Sunday, January 30, 2022

Wellness at Work Post pandemic

 Ever since companies and organizations started making plans to go back to in person work,  I have been thinking alot of wellness in the workplace.  Never before has something like this been more needed in the work environment.  The need to adjust to being in close proximity to one another, to spending the whole day in a mask, the constant cleaning up and making our spaces are clean, and adjusting back to the culture of the workplace and the fast paced routine.   When we worked from home, even though the nature of our work didn't change - our environment was controlled - we learned to create spaces that would allow for balance, concentration and wellness.  I look back at our home and how in the last two years how it has changed - all so that we could function optimally - and not feel burned out.  But as we go back to in person - we won't have the luxury of creating a separate space- our cubicles will still be there - and the same lunch room - and unless leadership start thinking of the kinds of adjustments that staff will need to make or implement we will see employees struggle with the return to work.  As someone who is responsible for running a program I am always checking in with my staff to make sure that they are doing okay.  We will be approaching two years in march of being remote - and throughout this time, my number one priority has been to make sure the staff is not over burdened.  Whether it be offering a support group for them to adjust to the pandemic, to hosting laughter session nights, to just creating a space for them to vent - it has helped in surviving through the pandemic in a virtual setting.  The work we do is emotionally exhausting and especially in a virtual setting makes it extremely challenging.  Our advocates listen day in and day out to stories of pain, shame, guilt and provide that emotional support, advocacy and time for our clients and it is so important that they are provided with the right coping tools and that they know that they are being supported in their workplace.   

What does this have to do with journaling?  Thinking about getting close to two years working virtually is scary - and I noticed that with the never ending recurrences covid variants and continued restrictions - it is starting to take a toll on staff.  So I thought to myself - what can I do for them?  What can I offer to help manage their stress levels? I started thinking of journaling as a writing tool and how it is extremely cathartic, and can also be fun with the right prompts.  So i started a monthly journaling group for staff - a space to write and carve out self-care time.  We had our first one this past friday and I am so glad we did it.  We talked about the many benefits of journaling and then provided them with guided writing prompts and shared.  It was a safe space and a time of healing.  And I could see from the look on their faces that they were enjoying it.  That gave me great satisfaction - and reaffirmed my need to do more of this.   I may not be able to bring about organizational change but what I can do is provide pathways for those I work with to make time for wellness and self-care.   

I hope that companies begin taking a look at the their employee's mental health and emotional health as we return to in person. I hope they take the time to have honest discussions about how awkward, difficult and uneasy this is - and I hope they give employees the space to find the normalcy once again.  

I leave you with a journal prompt that I think really helped me remember how much has changed over the years...

- Think of life pre-pandemic and where you are now - what has changed? What hasn't?  Begin with the prompt:  I Remember.....

Write for five minutes nonstop!

Happy Journaling! 

Friday, January 21, 2022

The Book of Regrets

 I started reading The Midnight Library by Matt Haig.  I am half way through it and I am thoroughly enjoying it.  For anyone that loves books and has spent hours in the library, the thought of being in a library filled with books about your own life is pretty incredible.  I remember spending time in my library after school and also while I was in college - I loved being surrounded by books - very comforting.  So this book was very easy to get into because the author creates that space for you to cozy up and start reading.  And that's how the book starts-I won't give much away but I will say this that it is about life and the paths we take and the paths we don't.  The main character is at a state of no return with the way her life is unfolding.  Sunk deep down in depression, she gets transported to this world which is The Midnight Library.  She is looks through her book of REGRETS and it is a big heavy book.  And she looks through different books of the many lives she could have lived had she taken that path.   

