Phases Of Burnout

Do you struggling to cope with workplace stress? In 2020, of British adults in employment – 79% commonly experience work-related stress (Perkbox, 2020).

When we feel stress, our body is constantly under threat and stress hormones such as adreneilne and cortisol flood the body. This creates a high risk of burnout. Burnout can leave people feeling exhausted, empty, and unable to cope with the demands of life. Researchers describe the 5 stages of burnout which look like this..

1) HONEYMOON

When we start a new job or begin a new project, we often start by experiencing high job satisfaction, commitment, energy, and creativity. We feel on a roll!

2) ONSET OF STRESS

This is when we start to notice that some days are more challenging and tiring than others. You might feel less productive, notice feelilngs of anxiety ebb and flow, and you may finder it harder to focus (and bump up the number of coffees in your day as your go to pick me up!)

3) CHRONIC STRESS

This is a marked change in your stress levels, transitioning from motivation, to experiencing stress on an incredibly frequent basis. This can lead to numerous physical and mental illnesses and affect your life outside of your work.

4) BURNOUT

This is the point where you can no longer manage your stress levels and the impact of your stress is critical to your health, often not allowing you to function at work or in your home life as you normally would. Key indicators of Burn Out are social isolation, chronic stomach, bowel, or headaches, feeling lost and empty, and neglecting personal needs.

5) HABITUAL BURNOUT

At this stage, the symptoms of burnout are so embedded in your life that you are likely to experience a significant physical or emotional problem, as opposed to occasionally experiencing stress or burnout.This includes chronic disoders which need professional support and care.

So how do we stay in the first HONEYMOON phase and not let the cycle of Burn Out commence!? That amazing state of loving your work, feeling motivated, making great progress, energised by your passion and visions - we want to help you and your collegues reach and stay here.

We design tailored made health and wellbeing packages to meet your employees needs. Stress and Burn Out are key topics that we work on and delve into so that you can see what might feel like a stressful situaton and welcome it as an opportunity for growth rather than a threat to be feared!

Get in touch today to see how we can help your organisation find resilience, passion and happiness! Email: outreach@soulsanctuarystudios.com

Top 10 Tips For Quality Sleep

How many hours a night of QUALITY sleep do you get?

Matthew Walker, author of best seller "Why We Sleep", states that, "There is not one process in the human body, that isn’t improved by sleep".

So how can you improve the quality of your sleep?

1. Stick to a sleep schedule

We should aim to go to bed and wake up at the same time each day. People generally have a hard time adjusting to changes in sleep patterns.

2. Don’t exercise too late in the day

Exercise is great, and we should try to exercise at least 30 minutes on most days. But try to time it no later than 2-3 hours before bed.

3. Avoid caffeine & nicotine

Coca-cola, coffee, teas (that aren’t herbal) and chocolate contain caffeine, which is a stimulant. Even consuming these in the afternoon can have an affect on your sleep.

4. Avoid alcoholic drinks before bed

The presence of alcohol in the body can reduce your REM sleep, keeping you in the lighter stages of sleep.

5. Avoid large meals late at night

A heavy meal can cause digestive issues, which interferes with sleep.

6. Leave time to relax before bed

It’s important to have time before bed to unwind. Try to schedule your days so that there is time to relax before bed.

7. Take a hot bath before bed

The drop in body temperature after a bath may help you to feel sleepy, and the bath can help you to slow down and relax before bed.

8. Have a dark, cool (in temperature), tech free bedroom

We sleep better if the temperature in the room is cool. Technology such as mobile phones and computers can be a distraction. The light they emit, especially the blue light, suppresses the secretion of melatonin.

9. Get the right sunlight exposure

Sun exposure during the day helps us to regulate sleeping patterns. Try to get outside in the natural sunlight for at least 30 minutes per day.

10. Don’t stay in bed if you (really) can’t sleep

If you find yourself starting to get anxious in bed, get up and do something else until you feel sleepy. Anxiety whilst trying to sleep can make it harder to fall asleep.

What works best for you to send you off for a great quality sleep?

Comment below!

STRESS & HOW TO MANAGE IT

THE SCIENCE OF STRESS

The science shows us that some animals are born with a defence mechanism to survive, but humans are born dependant i.e. someone else had to put our needs ahead of theirs in order for us to survive. The human evolutionary advantage is LOVE. As a baby, you had to do nothing to be loved. Bio-chemically mothers have oxytocin to make them love their baby, no matter what the baby does… Oxytocin wears off and suddenly we have to be a certain way to get attention and this creates our Blueprint.

