bumpyjump.com bumpyjump.com bumpyjump.com
Search:    Home Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> ToS :> Add Url :> Add Your Article   

 

Policies & Law

 

Family & Home

 

Creative Arts

 

Health & Therapy

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Companies & Business

 

Tour & Travel

 

Education & Learning

 

Automotive

 

Self Healing

 

Teens & Kids

 

Finance & Investment

 

Recreation & Entertainment

 

Shopping & Auction

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Software

 

News & Events

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

Property & Agents

 

Healthcare & Treatment

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Science & Research

 

Drink & Food

 

Online & Board Games

 

Home Page › Self Healing › Managing Stress
 

The Real Reason for Stress and Burnout

 
Author: Janice Wheeler

Do the pink sands of Bermuda really handle it?

Hans Selye, the renowned authority on stress, commented that the only stress free state is when you are dead. Unfortunately, most of us would like to be stress free in this lifetime! The idea of "learning how to live with it", while intellectually clever, is not one that we can readily accept or should even give in to. Not too many years ago, attendance at workshops on a host of stress management techniques was a popular answer to this problem. As time has passed, those techniques have faded into dim memory but stress lives on. The vast majority of the solutions offered for stress management have not worked well, particularly the most popular one - getting away from it all to the pink sands of Bermuda. Have you ever noticed that two or three days after that well-deserved vacation, you feel like you haven't had one? There's a very specific reason for that.

After consulting with hundreds of practices over the past nine years, I have noticed that the single biggest reason for stress in a practice, or in life for that matter, is the number of undone or unfinished actions. In life, you will observe that every action has a beginning, a middle and an end. In other words, you start a task you know you need to do, and keep on it until you reach the final stage, a completed task. Some people are good at starting things, but never finish them, while others (the procrastinators!) take forever to get started. So an uncompleted action is any action that has not been done to a satisfactory end. Sometimes a member of your team "completes" a task but it was not done satisfactorily; then someone else on the team (often you) ends up re-doing it, thus involving two peoples' time to get one task completed.

A typical scenario is when you start to work on something, get hit with some other action that needs doing and put down the first one (uncompleted) to start the second one, etc. etc. You as the practice owner spend your valuable time (maybe a lot) wondering and worrying if things are getting done and, if they are, are they getting done satisfactorily? Wearing both the Executive hat and the Dentist hat at the same time produces stress. No wonder so many practice owners have said to me, "I just want to be the dentist!" In a practice, there are literally hundreds of actions, big and small that you and your staff have to perform each day. And many of those tasks may not get completed that day or the next, or get "forgotten" or neglected for a period of time.

A little test you could do is to walk around the practice and see what things you have thought of doing or have actually started to do that are incomplete, i.e. fire yourself (small joke - it just seems like a good solution some days), replace the peeling wallpaper, clean your equipment, get your autoclave repaired, etc. etc. etc. It takes mental energy to remember to get these things done, and that then saps your physical energy. Now multiply that by five days. Is it any wonder that by Friday evening you and your team are completely exhausted? Now multiply that by the uncompleted tasks carried forward from week to week and month to month. Ever had that feeling that you'll never get caught up? Can you see how this causes eventual burnout?

To clean up this mess and free up a lot of your mental and physical energy, the first thing to do is to discipline yourself to complete each thing you start from now on. Then make up a list of all of the unfinished tasks in your practice. For example, the staff problems, revamping the recall system, the unwritten marketing program that needs writing, etc. Now complete these one by one starting with the easiest one, then the next, and the next, etc. By the time you get to the hardest task, you will have bundles of freed-up energy to attack it with. You will feel an immense release and a renewed energy level, I guarantee it!

So remember, it is NOT what you got DONE that stresses you, it's what you DID NOT get done!!

Author Bio:

Janice Wheeler

Over the past 30 years, both Bob and Janice Wheeler have taken a myriad of management courses to qualify themselves as consultants. Bob's work history began with computers (IBM; Systems Manager for Pepsi Canada, Descartes Ram, etc.) and then moved into management consulting on his own for a number of years with various well-known companies as clients. Janice was Executive Director for a number of small service-oriented companies.

In 1989, Bob and Janice joined forces to found The Art of Management Inc. (AMI) in Toronto. They decided to focus mainly on healthcare professionals so as to become in-depth experts in those fields.

You can search for this article using: stress management, stress management technique, managing stress, stress management techniques
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How The Power of Attraction Can Help You Get What You Want?
 
When Someone You Know Struggles With Depression And Anxiety
 
Perseverance - How To Quit Quitting
 
5 Ways to Create Reserve Energy Everyday
 
Today, A Wonderful Day
 
Circumstances Beyond Our Control
 
Courage
 
Executive Coaching -The Business Benefits
 
Moment of Magic
 
How to Have More Joy in Life!
 
 
 
Home Page :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.bumpyjump.com - All Rights Reserved.