3 tricks to feel less anxious at work
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3 tricks to feel less anxious at work
Anxiety about work can feel all-consuming. When you’re really anxious about your job, you may think about it constantly but feel paralyzed when it comes to actually accomplishing tasks or improving how you feel.?
This pattern of anxiety followed by paralysis hurts your productivity, takes a huge toll on your mental health, and also can impact your physical health. For instance, feelings such as anxiety, sadness, and loneliness have been known to negatively impact sleep, increase the risk of stroke, and increase the risk of developing dementia.?
As a time management coach, I help my clients overcome anxiety and get more done. Here are my top three tips to help you feel less anxious at work:
WRITE EVERYTHING DOWN?
A major cause for job-related anxiety is being worried that you’re forgetting something. To counteract that fear, I recommend having a written list of any tasks that you need to accomplish. You could write these out on a piece of paper, record them in a task management system, put them in a project management tool, or even keep them in your calendar.
Where you keep them is not as important as the fact that you have a centralized place for capturing all of your to-do items. Simply knowing you have a place to look so you won’t completely forget something can dramatically reduce anxiety.
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And to help alleviate anxiety even more, I recommend the following to-do list management tips:
BE DEADLINE GUIDED
I don’t recommend having a “deadline-driven” approach to your work because this can lead to hopping from one fire to another, feeling burned out, and having extremely low productivity when you’re not absolutely forced to get something done. This creates anxiety because you associate meeting a deadline with extreme stress and sleep deprivation, and because you’re always feeling behind.
However, I do recommend being deadline guided. What this means is that you’re conscious of what really needs to get done. For instance, you should know whether a task is an essential item and has a firm due date. Then with this knowledge in mind, plan time in your schedule to get that work done ahead of the actual deadline.
For example, if I have something important due on a Friday, I’ll usually try to at least begin it the prior week in case something else comes up, or the work takes longer than expected. This reduces anxiety because I know when I plan to start the task that I have time set aside for it, and I have a buffer for unexpected events.
To decrease your anxiety even more, I also recommend these planning tips:
COMMUNICATE EARLY AND OFTEN?
One of the major causes of anxiety at work isn’t necessarily the work itself. It’s the stress created when you feel like you’re letting people down. This anxiety compounds when you avoid communicating to others about what’s going on. When you don’t communicate, you not only feel bad about the incomplete items but also the unanswered emails.
To avoid the anxiety created by people incessantly following up with you, simply reply.
You don’t have to have completed an item to let people know you’re working on it, share a status update, or even just acknowledge receipt. Yes, it’s best if you get work done. But any response is far better than not replying at all.
To lower communication anxiety, I highly recommend:
Workplace anxiety can come in many different forms and be due to many different factors. But these three tips can help you dramatically reduce that anxiety. The best part is that reducing your anxiety at work creates a virtuous cycle: You feel less and less anxious, you think less about work, and you have more time to actually get work done.?
Disney Advertising Local Sales professional with extensive experience in partnering with clients to close long-term deals across multiple platforms to maximize revenue for the company.
9 个月This is a great article and very proud of myself that I do pretty much all of the tips already :)
Freelance Technical Content Writer for IT Companies | Reliable, result-oriented & quality-centric Solopreneur | Building @smartphonedose
9 个月Keeping a to-do list highly reduces anxiety at work.
OK Bo?tjan Dolin?ek