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resilience

How to Move on From Job Burnout

19/01/2020 by Marie

Feeling Stressed, Overwhelmed, Angry or Frustrated? Like 1 in 4 Others, You Could be Experiencing Job Burnout.

A few years ago, I experienced job burnout.

I had a good job with a well-respected brand, and I was killing it – regularly receiving awards and praise. I pride myself on my can-do attitude, and I was often the person called upon to get stuff done, the more important and immediate the task the more likely it was to come to me. I felt appreciated and important, and I was relishing it. Life was good.

Then it wasn’t.

I started getting colds and flus all the time, but I never felt that I could take the time to fully recover. There was just too much to do! I put on weight, mostly because I didn’t have time to cook or prepare meals, and I had stopped playing sports because I was just too tired after work.

I felt like I was always racing against impossible deadlines, forcing me to work into the evening or weekends. I’d always chosen to work late before – almost feeling proud of the extra hours I was putting in to get the job done well – now I felt cornered into it. I’d lost control and always felt snowed under. I noticed I was always stressed. In fact, it became my new answer when I’d walk into the office in the morning.

“How are you?” my colleagues would ask while not looking up from their computers.

“Oh you know, a bit stressed, but OK,” I would answer as I started up my laptop, brushing it off but also secretly hoping someone would say, “oh really, how can I help?”

They never did.

Most concerning to me, I was exhausted but couldn’t sleep. Not since my university days had I lay in bed awake stressing about all the things I had to get done the next day. The difference was that at university, I knew there was an end to exam week. It was a couple of weeks of intense prep and sitting the exams, then it was all over (with a holiday to follow!). But this just wasn’t ending, and it was getting worse. I tried writing my to-do list for the next day before bed, I tried deep breathing to calm my mind, I tried over-the-counter sleeping tablets. Nothing was working.

So, I jumped ship.

I was offered another job in another team, and it was the circuit breaker I needed. I got lucky, but not everyone has such a convenient alternative waiting for them when things get too tough.

2019: The Year of Burnout

2019 was the year that the world stood up and took notice of this problem.

It started when the World Health Organization (WHO) added burnout to its list of globally recognized diseases, estimating that one in five children or teenagers and one in four adults will experience burnout in their lives.

This was supported later in the year by the World Economic Forum labelling burnout a “mental health pandemic” and then later re-labelled it as an “occupational phenomenon” caused by chronic stress.

Understandably, there was also increased discussion of stress-management, resiliency and workplace engagement as a result.

Workaholics Beware

Job burnout happens after prolonged job-related stress, and it can affect your mental and physical health. According to the Mayo Clinic, job burnout can include the following risk factors that you should look out for:

  • identifying strongly with work
  • lacking balance between your work life and your personal life
  • having a high workload, including overtime work
  • trying to be everything to everyone, or trying to do everything
  • working in a helping profession, such as health care
  • feeling you have little or no control over your work
  • having a monotonous job

Unfortunately, society today rewards people who put in the extra hours – the people who are first to arrive and last to leave. Also, now that many people have a work phone, the lines between work and home have blurred, meaning we’re only a phone vibration away from that latest email your boss sends at 10pm because he’s also trying to catch up.

If you’re a high achiever or simply passionate about what you do, you are at higher risk of burnout. And if you’re a workaholic, then watch out!

Job Burnout Symptoms

Burnout is a slow progressing state that you get to over time which can leave you feeling physically and emotionally exhausted as well as cynical and detached. Symptoms of burnout include excessive stress, insomnia, fatigue, sadness, anger or irritability, alcohol or substance misuse, high blood pressure, and decreased immune function leading to an increase in illnesses, among others.

If you’re experiencing any of these job burnout symptoms, you’ll definitely want to get that checked out by a professional (talk to your doctor). If you’re not experiencing these symptoms, but are nodding along to those risk factors, you might want to reassess your current behaviours.

