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Laura Berman Fortgang

15 Tips for Coping with Stress When the World’s Out of Control

By Laura Berman Fortgang on May 13, 2020

By Teresa Bitner, Now What? Facilitator
Originally published in Bold Fulfilled Life Coach blog

Flooding, wildfires, and now COVID-19 – Is the world spinning out of control? If you have some anxiety and worry about the current events that’s 100% normal. You may ask, “What is the world coming to?” or “How will this impact my life?” Let me help you with coping when the world seems scary and out of control. Facts not fear.

First, if you or someone you know has been directly impacted by any of this, I acknowledge you and the impact, no matter now great or small. You are loved.

Second, it’s hard to NOT to be impacted by the news. You’re not alone. Just hearing of these natural disasters can make us feel anxious or fearful. Feeling stressed and or anxious after a stressful and or traumatic experience is common. We’re all impacted.

This distress shows up emotionally, mentally, and in our behaviors. You might not be directly affected, but the shock and news of it has impacted you. First step to coping is to acknowledge this stress.

Maybe you’re fearful, worried, sad, angry, filled with anxiety, hopeless, irritable, or even feeling depressed. I’ve heard comments from my clients like, “I’m concerned about public transportation,” “How will this affect my investments?,” “What about travel?,” “What about my family traveling to ____?,” “I’m just going to ignore this and keep on living,” “I’m afraid of …”

All 100% normal responses and parts of the process of dealing with stress.

Common signs of stress to be aware of in yourself and others

  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Making mistakes
  • Low energy
  • Overwhelm
  • Headaches
  • Stomach or digestive issues
  • Pain – aches, tense muscles
  • Sleep issues
  • Clenched jaw or teeth grinding
  • Changes in appetite
  • Mood swings
Things to be mindful of when overloaded with stress
  • Racing anxious thoughts
  • Negative only thoughts
  • Catastrophizing
  • Irritability and anger
  • Isolation and/or loneliness
  • Racing heart
  • Loss of drive
  • Withdrawing from others and activities
  • Neglecting responsibilities or procrastinating
  • Using substances to unwind or relax
15 Tips to Reduce and Cope with Stress
  1. Acknowledge your thoughts and feelings
  2. Express your feelings in a safe healthy way
  3. Maintain healthy routines
  4. Stay connected
  5. Eating healthy and drinking enough water
  6. Sleep – get enough for you
  7. Regular exercise – even a short walk
  8. Nature – get outside, especially in the sunlight
  9. Limit or remove news and social media content
  10. Journal – just write with no expectation or judgement
  11. Be mindful of how busy you are and how your schedule may increase stress
  12. Practice Gratitude
  13. Meditation or Praying
  14. Play your favorite uplifting music
Bonus Tip – Support – Find Support
Talking to a trusted person, spiritual leader, friend, family, counselor or coach.
Join a group online
Journal/Contemplation Prompts
  1. What am I feeling stressed/fearful/anxious about?
  2. Where do I feel this stress/fear/anxiety in my body?
  3. I want to feel______.
  4. What do I have control over?
  5. What is the opportunity in this stressful situation?
  6. What are three good things about today?
  7. I am grateful for ____ .

I hope this has been useful and helpful to you. My intent is that as we move into this new normal of change and chaos in the world that we can cope and thrive.

Filed Under: Global Impact, Lessons Learned, Life Lessons Leave a Comment

Crises Reveal The Essence of Things

By Laura Berman Fortgang on April 10, 2020

It is said that the true state of a marriage is laid bare in the face of a crisis. If it was strong, the relationship will grow stronger with the crisis. If it was already breaking, the crisis will deepen the fissures to breaking. It is the same for each of us as individuals. We are being shown what we are made of.

Crises Reveal The Essence of Things by Laura Berman FortgangThe current state of affairs among the crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic is laying bare our own essence. The novelty of our new “normal” is wearing off and reality is setting in.

We are seeing the virus hit closer to home as beloved celebrities and people you know are being affected or passing away. Generally, we are scared, and what is revealed is the state of our ability to deal with the unknown and our ability to be alone with that state.

There are so many questions and things that don’t have a clear solution right now. However, I offer you a few things to think about, journal about or discuss.

1) How are you?

I’m not asking about your physical health, but rather about your state of mind. How ARE you? Are you freaking out?, mildly worried? and relatively at peace knowing that you are controlling what you can right now?

Be with that for a few minutes. What is being revealed about your essence – your baseline of how you deal with things?

2) Who are you?

