By The Sun Team
The conversation surrounding health needed to move beyond aesthetics and short-term fitness goals.
PETALING JAYA: The pursuit of professional success may be creating an emerging health crisis among Malaysiaβs top performers, with an expert warning that long working hours, chronic stress and poor recovery habits are leaving many high-achieving individuals physically exhausted despite their financial accomplishments.
Health and performance specialists say entrepreneurs, executives and business leaders are increasingly paying an invisible price for years of relentless work, raising concerns about the long-term impact on their health and productivity.
According to Transformation Specialist and High Performance Consultant Murad Zaidi, better known as βBaddest Coachβ, many of the successful professionals he works with are excelling in business while quietly struggling with deteriorating health.
βThe irony is that some of the most successful people in the country are also among the most physically exhausted,β he said.
Murad, founder of Badcave Training Facility, holds a Masterβs Degree in High Performance and has spent more than 18 years working with entrepreneurs, corporate leaders and transformation clients.
He said the traditional definition of success has often overlooked the importance of longevity and sustainable performance.
βMany business owners are operating on four or five hours of sleep, relying on caffeine to function, skipping meals, travelling constantly and living in a state of chronic stress. They may be financially successful, but physiologically they are running on borrowed time,β he said.
Murad Zaidi
Murad added that warning signs often develop gradually and are therefore ignored by many professionals.
βWeight gain, declining energy, poor sleep, reduced recovery, loss of motivation and increasing dependence on stimulants are often accepted as part of a busy lifestyle. The problem is that the body eventually sends a bill for years of neglect,β he said.
He said the conversation surrounding health needed to move beyond aesthetics and short-term fitness goals.
βFor many professionals, the goal is no longer six-pack abs. The goal is having the energy to lead, make decisions, stay productive and remain present for their families. Thatβs what performance really means,β he said.
Murad stressed that greater emphasis should be placed on prevention rather than waiting until health problems become serious.
βThe best time to address a health problem is before it becomes a medical condition. Unfortunately, most people only become serious about their health after receiving a diagnosis or experiencing a health scare,β he said.
He added that many business leaders invest heavily in their companies, teams and professional development while neglecting the one asset that underpins their ability to perform.
βIf your health collapses, everything else becomes harder. Your business suffers, your relationships suffer and your quality of life suffers. Health is not separate from success. Health is the foundation that supports success,β he said.
His comments come as Malaysia continues to grapple with rising rates of lifestyle-related illnesses, prompting growing calls for greater awareness of preventive healthcare, stress management, sleep quality and recovery practices.
Murad believes the ability to sustain high performance over the long term will become increasingly important in the years ahead.
βThe future belongs to people who can perform at a high level for decades, not just a few years. Longevity is no longer a luxury. It is becoming a necessity,β he said.
Source: success-taking-a-toll-on-health-of-high-achieving-malaysians-expert-warns
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