Bench Jeweler Better Employee

May 2023

Vic Davis & Associates

Did you know the monthly observances in May include Arthritis Awareness Month, Better Sleep Month, Mental Health Awareness Month, National Walking Month, and Women’s Health Care Month.

Did you also know?
• Blue jeans were official invented in May of 1873 after Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis obtained a patent for the pants on May 20th.
• The birthstone for May is the emerald which represents love and success.
• The zodiac signs for May are Taurus (April 20-May 20) and Gemini (May 21-June 20).
• The birth flower for May is Lily of the Valley.
• The month May was named for Maia, the Greek goddess of fertility.
• In any given year, no month ever begins or ends on the same day of the week as May does.
• May was once considered a bad luck month to get married. There is a poem that says “Marry in May and you’ll rue the day.”
• May is the month of autumn in the Southern Hemisphere, and spring in the Northern Hemisphere.
Most importantly to me, May is the month to celebrate our mothers. When you think about it, who has meant more to you in your life, for most of us, than your mother. She brought you into this world with a nurturing love and care like no other. Take a moment, if it’s appropriate and if you can, and say…”thanks mom for all you’ve done and all you do”.

Things to Ponder…..
* Look up as you walk around today: at the sky, the architecture, the trees, the homes you pass that are each filled with unique lives. Allow yourself to adopt a new perspective by becoming more aware of your surroundings.
* Listen to a new genre of music. Put on a pre-made playlist that may introduce you to new artists and songs or switch up your regular radio station for something different.
* Tell a loved one about the ways in which they inspire you, and all the reasons you love them. Notice how spreading gratitude leaves you feeling uplifted and energized.

Use these 4 strategies to minimize burnout risk

By Marlene Chism

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How leaders can avoid burnout in a high-pressure climate

With the reality of change fatigue, mental health issues, collaboration overload and the demands of leading in a hybrid environment, today’s leader needs strategies to renew energy and avoid burnout. Here are four simple steps with strategies to take immediately.

1. Get your sleep

Before age 61 adults need a minimum of 7 hours sleep each night. Not getting enough sleep has been compared to alcohol impairment, with 24 hours wakefulness to be compared to a blood alcohol level at 0.10%. Poor sleep increases anxiety and raises the risk of suicidal behavior. If you’ve ever been angry, confused or overwhelmed, there’s nothing like sleeping on it to give you a new perspective.
Two practical strategies

  1. Create a workable schedule for retiring and waking, even if you do shift work. The more often you stay on schedule the better your sleep.
  2. Create a wind-down routine. One hour before retiring, lower the lights, unplug from electronics, lay out clothing for the next day. Do some light reading, meditation or journaling to signal to yourself it’s time to wind down.

2. Strengthen your mental fitness
It’s easy to understand the “use it or lose it” meme when it comes to physical fitness, but the same applies to mental fitness. When we get lazy with our thoughts, our thoughts control us. If you’re always thinking thoughts like, “this is hopeless,” or “No one cares,” you’re unconsciously creating new neuro connections for this kind of negative thinking.
Two practical strategies.

  1. In order to bring your unconscious to light you must notice your unproductive thought patterns that commonly arise during stress, for example, “This always happens to me,” or “They’re out to get me.” Carl Jung once said, “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.” Unconsciously we strive to be right about the way we see the world, therefore it’s beneficial to bring to light the negative thought patterns that you sometimes believe to be truth. The key is to notice the thoughts, not to make yourself wrong for discovering them.
  2. Once you’ve noticed the thoughts, it’s time to challenge them. We often think the situation, or another person is the reason for our anxiety or anger, but the story (narrative) is the source of your suffering. Shift the narrative, and your suffering dramatically subsides.

3. Seek regulation before resolution
When you’re angry or frustrated you don’t have the capacity for good decision-making. When you’re unregulated (emotionally upset) you don’t have the ability to be coached or the capacity to effectively coach or care for someone else. Something valuable I learned in narrative coaching is this: You can’t coach an unregulated person. This means if your colleague, patient or employee is unregulated (angry, frustrated or grieving) you can’t help them until they become regulated.
Two practical strategies

  1. Listen first. Whether you’re working with a patient, a colleague or an employee, use radical listening when the other person is unregulated. Radical listening is the ability to listen when every bone in your body would prefer to avoid, advise or admonish. Seek to neutralize the emotion before coaching, advising or offering feedback.
  2. Create space. Sometimes it’s beneficial to step into a new environment in times of stress. Notice when you feel a negative “vibe” in the room during a stressful moment. If so, suggest going to another room to continue a discussion when emotions threaten to overtake you or the other person. A simple, “Let’s go get some air first,” can assist regulation. I call this action “resetting the room.” When you return it’s as if a fresh breeze swept through.

4. Set appropriate boundaries
When you love your work it’s easy to let work take up every part of your life until you no longer have a life. According to Harvard Business Review online, Mission-focused executives, non-profit employees, teachers, principals, nurses and physicians are some of the people most at risk for burnout. From 300 to 400 US physicians take their own lives every year — “a suicide rate dramatically higher than that of the general public, 40% higher for men and 130% higher for women.”
Two practical strategies

  1. Stop rescuing. There’s a difference between helping and rescuing. Helping is teaching a person to fish and rescuing is continually giving the person a fish. If your door has become a revolving one it means your employees see you as the answer instead of learning to find answers themselves. If you believe that things would fall apart if you didn’t fix everything, it probably means you’re taking on things that don’t belong to you.
  2. Allow others the discomfort of growth. When you care, it’s difficult to allow others the discomfort required to grow. If someone is upset because of your boundary, it’s OK for them to be upset. You don’t need to fix their emotional response. The very reason you needed to set a boundary was because you were being taken advantage of. When it comes to setting and enforcing boundaries, someone is going to be unhappy, but it doesn’t always have to be you. Expect others to resist your boundaries but help them grow by not taking on their discomfort.
    Leaders don’t need more data, another whitepaper or a special report to be more effective. The future of work requires leaders to rejuvenate and reset to avoid burnout and handle the demands in a super-charged, high-pressure climate.

Marlene Chism is a consultant, speaker, and the author of From Conflict to Courage: How to Stop Avoiding and Start Leading (Berrett-Koehler 2022). She is a recognized expert on the LinkedIn Global Learning platform. Connect with Chism via LinkedIn, or at MarleneChism.com.