Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Managing Work Stress

     When work becomes less enjoyable and more stressful, burnout and irritability can set in.  If you are feeling this way, it is time to find new ways to manage your stress.  Here are 6 tips:

GET ENOUGH SLEEP.  When you are tired everything feels more stressful.  Make sure you are getting 7-8 hours of sleep nightly.
EAT WELL.  Keeping a balanced diet stimulates your mind and helps your focus and concentration.  Additionally, protein has been shown to decrease symptoms of anxiety and depression.
PRIORITIZE TASKS.  Being unorganized can increase stress.  Organize yourself by setting small goals and prioritize your tasks each day. 
BE A TEAM PLAYER.  You and your coworkers can be each other’s greatest assets.  Ask for help and delegate when needed.
TAKE BREAKS.  Not taking lunch or short breaks is a disservice to yourself.   Allow yourself this down time.  You will be more functional and feel less stressed.
ADDRESS CO-WORKER CONFLICT DIRECTLY.  If you are having difficulty with a colleague or boss, talk to them about it.  This is often scary for people, but keeping it bottled up will increase your stress levels.  Be assertive (not aggressive) in working things out with colleagues.  You’ll enjoy your job much more.

To learn more,  please go to DrSemich.com




The Three Phases of Relationship. Where is Yours?

     There are three predictable relationship stages, each building on the last.  Understanding these phases can help you navigate them to a successful, contented relationship.

Here are the three:
1.     Romance Phase
2.     Power Struggle Phase
3.     Stability and Contentment

1.  ROMANCE

     Nature forces us to fall in love, but not just with anyone.  Nature’s bias is toward the survival of the species.  The real reason you fell in love… to adapt and grow.  Let me explain.  Nature makes us fall in love with an incompatible person – the person the least likely to meet all our needs and the most capable of pushing all of our buttons.  Yet, they are the perfect person to force us out of our comfort zone to ADAPT and GROW.
     Of course, when we fell in love, we did not see all of our partner’s weaknesses, or we would have run in the opposite direction, which is why nature has to drug us.  Yes, there is a “Chemistry of Love.”
When you fall in love, the brain releases chemicals (oxytocin, dopamine, and phenylethylamine).  These chemicals make you feel good and help you to ignore anything bad.  You feel so good that you will do anything to get along with and please your partner.  Until the high wears off, which takes anywhere from 2 months to 2 years.  At that point, the brain stops producing those chemicals and you wake up with the “Love Hangover.”
     When the Romance Phase ends the Power Struggle Phase begins.  Some people may end a relationship when the high wears off hoping to meet a more compatible mate, only to find that the same thing happens in their next relationship.

2. POWER STRUGGLE

     Many relationships end at the 3 -5 year mark when the illusion of “romantic love” falls away and is replaced with feelings of disappointment and anger.  At this point, you begin focusing on your partner’s flaws.  One partner will often pull away or withdraw, needing space.  And the other partner needily chases them feeling emotionally deserted. This phase can last anywhere from a few months to many, many years depending on your willingness to grow.
FACT: Without the skills to navigate this phase and resolve differences, you will keep returning to this phase over and over again in your relationship.  There are three ways out of this phase:
  1. Break up
  2. Survive through the pain and frustration, remaining unhappy
  3. Overcome the power struggle - either on your own or with professional guidance

     You graduate from the Power Struggle phase when you:
  • ·      Accept and appreciate each other’s differences
  • ·      Learn to share power, and realize that using force or manipulation will never get you what you want
  • ·      Realize with gratitude who you are and what you have as a couple
  • ·      Give up your fantasies about harmony without conflict
  • ·      Surrender to life just the way it is

     Getting through this phase is not easy, it is much easier for one person to quit the relationship midway through the power struggle.  The people who quit are often unwilling to face aspects of themselves that feel too scary to confront. 

     If you feel like your relationship is stuck in this phase, it is important that you get guidance form someone who can help you navigate through.

3. STABILITY and CONTENTMENT

     Once you have learned to fight fair and resolve conflict, you move into stability and love returns.  But this time it is a deeper more mature love than the romance phase.
At this point, you realize that you will never ever succeed in changing your partner and you have given up the desire to do so.
     You are OK with your partner’s flaws.  You both have clear boundaries and mutual respect.  If you don’t, you will return to the power struggle.

To learn more,  please go to DrSemich.com


Building Your Relationship with Your Teen

     Teens will test their parents in every possible way.  When they do, a stressed out parent may react in ways that don’t always build relationship.  If you are in need of strengthening your relationship, consider implementing some of the following:
  • ·      Spend one-on-one time together each week.  Take you child out to breakfast or lunch.  Even if they resist, you must insist.  Make it a weekly habit.
  • ·      Talk to your teen.  Be prepared with topics that will be interesting to your teen.  You don’t have to have lengthy conversations.  Ask the right kind of questions.  Find out their opinion, or how they might do something, or where they would go.  Never belittle their opinion.
  • ·      Listen more.  Resist the temptation to lecture or tell your teen what you think.  Teens don’t really listen until they can become discussion initiators.  Step back and let them take the lead.
  • ·      Do something fun together.  Play paintball, go horseback riding, go camping, canoeing, laser tag, take a day-trip, do something spur of the moment.  Do something they like to do.  Make happy memories together.
  • ·      Establish boundaries.  Be a parent – acting more like a friend can hurt, not help, your relationship.  Tell them what you expect.  Clearly establish your rules for the household, school work, & extra-curricular activities.
  • ·      Correct and discipline.  Even when it makes you feel uncomfortable, your teen needs to know you love them enough to correct them when they break your rules or the rules of society.  And be sure to reward a teen for good behavior with more privileges and freedom.

      Your kids learn more from watching you than you can imagine.  Be the kind of adult you want your teen to become.  Serve others.  Love others.  Forgive others.

To learn more,  please go to DrSemich.com