How would it feel to make those tough choices without feeling that weight in your chest? What would it feel like to quickly restore a sense of calm and self-assurance whenever you need to most?
Our emotions have an obvious impact on our daily reality. Just think of how easy is to focus when you are peaceful and how difficult is to listen when you are worried; it’s common sense.
Yet, we often regard them as a potential source of weakness and unbalance, putting them aside so they do not interfere with our ‘clear thinking’.
Let’s explore how to manage and integrate the ebb and flow of our emotions better to sustain and boost our performance and well-being.
In previous articles we outlined the framework of five “batteries” that drive and sustain our energy:
While it is normal that the batteries fluctuate and interact constantly, the Personal Energy Management framework helps you to:
When you feel overwhelmed or are in the thick of a high-stakes meeting, it’s often your ability to monitor and support your emotional energy that tends to go out the window the fastest.
Your emotional energy is related to the QUALITY of your energy: it’s a fluid “internal climate” that can either support you or wear you down.
The “quality” to which I am referring is not one that is “positive” or “negative”. Rather, I prefer to regard them as “flowing” or “stuck”. Emotions are energy in-motion: they need to flow and when they don’t, they are likely to drain you and the people around you. I refer to stress as “frozen energy”, like the water in a winter stream.
To feel angry for a short time can help us to address an issue faster. Yet, if a month later we are still angry, those emotions are likely to drain us.
At the same time, imagine if you were always and only happy!
Each battery is recharged or drained by factors like your daily habits, your perceptions, and your lifestyle. For the Physical Battery, sleep, food and exercise were universal factors, and they were easy to identify.
As we move along the batteries, these factors become nuanced and become more akin to “clusters of factors”, where personal differences become more important.
When we talk about emotions, my clients often ask me for effective tools to manage them. My answer is to first identify their key factors and then select the techniques.
In my experience, these are the “4+1 cluster of factors” which most often affect the flow of your Emotional Energy.
Here's how you can begin to use your Emotional Energy to your advantage using examples from my one of my clients, Majeed.
First, you want to identify how the cluster of factors above are affecting your energy. Which ones are working for you? Which ones are more vulnerable?
Through the years, I’ve observed that “Drainers” have a greater impact than “Rechargers,” and this is especially true for our emotions; it is our “negativity bias”. For survival purposes, we are wired to look out for threats: we notice what doesn’t work, what makes us feel uncomfortable, and what could be dangerous. For this reason, we tend to miss out on what is “safe” and is going fine.
Let’s see how ‘Majeed’ put these ideas into practice:
Now the question to ask yourself is, “What could I do differently?”
To build new ways of doing things that stick, use the “Mini-Habit” methodology by taking on a small action which is meaningful for you, that you could do frequently (4-5 times a week) and is possible even when you feel tired or busy.
Majeed, at first, was very discouraged by his findings. As a senior executive, he felt that a calm assertive behaviour should come naturally to him. (We will explore further the “shoulds” in the article about Spiritual Batteries.)
He started to harshly criticize himself, which is – along with wanting to change too much too fast – one of the most common blockages to change.
Shaming yourself will make you feel even more inadequate. Talk to yourself as you would talk with somebody you deeply care for; as somebody who tries very hard and needs both honesty and kindness to develop further. Be patient and curious.
Once you’ve identified what you want to focus on, it is time to choose small steps you can take to create the greatest impact.
Majeed chose to start with these actions:
By taking small steps that he could build into his day-to-day routine, like expanding his emotional vocabulary or slowing down and tackling his inner voice, Majeed was able to replenish his emotional battery and bring more to his work.
Becoming more deliberate about where you focus your attention, along with how you identify, express, and let go of your emotions, will free up a lot of energy. It starts with creating new habits.
When forming new habits, patience is one of your most valuable assets because invariably you will fall back into old patterns when tired or under pressure. Being kind and honest with yourself will help you get up and go on.
Establishing small, daily habits will help you gradually tweak life-long behaviors that are not serving you, enabling you to access your best self more frequently. This template to build Mini-Habits is a very effective tool for getting started. Give it a try.
When it comes to your emotional energy, always remember that it has a huge impact on the quality of your life. How will you look after it today?