How do you show up during this time? Are you a helper? A researcher? An organizer of others? A nurturer? A hunter/gatherer? (our family’s joke about the search for toilet paper and essential items). Are you an alarmist? The rebel?, activist? and one fueled by outrage? (all are just fine)

What is the crisis showing you about how you show up? For me, it’s not much different than “regular life.” I’m the driver; I make sure young people get out of bed and don’t teen-sleep the day away, make sure there’s a meal every night, and herd the screen worshipers to connect as a family every night. (How much do I love them not being able to run off to friends, jobs and activities? Sorry. Not sorry). Professionally, the driver is making you think, absorb and evolve. It’s who I am. It’s what I do.

3) Who do you want to be?

If these questions are not revealing characteristics that you’re happy with or proud of, consider who you want to be. Where can you refocus your energy to practice the qualities you want to embody as you ground yourself for whatever is awaiting us?

A dear friend and colleague of mine often speaks about her aspiration to live with grace. Whenever she’s faced with a challenge, she puts her attention on handling all of it with grace, her highest value.

We are on hold. In the absence of action, there is suspension. Like the moment when the orchestra stops playing as the conductor raises both his arms in the air indicating a pause. All goes still, but there is anticipation and preparation lingering and holding, until the sudden indication that all can move forward again in a burst of sound.

For all of us, the outcome is unknown. Will there be a depression? Will the loss of life deeply impact how we can lead our lives? Will we see or want different things when we get to resume?

We don’t know, Are still in the surrender and  will be transformed by this.

Watch how and who you are being. It’s the best preparation for what is to come.

Filed Under: Global Impact, Life Lessons Tagged With: Laura Berman Fortgang, life coach, transitionLeave a Comment

CRITICAL PEOPLE – How to Survive Working and Playing with Broken Glass

By Laura Berman Fortgang on February 19, 2020

CRITICAL PEOPLE - How to Survive Working and Playing with Broken GlassBroken glass. Sharp. Razor-edged. Hurtful if you get too close to it. Even deadly if used a certain way. Shiny and sometimes attractive until you get too close to it.

Highly critical people live a tough existence. They are usually pretty smart and have a gift for seeing problems from all angles which can be very useful. The flip side is that if they have not done their personal growth work, when others don’t see what they see, they lash out. They criticize and take little responsibility for failure or even for their own perceptions. What they perceive is THE TRUTH without much room for other versions of the truth. They are usually unhappy.

THAT lashing out is extremely hard to be at the receiving end of. Unfortunately, we often are in workplaces and other life scenarios.

How do you deal with this?

Let’s break this down by looking at what glass is made of. Sand. Small grains of sand heated at incredibly high temperatures, becomes liquid that is then molded into the bottle or window you commonly come in contact with.

In terms of people, their “grains of sand” are the thousands of experiences that made them harden and become tough to deal with. If you focus on the infinitely small grains that make up the person and ignore the glass they cut you down with, you can temper your reaction as you monitor your own “grains of sand.” By looking through the hard exterior, hopefully you can lessen the damage and maneuver past the upset and get to real solutions with the toxic person.

Remember the old adage: we can’t change other people; we can only change ourselves, which in turn, will help us handle other people better. Not every scenario can become tenable, but hopefully you can transform the situation into one that works.

Believe it or not, finding compassion for the broken person, as hard as it is to do, is a way to lessen the damage to you. It may also help you to not take their behavior personally.

For example, back in my days waiting tables, there was a manager who was mean and vindictive. He had the power to affect your income and well-being by manipulating the staff schedule. He doled out the desirable, money-making shifts as well as the less desirable ones and had say over how many days he’d let you work (and earn). I was intimidated and angry when my schedule was not ideal.

One day, I saw him in my neighborhood walking his cute little dog. In that moment, I saw a loving “Teddy-Bear” side to him I had never even imagined possible before. I decided to see him through that lens moving forward. From that point on, I no longer had a strained relationship with him, and I rose through the ranks to become a valued employee. As I pursued my acting career, this job became my soft landing. I came and went as the acting jobs called, and thanks to my relationship with this manager, I never had a gap in my income. I always had a job whenever I needed one. All because of a shift in MY perspective.

I stopped reacting to his sharp edges. I had compassion for him, assuming he might just be a lonely person who only had his dog (I knew he did not have a life partner). It also allowed me to help other people who felt cut by his sharpness.

That doesn’t mean every toxic person will yield, so leaving the job is often the only way to go. That’s unfortunate, but understandable.

If you’re the broken glass – if you know you wield sharp edges, then you have work to do. Dulling the edges while still keeping your positive abilities requires major awareness and likely some therapy to get at the source of your anger and mistrust. No shame in that. Years of isolation and shame or some temporary pain to poke at the truth and find positive ways to grow? Your call.

Can the broken glass be made whole again? Maybe – with great care and precision. That’s THEIR work to do, not yours. In the meanwhile, soften their edges with your waves of understanding and compassion, and take away their ability to hurt you. If you can’t do that, get out of harm’s way.

Filed Under: Lessons Learned, Life Lessons, Now What? Newsletter Articles 1 Comment

Don’t Stay Stuck – Change Your Career

By Laura Berman Fortgang on January 29, 2020

Think you’re too old to change jobs or careers if you are 40 or beyond? Think again!

Don’t Stay Stuck - Change Your CareerNow might be the perfect time to make a move.

Here’s why along with a few tips to help you make the shift smoothly and well!

Why It’s A Great Idea To Change Careers When You Are 40

Filed Under: Job Change, Job Satisfaction, Job Search Tagged With: career, Career Change, Career coach, Career Coaching, career path, career transition, Career transitions, Laura Berman Fortgang, Now What CoachingLeave a Comment

Preparing a Solid Resume: Job Search Tips

By Laura Berman Fortgang on January 23, 2020

Preparing a Solid Resume: Job Search TipsWorking on putting together a resume that will get you noticed and invited to interview,
(including getting past the ATS system that Laura mentioned in her Ghosted: Job Search Edition post)?

Check out this practical guide and sample resumes to take you through this sometimes grueling task.

Your Step-by-Step Guide to Making the Perfect Resume (With Examples!)

Filed Under: Job Change, Job Search Tagged With: career, Career Change, Career coach, Career Coaching, career path, career transition, Change, Now What CoachingLeave a Comment

Ghosted: Job Search Edition

By Laura Berman Fortgang on January 15, 2020

Looking for a job opportunity in the digital age is like dating in the digital age. You scroll, you swipe right, you wink, you might even “hook up” (interviews) and then … ghosted.
No response.
No indication of what went wrong.
Just silence.
Not that blissful experience of standing on a mountain taking in the vast expanse. No.
It’s the harsh, still crash into a wall of uncertainty.
Job Search How to cope?

First, understanding what you’re feeling may be helpful to moving past it and getting back on track to finding employment. Rejection is not a good time. It hurts, it’s confusing when you think you’re doing everything right, and it’s scary because the clock is ticking on your ability to go without an income.

Rejection kicks up shame, but most importantly, it lock jambs your emotional system. You set out with hope and an idea of what could be possible if that job works out. Then, every blocked path strips you of those good feelings. No wonder we get depressed and want to give up.

Please don’t.

BE GOOD TO YOURSELF
Being good to yourself doesn’t mean indulging in binge watching shows or staying in your jammies all day. It means not being hard on yourself about your state of affairs, and it means putting a structure to your days that keeps you healthy and engaged.

Eat right, do some exercise, have social contact to look forward to, and make a structured “work time” to do your job search as a task and not an “if I get to it today” item.

It also means increasing your self-care to the levels it might not have been at while you were employed and busy (meditation, yoga, walks, biking — whatever makes you feel centered and at ease).

NETWORK
In addition to watching job postings and applying for them, get out to industry events or other gatherings that will expand your network. Having a warm contact is always better than no contact, and you never know how putting yourself in opportunity’s way will help you.

GET SUPPORT
To get through the emotional roller coaster and for brainstorming strategies, it might serve you to look for like-minded people in a career-oriented forum. All it takes is googling ‘career support group’, a dose of courage, and a slice of “humble pie.”

The benefits are likely to be that you’ll discover you’re not alone, that you may be in a better scenario than you thought, and that you’ll gain some strategies or at least some camaraderie.

MIND YOUR KEYWORDS*
Research the companies you are applying to and start adding more of the company’s language (even industry jargon) to your cover letter and resume. Get more hits by improving your keywords to those that will be caught by the ATS (applicant tracking system).

Also, become more specific on your resume. Watch for too much generalization. Instead of saying: “Created system that saved millions for our department,” say instead: “Created a multi-faceted system that reduced costs by 40% ($2.5 million) and increased productivity by 20%.”

As with dating, there is no better remedy to the uncertainty and delicate state of your needs and desires than to take your power back and keep your ship steady and pointed in the direction you want to go. Stop letting the tides and whims of others and the job market sink your emotional ship.

Stay buoyed by these tips, and when you feel desperate, keep your head up and double the job search action you are taking. I can’t promise you’ll never be ghosted, but I do know you can even out the collateral damage to your self-esteem and improve your job search success.

Good luck and let us know how we can help: lbf@nowwhatcoaching.com
*Help for minding keywords: Wordclouds.com

Filed Under: Job Change, Job Search, Lessons Learned, Now What? Newsletter Articles Tagged With: Career Change, Career Coaching, career path, career transition, Career transitions, job search, Laura Berman Fortgang, Now What CoachingLeave a Comment

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