Coaching is
employed to make the good better. It
offers the client different perspectives; it challenges as well as supports; it
enables the client to reflect on her thoughts in a safe environment when
perhaps the workplace does not afford her this.
And it can go
further. What happens when the client
reaches a point in her life and career where demands outstrip resources? It’s a rather brutal way of describing
stress, grounded more in economics terminology than in mental health, but it
encapsulates the processes within perfectly.
A recent World
Economic Forum report, “Charter
for Healthy Living,” describes how “economic
uncertainty has placed many families…under enormous levels of stress.” Granted, the WEF’s findings of increased
levels of stress should be taken with a certain level of scepticism: while life
was universally better before the 2008 crash, I’d still choose life in 2013 over
1913 any day. But modern living – and the
demands we place on ourselves that accompany it – comes with its own problems.
Severe
stress is
highly debilitating. But what do I mean
by resources? Naturally, the inability
to pay the mortgage is an economic problem that can indeed lead to
stress. But what about non-monetary resources? Well, there are family
and friends. And there are professionals.
Now, I’m not
one to psychopathologise, but I certainly believe in dealing with small
problems before they become big problems.
(Unchecked, small problems tend to do that.) And, to illustrate this, the WEF report
contains one particular paragraph that is worth reproducing in its entirety:
Our modern lifestyle,
including changing social support networks and personal stress, is another type
of social pressure for Healthy Living. Modern
living places pressure on the traditional social support structures and
connectivity with families and the broader community (WHO, 2003). Stress (at work) has also been associated with
a 50% excess risk of coronary heart disease (Marmot, 2004; Kivimäki et al., 2006), and there is clear
evidence that work-related stressors have a negative impact on both physical
and mental well-being (Stansfeld & Candy, 2006).
Let’s think about this a moment. The social network has evolved over time, and
one significant change is that we are living more atomised lives. For example, as the 2010
US Census found, more people are living alone than ever before. While this is great for privacy and not
having to queue outside the bathroom, it can however bring about its
own problems. And this is where your
resources come in. When times are good,
we do not feel such a need for them; when times are hard, we tend to need to
reach out more.
Demands for increased role flexibility, less career
security, constant traveling, heightened workload, distance, a diminished
support network – and generally asking yourself if these roles in life still
mean to you what they meant a few years back: look out for these as potentially
stretching your resources. And talk
about it.
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