Restoring Mental Energy

Tranquil Meditation scenery
Pixabay.com

Sometimes, no matter how much meditation, deep breathing, or mindfulness we pack into our day or week, our mental energy can be depleted.

To restore it without drugs, alcohol, caffeine or food, try one of these ways:

Find uplifting and positive activities

If f a Facebook or YouTube cat video makes you laugh, then watch it. Just in case you need a fix right now, here’s one:

If prayer or meditation gives you the needed relief, then pray or meditate.

If playing with your children does the trick, then play.

Some days, binge-watching Netflix can do the trick. 😉

Make a list of activities that are uplifting to you and make you feel positive about life.

Do what you love just like Bob Ross

(Here’s a link to Bob’s YouTube channel!)

Work aside (the one that pays the bills), what is it that you LOVE to do?

Baking, cleaning, organizing, reading, painting, running, walking in nature?

Some say you can’t choose what you do for a job and many say that the notion of “doing what you love, so that it doesn’t feel like work” is reserved for the few and the talented.

But each time you decide to do something (life, work, family) you are making a choice.

A choice to eat or not to eat the chocolate cake instead of an apple for breakfast. That’s not to say you have to beat yourself up about it. Admit your choice, and move on. But do realize you did make that choice.

Same with work. You CAN choose to take steps to better your situation. You can choose to be happy you have a job in the first place. Often that can be the catalyst to accepting what you have, and often it can be the catalyst for change.

You could start turning your hobby you love into work you love. It may take time, but it is possible.

If you are already doing what you love (teaching), then make every moment count. Do the things you love to do with your students, brainstorm with colleagues to make your school the best – the greatest – place to work and learn.

Mission for a purpose

Often, focusing on the “why” of our work can restore your energy.

For teachers, the why can be helping students understand grammar or math problems, influencing lives, ensuring students are taken care of, getting them ready for the real world.

For a factory worker, it can be that the microwave-ready veggies they put into the bags parents are purchasing helps the harried family have a fast and nutritious meal.

Restore with gratitude

writing a gratitude journal
pixabay.com CC0

When you are grateful for even the smallest things in life, you can quickly restore your energy. Writing down or saying out loud the things you’re grateful for today can increase your positivity.

Simply state: “I’m so happy and grateful that I have…

…food in my belly

…a job

…money for gas

…a nice home and family

…a healthy lifestyle etc.

Bringing work home

As teachers, we feel that we should be available 24/7, including nights and weekends.

After all, we do have summers off as well as time during the Holiday season to recharge.

You know well that it doesn’t work that way.

When you’re working 6-7 days a week, you’re doing no one any favors. Least of all yourself.

When you’re not happy, no one is happy.

We don’t even realize it ourselves that we project the unhappiness and exhaustion we feel onto everyone else as well – students, colleagues, and family alike.

Bringing work home won’t show as extra pay at the end of the month. Nor any less.

Instead, try to do all the work possible at school – at work.

Now, if you’re an English teacher like I was, there are times when you have to take a stack of essays home to read and correct. But it shouldn’t happen every night.

And if you’re like me, taking that bag of work home but not even opening it because you are so exhausted, well – that just creates more stress, because now you didn’t take care of it. (I wrote about the belief of how hard a task is here)

My solution was to have rituals in place, so that work was done at work, and home was for relaxing.

Cultivating a calm mindset is the key in managing the way your energy is expended.

That energy can be replenished with meditation. To feel calmer, happier, and more energized, click here for guided meditation written for Teachers by a Teacher.

I wish you a calm day.

Most sincerely,

Taru

Feel happier today — Order the full guide to listen to words of inspiration

Master your life to find happiness and fulfillment. Live in the moment, be present, be here now, and use your talents to create a clear and tranquil mind.

TRY IT! 5 DAYS of FREE GUIDED MEDITATION!

Just click here, enter your name & email to get started!

All done with the 5 Free Days? If you found the meditation helpful, imagine what 21 Days of Guided Meditation can do? Order now and Listen to Days 6-21 and continue to create calmness, happiness, and energy in your life.

Use coupon code Love2019 during the month of February to get $9.00 OFF regular price of $29.00! (That’s 31% off!)

Keep Reading the blog: 9 Tools to Get Enough ZZZs

©2018 Taru Nieminen – The Happy Teacher Solution

20 Questions for Teachers

20 Question Challenge for Teachers

Here’s a challenge for you: read and answer each of these 20 questions to find out some interesting things about yourself. Follow the facebook page and conversation – now, some of these are very intimate and some of the questions may be a bit too personal to post about. That’s okay.

These are for you. Whether you journal about them, talk it out with a friend, or simply mull over in your mind (perhaps with a good glass of wine…) it’s all up to you.

These 20 questions are meant for reflection, ponder, and/or meditation. You choose. Perhaps you’ll take each question and answer in your diary. You may want to answer all 20 in one sitting or tackle one per day. Perhaps you’ll pass on some, while taking much more time on others. Everyone is different.

Everyone will have different answers, different thoughts, and different emotions that may spring up. Take heart that those which “upend” you and bring the strongest emotions may be the ones that you may want to take more time on.

Again, everyone is different. Yet, you may want to have a plan in place when/if extremely strong reactions/passions/excitements surface. Perhaps take a walk, write it down, or meditate on it. Most of all, enjoy.

20 Questions for Teachers

  1. Where are you coming from?
  2. How are you feeling? Sad, scared, hopeless, hopeful, excited, nervous
  3. Are your feelings universal?
  4. How did you end up here?
  5. Do you have underlying fears
  6. Do you feel hopeless/hopeful?
  7. Are you comparing yourself to others?
  8. Do you have an overwhelming sense of anxiety?
  9. Are you grateful for what you have? Truly grateful?
  10. When did you last gift time for yourself?
  11. Do you feel like you have no control over your career?
  12. Do you need control of not just your career but life in general?
  13. Can your fears be substantiated?
  14. Do you look around you with overwhelm? Overwhelm at everything?
  15. Do you have a sense of not knowing where to start?
  16. Are you prepared?
  17. Can you organize? Organize time, files, priorities, family, etc.? Batch.
  18. Are you creative? What does it mean?
  19. How can you cultivate creativity?
  20. How do you deal with: family, overwhelm, time constraints, demands of work/admin, bad habits/good habits, organizing, quality lesson planning?

 

No matter what your answers, if you haven’t tried meditation yet, each happy, sad, elated, and fearful answer can be dealt with in meditation.

I hope you have an amazing day!

Get your meditation guide for Teachers written by a Teacher!

Use coupon code Love2019 during the month of February to get $9.00 OFF regular price of $29.00! (That’s 31% off!)