Being Mentally Strong Is About How
You Recharge, Not How You Endure
We were
led to believe that being tough means you can endure more. The more we work,
the more resilient we become. When we think we don’t have the strength anymore,
but we still get up and keep going – that’s what we think resilience is. How
wrong we all are about what it really means to be resilient. If we deprive
ourselves of deep relaxation and recuperation, we’ll become less and less
resilient and less and less productive. To keep the balance and to keep our
brains healthy, we need to truly unwind and step back from what we are doing.
According to a study, the
recovery time is the precondition for healthy life and for avoiding
occupational stress. If we exhaust our bodies to the limits, we’ll eventually
break down, whereas keeping a healthy balance between working and resting will
help us accomplish all our tasks and not feel overwhelmed.
Without resting, you become less successful
To always
be productive and to do our best at performing every task, the key is to let
our body and mind recover from everyday obligations imposed by our jobs. If you
look at how we work, we can see why it’s important to let our bodies recharge.
We tend to deprive ourselves of sleep in order to get more things done, but we
don’t realize to what extent we harm our bodies and that it will have the
opposite effect. Sleep deprivation impairs our attention, working memory,
long-term memory and decision making ability. It
also has a negative impact on homeostatic processes, which are necessary for
our bodies to restore balance and keep us healthy.
Feeling
recovered in the morning from the previous day allows us to be fully
focused on what we are doing and to perform to the best of our abilities.
And consequently, if we proceed to think about our work even when we go to bed,
it will result in us waking up feeling fatigue, even though we had enough hours
of sleep, and we won’t be able to fully focus on our work the next day.
Leave your work physically and mentally
True
recovery means not only to leave the office, come home and lie down. We need to
give our brains some time to recover by doing activities that will lead to true
state of relaxation. Lying down and thinking about the pile of work we have to
deal with the next day will produce no positive results and we’ll end up
feeling exhausted even though we practically did nothing – that is because our
brains require rest too. Try doing some fun creative activity that will take
your mind off work and allow you to recuperate. Non-work related creative
activities have positive effects on the performance at work place. So, get creative and unwind.
Take time to recover
Find the
time every day for activities that will help you to unwind. You can take your
time and read your favorite books, watch a comedy movie, look at funny
pictures, even buy a coloring book for adults and see all the stress
disappear as you unleash your creativity. Use the time, for example, when
you are commuting to and from work to listen to some music that makes you
happy, or to call your friends and chat about some non-work related topics. If
you can’t stop thinking about your work when you go to bed, you can try
meditating for 15-30 minutes each night before you go to sleep. It will help you
clear your mind of all worries.
In order
to stay healthy and energized, it’s important to know when to stop, take a
break and recharge. If you don’t let your body recover, you’ll always feel
exhausted, and thus less able to do your best. Pushing yourself to the limits
doesn’t mean you are resilient, knowing how to keep the balance between working
and resting does.
http://www.lifehack.org/521684/being-mentally-strong-is-about-how-you-recharge-not-how-you-endure?ref=mail&mtype=daily_newsletter&mid=20170127_customized_editor_pick&uid=687414&hash=707e797f7e757e6d794c856d747b7b3a6f7b79&action=click
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