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How to Manage Stress and Mental Wellness When Starting a Business

September 13, 2018 by Guest Author Leave a Comment

By Jean Cherry

The U.S. Small Business Administration reports there are 28 million small businesses, which account for 99.7% of all U.S. businesses. That means a lot of small business owners are making a go as an entrepreneur. Starting a business is exciting and rewarding, but included in that excitement are fast-paced demands and risks of the unknown – all of which can lead to stress.

There are both positive and negative stresses when starting a business. A 2017 survey of entrepreneurs found that positive stressors include increased commercial activity, hiring an employee, and launching a new project or product. Negative stressors include being overworked, employee resignations, and poor business performance.

Here are some tips for small business owners to help manage both positive and negative stressors:

Stay organized.

Stress levels can be diminished when you’re well prepared and have everything in order. Careful planning allows you to anticipate challenges and come up with solutions ahead of time.

Find a creative outlet.

Great ideas come from many places, so take time to dream, take a painting class, get out in nature, meditate, or write in a journal. Business owners can benefit from building time in their schedules to think about innovative and creative ways of doing things and separate themselves from the everyday stress of running a business.

Listen to others.

As a business owner, you have a lot of decisions to make. Being a good listener will show that other people’s opinions are valued. Employees that are closer to different aspects of the business may provide new perspectives.

Be committed and resourceful.

A recent study found that entrepreneurship is common among people who have endured life challenges. They learned to persevere and manage stress by working harder, seeking help when needed, developing social skills, and networking. Everyone can learn from these entrepreneurs.

Balance responsibilities.

One of the most common complaints entrepreneurs have when starting a business is that they feel overworked. Delegation is difficult when there are only a few employees to carry the load, but letting go and sharing the responsibilities of the business can help reduce some of the stress. It’s also necessary to take time away from work and go on vacation. Delegating and taking a vacation helps to avoid burnout.

Exercise and eat right.

Exercise is a great stress reliever. Find something that fits your personality — from walking to marathons to yoga. We have better mental acuity and focus when we maintain a healthy diet. Drink plenty of water, decrease sugar intake, and limit caffeine.

 

Stress management for an entrepreneur is a balancing act, but the journey can be much more enjoyable with good organization, building on creative ideas, valuing input from others, and maintaining a healthy lifestyle.

 

 

Author Bio: Jean Cherry, RN, MBA enjoys sharing her knowledge of health and wellness with readers in her writing for Walgreens, where you can find a variety of vitamins to supplement a hectic entrepreneurial lifestyle at Walgreens.com.

 

 

Although it is intended to be accurate, neither Walgreen Co., its subsidiaries or affiliates, nor any other party assumes for loss or damage due to reliance on this material. Walgreens does not recommend or endorse any specific tests, physicians, products, procedures, opinions, or other information that may be mentioned in the article. Reliance on any information provided by this article is solely at your own risk.

 

Filed Under: Personal Development Tagged With: stress-management, wellness

Your brain on stress

December 30, 2010 by patty Leave a Comment

by Patty Azzarello

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As a leader it is vitally important that you maximize the energy you bring to your work.

When your energy is low, you are just not very good at your job.

So you need to be clear that part of your job is to make, and keep yourself OK, despite the stress of the job, and the many things that line up to kill you each week.

As we all plan for the new year, let’s consider how we can be happier and less stressed, so we can be better at our work and better at our life.

Brain Science and Happiness

I have come across some really interesting pieces of information about brain science, as it affects attitude and positive energy.   I wanted to collect them in one place, because together they tell an interesting story.

The punchline of the story:  You need to do stuff on purpose to be happy.

1. How long can you stay angry?

From Jill Bolte Taylor’s book:  My Stroke of Insight, she talks about the fact that there is a physiological response to anger.

She writes: Once triggered, the chemical released by my brain surges through my body and I have a physiological experience. Within 90 seconds from the initial trigger, the chemical component of my anger has completely dissipated from my blood and my automatic response is over.  If however, I remain angry after those 90 seconds have passed, then it is because I have chosen to let that circuit continue to run.

Basically, if you get angry, you’ve got 90 seconds of real anger that is a physiological experience.  If you stay angry after 90 seconds, it’s entirely up to you.

After 90 seconds you are using up energy specifically to stay angry.

2. The Default Mode of the Brain is Negative

A friend of mine is studying the brain science of meditation, and told me two fascinating things, that made a lot of sense to me.

The brain’s default mode is negative. So all those stories, sequences, decision loops, doubts, and obsessions that your brain puts you through — all the negative processing, is actually the default mode of the brain.  Yuk!

The fear response

The other shoe to drop on this negative-default topic, is with regard to the amygdala. The amygdala is the oldest part of our brain that has not evolved since we were cave men waking up at 2am because a tiger came into the cave. Actually it’s not evolved since way before then, which is why it’s often referred to as the lizard brain.

The amygdala is responsible for the fight or flight, survival response — the raw, paralyzing, fear response, that puts you at your most threatened and defensive.

When that response is triggered, blood actually rushes to your limbs (to get stronger for the impending fight or flight), which means it rushes out of your brain! So in the moment of threat, you are actually less mentally capable.

The new piece of brain science emerging from this, that my friend told me about, is that long periods of extended, severe stress can make the amygdala response part of your default brain response.

If this has happened, and your brain has recruited the amygdala to participate in it’s default, negative mode, then even the  slightest nudge or input (think, dropped phone call vs. tiger in the cave) would trigger an extreme anger/stress/threat response. How painful would that be? You can see how stress can build upon itself to the extreme, if you don’t get a break from it.

