How do you recognize when you need self-care, or have behaviors that signal it’s time to step back? [15:36] What is Angel’s morning routine?  [19:00] How to deal with the shame that comes with self-care [21:39] What have Angel (and Ethan) learned in therapy? [26:40] Finding balance vs. coming into balance [28:50] What are some of Angel’s & Ethan’s other self-care and health practices? [32:45] What helps Angel and Ethan get into flow? [39:35] What is NACAC and the college admission field doing well, and what could we do better (in regards to self-care, rest, work culture, etc.)? [43:45] What is NACAC committed to? What should we look forward to at this year’s conference? [46:35] What are we committed to (in regards to increasing access to self-care in our personal/work lives)?

On this episode I chat with Angel Perez to discuss his personal journey with burnout, self-care, and therapy, and I even share some of my own personal journey — and we connect on what it might mean to find more ease, purpose, and joy in our own lives.
This is part 1 of a series I’ll be doing on self-care this year. You’ll notice Angel mentions a morning routine — in part 2 you’ll meet wellness coach Sage Simpson, who will get into the practical specifics of how to create a morning routine for yourself.  
 
On the episode you’ll hear Angel and I discuss:
Angel’s personal experience with burnout How did he address it in writing an article on self-care in college admissions Why self-care is especially important for caretakers and professionals in helping roles Strategies and techniques Angel (and Ethan) use for self care Ways to address shame, and why therapy has been important for Angel What to look forward to at NACAC 2023  
Why these episodes?
Self-care has become a bigger theme at CEG in the past couple of years, particularly coming out of the pandemic—and in my own life. Anxiety and depression are at an all-time high in students, while counselors, leaders, and educators are burning out and switching jobs (Chronicle of Higher Ed reported on a study by the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, or CUPA-HR” noting that 71 percent of coordinators and counselors in the college admissions field have been in their jobs for just three years or less.  
Resources:
Blog post Angel wrote: One CEO's Story of Executive Burnout  
Play-by-play:
[00:00] Intro [2:34] Who is Angel Perez? (Spoiler: he’s awesome) [4:44] What led Angel back towards self-care in recent years? [8:10] How did Angel’s childhood affect his work life today?  [10:15] What inspired Angel’s article on burnout?  [12:30] What are Ethan’s boundaries and personal habits with work? [13:30] How do you recognize when you need self-care, or have behaviors that signal it’s time to step back? [15:36] What is Angel’s morning routine?  [19:00] How to deal with the shame that comes with self-care [21:39] What have Angel (and Ethan) learned in therapy? [26:40] Finding balance vs. coming into balance [28:50] What are some of Angel’s & Ethan’s other self-care and health practices? [32:45] What helps Angel and Ethan get into flow? [39:35] What is NACAC and the college admission field doing well, and what could we do better (in regards to self-care, rest, work culture, etc.)? [43:45] What is NACAC committed to? What should we look forward to at this year’s conference? [46:35] What are we committed to (in regards to increasing access to self-care in our personal/work lives)?

56 min

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