How many of us including myself have gone that road of "If only" - if only we had followed this, maybe my life would be different.  Then we keep building up this bucket of regrets and what does that really do to us? only more miserable.  What if we looked at our lives that everything that has happened to us has led us to the point that we are in today - we are a cumulative result of our experiences - would that create more regret? Or would that allow us to be more compassionate with ourselves and more understanding?  Does it mean we just accept and don't make changes? No- but its more an introspective look into the whys and hows of how we operate.  So that if something comes our way the next time around, we are more prepared with how we respond, welcome, and /or reject it.  I have lived my share of regrets- from career decisions to financial decisions to personal decision - to parenting decisions - and I can say from personal experience that it is very easy to get drowned in the abyss of the other "possible lives" or to get lost in the fact that my ability to make decisions is impaired.  Having come to a point at one point in my life to regretting every decision that I made, I had to force myself to take a step back and view it from a camera lens.  Reading through my book of regrets is not therapeutic - it only adds more shame and blame and guilt to the fire. And I dd not want to live with that anymore - I don't need it.  And so the real work began. I have had to work through and journal about these experiences to come to a place of acceptance -and it is hard work.  It is painful -but it is so worth it because then you are free - free to be u - with the whole works. There is a quote in the book by Ms. Elm the librarian " “‘You don’t have to understand life. You just have to live it.”  and that's exactly what life is about - living.   

A journal prompt for you this week is : Pick one regret and write a letter to it.  Pour out whatever it is in your heart.  Let it all come out - and be compassionate with yourself.  After that, treat yourself to something nice - a nice cup of tea, a small cookie, whatever will give you some sweet pleasure.  You deserve it.  

Happy Journaling!

Sunday, January 9, 2022

My Body My Friend

 For as long as I remember I have had a love/hate relationship with my body.  I have spent my whole life trying to make friends with my body because I know that  self-love is the key to accepting my body.  But yet this body doesn't shape itself according to my vision of what I want for myself so I continue to have this love hate relationship.  It only got worse when I was diagnosed with Breast Cancer and part of my treatment was to take Tamoxifen post radiation.  

For the last three years I have been on Tamoxifen to prevent the breast cancer from coming back and I would say these last years have been the greatest tests of my life in accepting the body or rather to stop fighting with it.  This drug does something that I had no idea it could do- it stops the level of estrogen from being produced in your body - but what does that do to a premenopausal woman?  It does a whole lot of craziness and more.  And it has been a journey in getting to understand my body and not fight it.   I have learned to identify triggers for hot flashes, I have learned to make friends with pains in all parts of my body that I didn't even think existed, and last but not least I have learned to come to terms that yes my metabolism has slowed down like never before and that I will need to move 5xs as much if I want to eat the things that I enjoy eating.  It is a journey of ups and down for me.  I hated taking this drug when I started it. I hated the mood swings, I hated the pelvic pains that would appear that would make me scared - could this me uterine cancer?  I hated my annual visits to the gynecologist because I knew it meant that I would have to do more than my routine pap smear. I hated weighing myself because no matter what the pounds just don't come down.  I hated that i couldn't move as fast i wanted to because of pain in my joints.  So much hate going into yourself is not good - i had to make a choice - either i learn to live with it and love it or it will eat me alive and I am the one that will suffer.  I do believe that 2021 was the year that I finally began seeing a shift with myself and this love hate relationship with tamoxifen.  I was not going to stop taking it - so I had to make a choice - find ways to live with the side effects to make my life better.  But stop the hate.  But to stop the hate I must name it.  I must own up to it, name it and be aware.  Awareness and opening up is a freeing exercise because it relieves one of shame and guilt and fear and anger.  And that is what it has taken.  

Do i still have the same problems yes?  But what has changed is the relationship with my body- learning to take care of it because it is in pain.  For example, I have severe pain on my ankles and feet and this is due to tamoxifen because it does affect the joints - but i need to move - so instead of getting angry at myself for not being able to move, I find ways to move that I enjoy that I know will alleviate the pain.  I also go for acupuncture which has been a life saver for me  in energy and symptom management.  There is a very common saying in my house, that they hear me say a lot - "We all have pain - emotional and physical but we have to work through the pain, It doesn't go away but it makes it less manageable and we have to find the tools that work for us." 