3. How to get a break? Trade one stress for another!

The third thing I have come across was actually some research from a colleague of mine, Vonda Mills, who is a noted psychologist, and management consultant, which showed that working professional people with children actually had lower overall stress than working professional people without children.

The reason was that the people who had children were forced to “turn off” the work stress because their children required their full attention during parts of the day.  The people who did not have an alternative stress to switch over to, those who alternated between stress and “rest”,  actually ended up more stressed than the people who got to alternate between different sources of stress.

There is more science to say that a stressed brain, gets more useful rest given something else to work on vs. being idle. Remember, idle/default mode is negative.

(This made me think of something I often say — that happy people make bad art.  Perhaps many of the great artists created their works because they intuitively knew they needed to give their  brain something to focus on instead of the stress that was causing their despair.)

4. Stress and laziness

I was traveling through an airport a few weeks ago, and caught a news story about how distracted we all our by the amount of information we have to contend with on all our electronic devices, social networks, and many browser windows (and televisions in airports).

The point that leapt out at me, (which I typed into my blackberry on the spot), was about a study of highly distracted, stressed people… “[in mice] under stress, the areas of their brains associated with habit formation grew, while those linked to decision making and goal achievement shriveled.”  I found the source info here.

Wow, so stress adds real estate to the part of our brain that wants to be a couch potato and shrinks the part of our brain that is required to make new things happen.  Yikes!

OK, so now what?

What this all means to me is – the broken record part from me –

Do stuff on purpose

Actively do things to keep your brain out of the default negative mode.

Acknowledge that happiness is not the easy, default state. It requires effort.  Focus on things that make you happy or bring you fulfillment, and do them on purpose.  On purpose = actually schedule time in your life to do the things that fuel your energy.

Be careful of anger

Remember that you have an excuse for only 90 seconds – a physical process that makes you angry, after that it’s up to you.

And the more you choose to stay angry, the more you stay in extreme stress, the more you encourage the already negative default mode of your brain to recruit the amygdala and make it far worse.

When you need a break, try keeping your brain busy with something instead of “zoning out”. Since even switching one stress for another stress has proven to be more restful than resting your brain, next time you need to de-stress, try something that is mentally challenging but fun for you, and see if you feel better than letting your brain fester in a negative “rest” state.

Happiness on Purpose

Finally, from Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love, describing something from one of her teachers:

…People universally tend to think that happiness is a stroke of luck, something that will maybe descend upon you like fine weather if you are fortunate enough.  But that’s not how happiness works.  Happiness is the consequence of personal effort, […] and once you have sustained a state of happiness, you must never become lax about maintaining it…

—–
Patty Azzarello works with executives where leadership and business challenges meet. She has held leadership roles in General Management, Marketing, Software Product Development and Sales, and has been successful in running large and small businesses. She writes at Patty Azzarello’s Business Leadership Blog. You’ll find her on Twitter as @PattyAzzarello

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Filed Under: management, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, Patty Azzarello, stress-management

Surviving Explosion, Implosion, Meltdown and Other Personal Disasters of the Holidays

November 24, 2007 by Liz Leave a Comment

Fine Memories or Forgettable Mess?

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On this busiest shopping weekend, phone purchasing something can be a fine memory in the making or a most forgettable mess. We change how folks act or what they do, but we get to choose how we think about it.

Surviving Disasters of the Holidays

Yes, Virginia, it can be done. We can get to the New Year with our Joyful Jolly still fully functioning. As usual as they might seem, personal disasters — explosion, implosion, and meltdowns — are not a necessary result of the Holiday Season.

Here’s how to avoid them entirely and maybe even have the energy to help others to do the same.

  1. Allow too much time for everything. When we’ve got more to do, we seem to think we can do more in less time. We hurry up. Everyone else is hurrying up too. Traffic jams, extra programs, sales at the mall, and holiday traditions pile on us all. We funnel in the same direction . . . bumping into one another. Accidents happen. Let the other guy go first because you left early.
  2. Make a list and check it twice. Other times of year, a list might be useful but during the holidays, a list is major stress relief. Get those details of what to do in one place on paper, where they’ stop mentally nagging you to remember them. The accomplishment of crossing off something that’s done is a feeling that will keep your good mood moving forward with you.
  3. Enjoy the view. Set aside time along the way to relax. Beautiful things happen this time of year. Let your eyes, your mind, and your spirit take them in. The time you take to do that with folks you love will refuel you. You’ll come back ready to do more than you might have had you kept chugging ahead. You’ll be brilliant and appreciated. A little appreciate — of the world and of you — does a lot to keep a joyful, jolly mood in season.
  4. Realize that everyone is a person. The clerk at the store, the voice on the phone, the delivery man or woman at your door, the folks walking around you on the street . . . they all have thoughts, feelings, and the same sorts of stresses as you. . . . maybe more. See them. Smile. The smiles they return will make you smile even more.
  5. Be a person too. It’s easy to start attempting superhuman feats during this season of generosity. Set kind and generous priorities. Know that to give well also means taking care of yourself for your family and friends. All of us can only do what is humanly possible. The world won’t end if you decide not to make cookies this year.

Follow these simple ideas and you just might find that you enjoy the holidays. Decide from this moment what you care about and let that be your guide when you feel yourself starting to falter.

Besides, when the cranky folks decide to explode all over us for their own unpleasantness, nothing beats a smile and an answer like, “Hey, I’m sorry that’s how you feel. . . . I’m finding everyone is so generous and joyful!”

How will you manage yourself this holiday season?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, holiday, relationships, stress-management

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