Everest: The Transformative Power of Nature: 8 Big Lessons from Everest with David Picton
- Jackie De Burca
- August 23, 2025
The Transformative Power of Nature: 8 Big Lessons from Everest with david picton

At Constructive Voices, we’re not only about the place and the things that happen within the built environment, we’re also about how the places are directly connected with us as people. Along with the creatures around us and how that actually plays out in various ways within our lives.
Today we’re with David Picton. Now David will also be visiting you again in another episode, but in this particular episode, David, who’s the Senior Vice President of Safety and Sustainability at EcoOnline, is going to speak to you about his visit to the Everest Base Camp and how this is a mirror for his life as it has been to other people also.
Listen To The 26-Minute Podcast Below

In this conversation, David Picton shares his transformative journey to Everest Base Camp, discussing the profound connection he felt with nature, the communities along the trail, and the importance of teamwork and collaboration.
He reflects on the physical and mental challenges faced during the trek, the sustainability efforts observed in the region, and the life lessons learned from this extraordinary experience.

Why it matters to you
Manage your energy, not just your time. Altitude makes every step count; your week does the same. Pacing wins.
Anxiety doesn’t mean stop—it means manage. David hit a wall at ~14,000 ft and adjusted, step by step.
Teams beat heroes. Five strangers became a safety net—hydration checks, hard truths, small celebrations.
Attention is a choice. On a dusty, risky trail, lifting your head to the view changes your state immediately.
Sustainability is practical, not abstract. Solar kettles, micro-hydro, “carry a kilo back” trash schemes—simple actions that add up.
Gratitude resets your baseline. Four days without soap or running water makes that first sink at home feel miraculous.

How a place becomes life-changing
Awe reorganises priorities. Standing below those peaks, you remember what matters—and what doesn’t.
Friction reveals values. Dust, cold, thin air: when comfort falls away, character shows up.
Community redefines strength. Sherpas, porters, teammates—nobody gets far alone.
Simplicity clarifies. Food, water, sleep, warmth, safe footing. Strip life to its essentials and decisions get cleaner.
Perspective returns with you. Back home, the “ordinary” is extraordinary: a hot tap, a light switch, a friendly smile on the bus. Keep noticing.

Takeaways from David Picton
- Everest Base Camp was a life-changing experience for me.
- The connection with nature was profound and beautiful.
- Teamwork was essential for overcoming challenges on the trail.
- I learned to rely on others and the power of collaboration.
- The physical challenges pushed my limits further than I expected.
- Sustainability efforts at Everest are crucial for future generations.
- Every day on the trail reminded me of what we take for granted.
- Our attitudes can significantly impact our experiences.
- Sometimes we need to accept realities rather than resist them.
- I returned with a sense of peace and calm that stays with me.

The 8 big lessons (and how to use them)
Choose your pace. The mountain forces you to move “at the pace of the slowest yak.” In life, set a sustainable cadence: schedule recovery, protect deep-work blocks, and leave buffers.
Start before you feel ready. You plan, then you begin. Momentum turns unknowns into information.
Name the fear, walk anyway. Bridges sway; hearts race. Pick a fixed point, breathe, take the next step. Apply it to tough emails, first pitches, or hard conversations.
Small wins compound. Each village reached is proof you’re moving. Break your week into waypoints and celebrate progress, not perfection.
Carry your share. On the trail, everyone hauls something—water, a teammate’s pack, a bag of trash for recycling. At work and at home, share the weight you can actually lift.
Resourcefulness beats resources. Solar mirrors boiling kettles; tiny hydro setups powering homes; recycled bottle-top souvenirs funding education. Constraints spark creativity—use them.
Choose your attitude. Weather changes. Plans change. Your stance is still yours to pick.
Look up. Don’t let risk or routine steal awe. A 10-second view break can reset your nervous system and focus.

Everest Base Camp is a mirror. It shows you your pace, your fears, your dependence on others, your capacity to adapt—and your ability to choose your attitude. Bring that home, and a faraway mountain changes your everyday life.
“But the place that can support and/or challenge you to do better is not always such an obviously dramatic one. It may be so ordinary most people don’t even know its name. But it can still help you push beyond your boundaries.”

About David PIcton
David is Senior Vice-President of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) at EcoOnline. He has substantial experience across construction, supply chain, operations, and strategy. His previous roles have included Chief Sustainability Officer and an original Board member of the Supply Chain Sustainability School.

Courtesy of David Picton
Prior to EcoOnline, he held Director and Executive roles in the technology, media, infrastructure and public sectors, started an independent advisory practice and served for 20 years as a senior military officer.
He also achieved the Queen’s Enterprise Award for Sustainable Development and presented the benefits of responsible business to the UN in Geneva.

Meet some other guests who have spoken about their places:
“I just hope all this new development is done well. There’s a huge amount of ambition around Cork—but not enough legislation to measure the environmental impact.” Stephen Barrett
Discover more in the Sustainable Snapshot of Cobh
“Planning makes all the difference—and Zurich plans with purpose.” Anna Haas
Tune into Zurich: A Living Lab for Sustainable Cities
“Nature has thought of everything to keep everything in place and in balance. It’s just us who’ve gone in and disrupted everything because we don’t know. And we should make it our job to know, to understand.” – Sangeeta Waldron
Listen to the award-winning Sangeeta Waldron on Enfield Where Community Meets Nature.
sharron boulton
3 weeks agoGreat insights for use every day – absolutely inspiring – thank you for sharing !
Jackie De Burca
3 weeks agoThank you so much, Sharron. David Picton is an amazing guest. He is inspirational. We will let him know about your comment.
Best wishes,
Jackie
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