I have been reading Atlas of the Heart by Brene Brown - this book as I may have referred to in the past is about naming your emotions rather than shutting it down.  By naming how I have felt with my body in the last three years =it gives me more power to be my authentic self. The truth is ugly sometimes but the truth can also help see thing clearly and make us more open to being fully authentic with ourselves.  This will not be the last time I refer to this book - I believe there will be more blog posts on several aspects of this book - we are now in this society where it is not enough to just keep on living for the sake of living.  The pandemic has pushed us to want more out of life - to be better versions of ourselves- to love our imperfect self and to be true in thought word and deed - so I leave you with this quote:


What does it mean to you to be brave and afraid all in the same moment?  Where have you showed vulnerability and courage and it has set you free?

Write about it as a stream of consciousness with a timer - maybe for 10 minutes or even five if 10 is too much for you.  

Happy Journaling!



Saturday, January 1, 2022

January 2022

 It is the first day of January 2022.  A new year, and another chance to make amends, to mastering a craft, to check off something from that bucket list.  Another year to do it right again.  Another year to give ourselves the opportunity to becoming the better version of ourselves.  Yet isn't that so much pressure when you think of it?  We create lists and then end up becoming overwhelmed when we don't get them done and then we end up in a rat race with ourselves.  I have this ritual of looking over my old journals and I realize I daydream alot -I let out a big chuckle as I read through these fantasies of where I would be during the end of 2021.  Who would have thought that we would be right where we were from 2020?  Not me.  I decided that I was not going to do any resolutions.   This was not for me.  But I was going to write and that the right prompts will come to me at the right time.     So our family did not sit around and do our intentions or our year in review or the journaling prompt of where we think we are going to be at the end of 2022.  We are simply just going to enjoy the last day of the year by being together and that the universe will send me the prompts that I am supposed to write.  So what we did instead was walk it out - we went on a long walk during the day so we could get out whatever we were feeling - each of us - in our own way.  We didn't need words yesterday because we each are dealing with some aspect of how the pandemic has affected us and continues to do so.  But what we did feel was gratitude.  Gratitude for being safe, for being covid free, for being somewhat healthy and for being together.  I like looking for signs - I always ask for the universe to show me signs - sometimes they are right in front of me, sometimes it is very difficult to see...but yesterday while walking, we came across a mural that was put together for a better tomorrow. And it was the perfect perfect way to start the new year...the mural was titled " What I wish for..."  It brought joy to me in that moment.  A mural about a better society, a mural that was filled with color, artwork depicting our dreams and wishes.  A perfect encounter on our walk- totally unexpected and I was so happy.  And a beautiful picture of just how beauty can be found in our universe.  

This morning, I was checking my inbox and was reading through the latest posts by Suleika Jaouad. https://theisolationjournals.substack.com/p/the-five-lists -yet again anohter message from the universe for me.  This was not about setting intentions but they were the five journal prompts that I was looking for.  

Journal Prompts to help get stuff that is stuck out of us so we can have more clarity.  You see there is a lot of fear about having hope - We don't know if our dreams will come through.  The amount of people that we have seen pass away tragically, suddenly this year, all this leaves us feeling a little icky - so when I read this quote by  Pema Chodron that says "ABANDON HOPE, " I loved it -it frees me of all expectation for myself and frees me of disappointment.  So these prompts were the perfect antidote to feeling hopeless - it allowed me to sit with what is real, what is ugly, what is beauty, and simply just sit with it.  No expectation nothing and that made me even more grateful.


So I share with you on this new year the five writing prompts that Suleika Jaouad presented us with and yes this time our family did sit around and we did this together.  A beautiful way to begin the new year....I wish you all peace, good health and moments of pure joy.     Happy Journaling! 

In place of resolutions, journal your way into the New Year with five lists.

  1. What in the last year are you proud of?

  2. What did this year leave you yearning for?

  3. What’s causing you anxiety?

  4. What resources, skills, and practices can you rely on in the coming year?

  5. What are your wildest, most harebrained ideas and dreams?