Paradise Valley resident Liana Habicht knows firsthand what burnout feels like.
In her mid-30s, she appeared to have it all: an entrepreneur running a thriving business, a lecturer at her alma mater and a high-performance executive networking with top innovators in Silicon Valley. But inside, she said, the success felt hollow.
“On the outside, things looked good,” Habicht said. “I had the image of someone who had it all together. But I felt like I was stuck on a hamster wheel. I wasn’t connected to my business anymore. I felt misaligned.”