<p>Striving for a balanced life has other benefits beyond just supercharging your creativity by taking advantage of your subconscious and leaving yourself the energy to be open to new ideas.</p> <p>If you have a balanced world view you'll find that when you have failures, or when you experience setbacks, you will not fall as far or land as hard.</p> Having a balanced life has other benefits beyond just supercharging your creativity by taking advantage of your subconscious and leaving yourself the energy to be open to new ideas (and execute on them).If you have a balanced world view you’ll find that when you have failures, or when you experience setbacks, you will not fall as far or land as hard. This is true for either personal or professional failures (if you’re experiencing both at the same time, you’re just going to have to settle in for a patch of rough air).Of course we’ve been focused primarily on the work side of the balance equation—that is, not investing all of you energy, identity, and perception of self into your work. But it’s completely possible to go the other way, too, and identify yourself solely through one or more facets of your personal life: your kids, for example. It’s not that focusing solely on work is bad because your focus is work, or that focusing solely on your family is bad because you shouldn’t focus on family per se. The point is that focusing completely on any one thing is going to set you up for serious knocks to your self image. If you are doing anything challenging, learning anything new, and in general making a difference you are going to have failures. You need a cushion to land on when you fall.Strong leaders seek balance in all aspects of their lives, and encourage it in others. Careers