home coaching training counseling articles books about susan fee resources contact  

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for Susan Fee's Communication Tip Sheet Email Newsletter
 

 

 

 

21 Days to Managing Your Stress

Friendship

Bull's-eye

 

Dealing With Difficult People

Tips Booklet

 
Susan Fee:  Communication Tip Sheet
December 2011 Edition

In This Issue

News & Notes: Enjoy This Present

Topic of the Month: Managing Your Stress

Questions for Reflection

Action Step

...................................

News & Notes: Enjoy This Present

We have officially entered the season of temptation! I don’t know about you, but I know the holiday seasons tempts me to do, eat, and spend too much until I’m operating on auto pilot just to survive.  Stress can put a strain on our communication and relationships.

We can easily become distracted by worrying about the future (anxiety) or lamenting about the past (depression), rather than living in the present.  Mindfulness is remaining present-focused and is highly beneficial in controlling anxiety, depression, and stress. 

The best present you can give yourself is to stay “present.” Please enjoy this month’s tips, excerpted from 21 Days to Managing Your Stress.  Why not make today Day One?

 

Until next month,

And, just for fun and inspiration, take a look at this speech by d

Susan Fee


Topic of the Month: Managing Your Stress

Stress is personal.  It’s not a separate entity that exists outside of you, but how you react to the world around you. It isn’t necessarily bad, either.  In fact, a certain level is healthy and productive. Your body and brain were designed to experience short spurts of high tension known as “fight or flight” when you choose to either conquer the situation or escape from it. 

However, you were not designed to endure chronic stress where you stay in the “fight” mode for weeks and months at a time.  Unhealthy levels of stress can make you feel drained, irritable, and physically sick.  Sound familiar?  If so, consider these tips from

21 Days to Managing Your Stress.

 

Banish All-or-Nothing Thinking.  Your thoughts direct your actions so it’s important to challenge skewed perceptions.  All-or-nothing thinking limits the way you see the world.  Statements like, “Nothing ever goes right,” or “Everyone hates me,” are rarely true.  It’s more accurate to say that some things go well while others don’t, or some people like you and others don’t.  If you’re convinced that you never succeed, then you’ll miss the times you occasionally do.  Describe your situation using specifics that are truthful rather than relying on blanket statements.  Gain an accurate perception by paying attention to the exceptions to your stress. 

Change the Question.  When you’re stressed, your mind can lock in on repetitive thoughts that leave you feeling even more exhausted.  Usually, they’re questions that create more worries or that you can’t answer.  If the questions you’re asking make you feel stuck and powerless, change the question.  Start by replacing “why” with “what” or “how.”  For example, instead of asking, “Why is this happening?” or “Why did they do that?” ask, “What can I do for myself right now?” or “How can I change the way I cope?”  The first two questions will keep you stuck while the last two will give you answers to move you forward

Re-evaluate Friendships.  Healthy friendships grow and adjust to changing needs.  Just because you’ve known someone since kindergarten doesn’t mean the person still belongs in your life in the same way today.  If you’ve grown and the friendship hasn’t, then it’s one of obligation.  These types of relationships can be highly stressful unless you renegotiate updated wants and needs.  The best test of a healthy friendship is considering how you feel about yourself after spending time with the person.  Feeling drained, attacked, or hurt are signs that something needs to change.  If you feel confident, respected, and appreciated, it’s a healthy friendship. 

Fill Your Own Cup.  Reaching a state of overwhelming stress often exposes how much you give to others and how little you think about yourself.  If helping others is causing feelings of resentment, and focusing on yourself makes you feel guilty, your intentions are coming from the wrong place.  Service to others needs to come from your energy overflow, not reserves.  If you keep serving others out of your own cup without filling it up, you’ll soon be empty and then everyone suffers.  Don’t wait for things to slow down or expect someone else to fill you up.  When you’re at the point of overflow, serving others is energizing.

Susan's suggested reading list on Stress Management.


Questions for Reflection

How does stress affect your communication and relationships? 

How do you currently manage your stress?  What works and what doesn’t?

What one activity (or person) would you be relieved to not have to deal with this season?  What conversation can you have to respectfully lessen your obligation?


 Action Step

When feeling stressed, write down all your thoughts on paper.  Then, determine if each thought is focused on the present, past, or future.  Focus only on thoughts that are in the present. 

 


Interested in booking training or coaching?  Let me know how I can help, Susan_Fee@msn.com. 

 

Susan Fee is a professional clinical counselor, personal coach, and national speaker.  She is the author of Positive First Impressions, Dealing with Difficult People, Dealing with Mean Girls, Building Resiliency, Secrets of Successful Presentations, and the college survival guide, My Roommate Is Driving Me Crazy!  She can be reached through her Web site at www.susanfee.com or by email at Susan_Fee@msn.com. 

 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, 2011

 

 
HOME | COACHING | TRAINING/KEYNOTES | COUNSELING | ARTICLES | BOOKS | ABOUT SUSAN FEE | RESOURCES | CONTACT
copyright 2006 Susan Fee. All rights reserved.