📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Rough Day at Work? Exercise and Sleep Are the Best Ways to Shake It Off. A new study shows that getting enough exercise and shut-eye will stop your temper from getting the best of you.

By Nina Zipkin

entrepreneur daily
Shutterstock

We all have those days when the stresses of work follow us home.

But a recent study published in the Journal of Applied Psychology has found that two simple activities -- exercise and sleep -- can go a long way toward not only making you feel better, but also making sure that your bad day doesn't affect your home life.

Researchers from the University of Central Florida, the University of Illinois and the University of Wisconsin asked 118 MBA students with full-time jobs to wear activity monitors for a week. They also surveyed the people whom those participants lived with.

Related: Stressed Out? Three Tips to Build Resilience

They found that participants who took a daily average of 10,900 steps were less likely to take out their frustrations on their loved ones than those who took an average of less than 7,000 steps a day.

The study also found that burning about 587 calories can translate to shaking off a tough day and stop an individual from bringing work issues home with them. The authors recommended activities such as walking and swimming.

The researchers also identified a link between engaging in activity and feeling rested the next day, noting that "workplace undermining is associated with poorer (perceived) sleep quality and, in turn, greater home undermining, but only among individuals who reported exercising less, took comparatively fewer steps each day and expended less energy."

Related: 7 Ways to Live With Job Stress That Isn't Going Away

In other words, those who exercised found they got a better night's sleep, and those who slept better were less likely to have their work issues spill over into their home life.

If an employee has "been belittled or insulted by a supervisor, they tend to vent their frustration on members of their household," UCF College of Business management professor Shannon Taylor explained in a release accompanying the study. "Our study shows that happens because they're too tired to regulate their behavior."

Get a good night's sleep, get some fresh air and get active. Your employees, colleagues and especially your loved ones will thank you for it.

Nina Zipkin

Entrepreneur Staff

Staff Writer. Covers leadership, media, technology and culture.

Nina Zipkin is a staff writer at Entrepreneur.com. She frequently covers leadership, media, tech, startups, culture and workplace trends.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Leadership

6 Guiding Principles Behind Every Successful Company — And Why You Should Follow Them to Excel

Certain common characteristics that I identified after analyzing the top companies currently active in the market can aid in achieving success. And all of them are applicable to every business.

Business News

These $1 Bills Could Be Worth $150,000 — Here's How to Check If One Is in Your Wallet Right Now

There are an estimated six million of these erroneous bills in circulation.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Gen Z Is Increasingly Turning to Trade Schools as a Fast Track to Entrepreneurship and an AI-Proof Career

Trade school enrollments increased last year as undergrad degree completion dropped.

Side Hustle

When This Entrepreneur Couldn't Decide What to Name His Business, He Started a $2,000-a-Month Side Hustle to Help — Now It Earns Over $10 Million a Year

Darpan Munjal, founder and CEO of AI-powered startup ecosystem Atom, offered $50 to anyone who could help with the creativity block.

Starting a Business

Here's What 86% of Hourly Workers Say Would Actually Make Them Happier at Their Jobs. (Hint: It Isn't More Money.)

John Waldmann, the CEO and co-founder of the small business team management app Homebase, discusses the launch of his business and the findings from his company's small business fulfillment survey.