Still Stepping Six Feet Back
Mentally stepping six feet back can help us remain accountable while letting go of the judgment we may hold about ourselves and others as we make our way through stressful work situations.
Mentally stepping six feet back can help us remain accountable while letting go of the judgment we may hold about ourselves and others as we make our way through stressful work situations.
It’s going to be a new year, which means a new us! We make all sorts of promises to ourselves about the things we’ll do: we’re going to eat healthier, we’re going to work out more, we’re going to spend less time on social media, and so on. In short, we’re going to become better versions of ourselves.
If you’re like me and miss the big, loud, social aspects of dancing, I hope you can continue to enjoy the fun aspect of dancing and soak up all the happiness and wellness that a micro-dose of dance can generate.
Have you ever started working in the morning only to realize you skipped lunch, and haven’t looked up from the computer screen?
The notion of compartmentalizing spaces is a useful technique for many purposes, but the primary goal of such an exercise is to establish a mental association with why you are spending your time at a particular place and what you have come to that place to do.
With lawyers experiencing some of the highest incidences of burnout, mental health challenges, and suicides before the pandemic, how do we find resilience in this time of increased isolation?
We can change the way we feel by changing our breath — and we can do it in less than a minute.
If you want a productivity boost, the next time you catch yourself reaching for your snooze button, remember that when you snooze, you really do lose.
“When you change your energy. You change your life.”