Do you worry excessively? Does this place a lot of stress on you? There are many of you faced with this dilemma. The truth is that stress and anxiety can affect your health and impact on your relationships.
Panic attacks can lead to insomnia, anxiety and it places your body in “overdrive”. Anxiety takes many forms such as anxiety disorder, panic disorder or social anxiety. Incidents such as preparing for a job interview, preparing to deliver a speech or presentation, financial problems and work-related problems can trigger anxiety and stress.
Some symptoms are:
In a 2017 study by Profmed, the 3 000 respondents indicated that work-related stress was a main contributor of anxiety. Respondents also indicated that stress had both an emotional and physical impact on them, with 11% stating that they had to take time off work due to stress-related illnesses. Of great concern is the 29 % of professionals who felt that they were not managing stress effectively. If this persists, you will be prone to burnout.
What is a phobia?
A phobia is an intense fear of something that, in reality, poses little or no actual danger. Common phobias and fears include closed-in places, heights, highway driving, flying insects, snakes, and needles. However, you can develop phobias of virtually anything. While most phobias develop in childhood, they can also develop later in life.
Phobias can sometimes consume you and act as an obstacle to success. Consider a person who harbours a fear of flying, and their job entails flying. This can lead to anything from a demotion, poor performance or even resignation.
You will need to address this phobia especially in the following instances:
You will know when you have a problem with anxiety, stress and phobias especially when:
My coaching programme will assist you to:
It goes without saying that divorce is rated as one of the most traumatic incidents in one’s life. There are other casualties such as family ties and, more importantly, children, especially minor children.
However, with our stressful lives, sometimes divorce is the only option and then one needs to plot a way forward and find appropriate coping mechanisms. In cases where the divorce id associated with prolonged legal battles, financial stress, animosity and emotional trauma, the act of divorce places added stress to the already stressful situation.
Then there is the issue of death or sometimes disability and this can place a huge burden on an individual.
You will recognize the following symptoms:
My coaching programme will assist you to:
Also Couples therapy:
To try and prevent divorce- Highly recommended!!!
The key element is communication and the kind of tenderness associated with dating. The demands of life, child rearing, career promotion, financial demands can erode good relationships.
I can help you to re-connect as a couple and to re-kindle romance and tenderness. I can help you communicate better and spend quality time together.
South Africa is struggling against the rising tide of drug use.
The latest report from the South African Community Epidemiology Network on Drug Use shows that an alarming 21% to 28% of patients treated for substance abuse in 2016/7 were under the age of 20. Some children in primary school have already started experimenting with drugs and alcohol.
Dr Joel Shapiro, clinical psychologist at Randburg’s Akeso Crescent Clinic, said most drug abuse stems from an underlying emotional problem.
“The core trigger for drug abuse is often an emotional one.
“For many youth, it is a sense of alienation, disconnectedness, loneliness or lack of normalcy that often arises in the years following puberty,” he said.
In a South African context and according to SACENDU, cannabis and alcohol are the substances most likely to be abused. Males over the age of 20 are the biggest abusers of alcohol while male youths are the main abusers of cannabis. It’s estimated that up to 60% of crimes committed involve the use of substances and 80% of male youth deaths are alcohol-related. South Africa also has a rate of foetal alcohol syndrome which is 5 times that of the US.
Adolescents are ‘biologically wired’ to seek new experiences and take risks, as well as to carve out their own identity. Trying drugs may fulfill all of these normal developmental drives, but in an unhealthy way that can have very serious long-term consequences.
The consequences are far reaching and can only be detrimental.
So what is responsible leadership? Is it simply judicious financial management? Is it how to show profits and cut down on expenditure? Does it deal with people management and providing mentorship and guidance? Is it about leading by example and living good values? Is it about being ecologically friendly and factoring-in green living and climate change? Is it about community outreach and national imperatives? Is it about social responsibility and not just ticking boxes? Is it about having a clean lifestyle?
Or is it about lining your pockets? It is about manipulating people and situations to seize power? Is it about lining up friends who can assist you in your selfish desire to enrich a select few? Is it about underestimating your key stakeholders by telling them, for instance, that a swimming pool in your house was built to put out fires- a fire pool in other words? Is it about giving the youth out there the perception that you can progress and enrich yourself without working hard? Is it about neglecting your key stakeholders and benefitting yourself and your associates? Is it about inward thinking and neglecting the proverbial bugger picture?
The answer I guess depends on where your priorities and values lie.
In South Africa we have individuals such as Marcus Jooste, Brian Molefe, Anoj Singh and Tom Moyane who are counterbalanced by Sizwe Nxasana, Thuli Madonsella, Archibishop Desmond Tutu, and of the course the legendary Nelson Mandela.
As a responsible leader, you need to be an exemplary role model and mentor. Sadly, our country is in dire need of credible role models and the youth have a perception that making money the “easy way” is the norm. As a responsible leader and Manager of human capital, you need to be a beacon and guiding light so that your good values and example become a blueprint worthy of paying-it- forward.
Of course, you will need to be:
My coaching programme can assist you with: