Facilitating Effective Meetings
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Stress Management
I have never,
nor has anyone I know, perfected a way to avoid stress in daily activities.
Stress relief and stress management are both subjects on which a plethora
of information exists, perhaps too much information. I am going to stick
to basics because you can take these and build upon them and create your
own stress management/stress reduction program tailored to individual
needs. I suggest everyone read Life Management Skills by Joan
Driggers. Many instructors I know use it in such classes as “Becoming
a Master Student” or “Life Skills 101.” The tenets in
this interactive textbook are things we can all follow. Driggers has this
to say about stress: “Stress is a physical and psychological reaction
to events, people and our environment. Notice that definition tells us
the cause of stress is not the event, such as a divorce, but our response
to the event. Knowing this, we can find ways to understand the event and
change our response to it.” Driggers’ textbook has an entire
interactive chapter dealing with stress and identifying symptoms and relief
mechanisms. If you will take time to complete the exercises in this chapter
you will not only understand what causes your stress but, more importantly,
how to deal with it before stress damages your physical and mental well-being.
These simple tips, if put into practice, will help you reduce your stress and allow you to operate at your maximum potential. We all have stress triggers in our lives; we need to identify methods to reduce this stress and keep us productive and having fun in the workplace! |