When you first walked, you may have had love, and so achievers were born. Or, maybe you cried and screamed, and no-one came so you crawled and bumped your head, the mother comes running in for an injured cry, and there we learn “hurt = love”. So now as an adult we either feel we have to achieve to be loved or we talk about pain and problems because our subconscious believes pain = love. Essentially, we all crave the unconditional love we had before.

THE STRESS RESPONSE

When we were cavemen, we needed the stress response to keep us safe from tigers and bears. The adrenaline would pump around the body, which heightens our awareness so we can hear a twig snap a mile away to give us time to run from the tiger. The same thing happens today when you hear a noise in your house, adrenaline floods your body so suddenly the washing machine sounds more like someone robbing your TV… We don’t have tigers or bears anymore, but we do have deadlines, and bosses, and exams (rooted in the need to achieve to be loved) – whatever the stressor, our response to ‘danger’ is the same: our body is flooded with adrenaline and cortisol.

So, we have some options – fight, flight or freeze. We can get angry, run away, or hide in bed.

CHANGE YOUR LENS

So how can we change this? FIRST, we have to change our lens so it’s not danger in the first place – so it moves from a threat to a challenge or opportunity! That will kill the stress response in its tracks, suddenly it’s not a have to but a want to. We have to practice letting go of the fear of failure, make loads of mistakes, get messy, and learn that we are not loved for our achievements, but that we are enough, just as we are.

HEALTHY EXERCISE

If we cannot change the lens and we’ve gone into fight/ flight/ freeze then we need to rid the adrenaline and cortisol OUT of our bodies, which is maybe where we see this increase in exercise addiction too; fill ourselves up with stress hormone all day and then burn them off in the gym all night. Our poor bodies… our organs are on absolute overload creating all these hormones to keep us safe and then have to burn them all off, every day! That level of stress we put our body under physically, because of the level of stress we put ourselves under mentally, is not sustainable, and the body will get sick.

Our bodies are only able to mop up cortisol for 30% of the day – how many of you feel stressed more than 30% of the day? So, the rest of those toxic chemicals are not mopped up by your organs and so stay as excess in your body. This is what causes aging and an acidic environment which damages our immune system and leads to inflammation (anything ending in ‘-itus’ including ‘arthritis’…. and autoimmune diseases) the level of acid that builds up in our body as a result of stress changes our blood. If we are out of balance, we are in dis-ease, and so we experience disease.

HOW CAN YOGA HELP AS A WAY TO REDUCE STRESS?

  1. PHYSICAL BENEFITS OF YOGA ON STRESS

    We need to move our body so that we get rid of stress hormones, but we have to do it in a way which doesn’t create more stress… so we need to exercise in a way which is nurturing, not depleting. Yoga is designed to realign and re-centre your body, detox your organs, and mobilise your spine, without impacting your joints or bringing you out of natural alignment, like so many other exercises today!

  2. MENTAL BENEFITS OF YOGA ON STRESS

    Hopefully your yoga teacher will weave in the psychology and philosophy of the practice, which eventually rewires your brain to give perspective, subconsciously reminding you that you are safe, and healthy and the rest becomes less important. As you focus your mind (meditation) on your breathing and your posture, you can’t be thinking about all the other stuff you usually worry about.

    Yoga allows us to quieten the mind and come out of thinking, giving your brain a break from the constant chatter of the human mind (vriti). As you breathe deeply (pranayama) into your belly, you increase your oxygen levels and decrease the acidic carbon dioxide build-up, so you change the chemical make-up of your body.

    If you practice gratitude for what you have (abundance mindset), it stops us focusing on trying to achieve what we haven’t got (lack mindset). We cannot feel grateful and stressed at the same time! And, we learn to fall over and get messy, to let go of perfection and for that to be okay! We learn to love ourselves just as we are now, so the pressure to achieve in order to be loved is off.

    And, community. Studies show that the best medication for anxiety and depression is social prescriptions (gardening together, walking together etc) because as human beings, we need to connect, we need to have authentic relationships and conversations to feel understood and to not feel alone. In the right yoga studio that community is there to tap into.

    You can join our online community on Soul Sanctuary TV - where you can join in on-demand classes of all styles from beginner classes to advanced classes with the rest of the Soul Sanctuary family!