The Ideal State

A Yale university study recently examined engagement levels in 1000 employees and found that 2 out of 5 were engaged and had positive emotions about their work and workplace. Another 2 out of 5 were disengaged, so they were at higher risk of leaving the company. The last group, 1 out of 5, were engaged but burned-out – reporting high levels of interest, stress, and frustration. Surprisingly, people in this group had a higher turnover rate than those who were disengaged. To extrapolate, high performing talent is coming into organisations, burning themselves out, then moving on.

It stands to reason for both employers and employees that the ideal state for workers is to be highly engaged, but not to the point of job burnout. Workers need challenging work, sure, but they also need support to achieve that work. In short, managers need to stop asking one person to do more than one person’s worth of work for long or indefinite periods. And employees need to stop treating constant overtime as a reasonable request. Also, if asked to do a short-term stint of long nights and weekends, the worker needs time off afterward to re-balance. As Shawn Achor and Michelle Gielan wrote in Harvard Business review, “resilience is about how you recharge, not how you endure.”

Balance. That Old Chestnut.

While recovering is important in high stress jobs, it’s also important to put time and thought into how not to get stressed in the first place. And you guessed it, it’s all about balance.

There are three focus areas you should be aiming to find balance across. With small but powerful changes in these areas, you can keep some balance in your life and stop your job from leading you to job burnout.

When we experience job burnout, we let our job (the purpose and meaning circle) take over, often to the detriment of our relationships and health
  1. Put Work In Its Place – It Is One Part Of a Balanced Life

Remember, work is only one part of a balanced, happy life. Many studies have shown that we need to have purpose or meaning in our lives, and in today’s day and age we generally get that from our jobs. In fact, because our jobs take up so much of our times nowadays, they often become the main thing that gives us purpose and they often are inextricably linked to our sense of identity. What we do is very often how we introduce ourselves to others, and how we see our place in the world. So, yes jobs are important, but they’re not everything, and like with nearly all things in life, it’s about balance.

You need balance between what brings you meaning and purpose, and also between the other aspects of your life: your social connections and your mental and physical health.

You may only aim for balance between each of the three areas, whereas some people may also aim for balance within the three focus areas as well. This means aiming to have multiple things that give their life meaning, such as being a banker and a little league coach and a father/husband, or as we’re seeing more and more in today’s gig economy, you might be a freelance writer, a speaker and a change consultant.

If you have one job you’re passionate about, but your job has recently taken over your life (the red circle is the only or largest circle), then you should start by learning to say “no” while you are getting yourself back onto your feet. Talk to your boss about needing to find balance between work and personal life and agree that you won’t take on new tasks or responsibilities for a while until you can get back to a manageable workload. Also, take back your out-of-office life by agreeing on times you can turn off your work phone or silence alerts outside of work hours – then do it!

  1. Prioritise Your Mental and Physical Health

One of the first things that goes when we get busy is our physical health. With this one, start small if you want to make long-term change – the easiest way to fail at change is to try to do too much all at once. So, here’s some good news. Studies show that as little as one-hour of exercise per week, regardless of intensity, can show benefits. So, why not sign up for a 6pm gym class or sports league once per week. Tell your colleagues and boss so they can support you to leave on time that day. You could also find ways to get outside during your workday. Try walking meetings, or you could actually take your lunchbreak (gasp!), and when you do, find a park to sit in and eat lunch. Lastly, why not go for a hike with friends or family on the weekends – the benefits of being in nature are many.

Mental health is just as important as physical health, and they’re both intrinsically tied. There is a lot of information out there, such as be mindful, grateful, kind and generous. But if you’re recovering from burnout, or trying to, you may wish to focus on resting and recovering – also now known as self-care. So, take your holidays, get enough sleep, have long baths, Netflix to your heart’s content. Whatever it is that helps you unwind, make it a priority in 2020. Here’s some additional inspiration if you need it. Like with all things, you don’t want to overdo it (it’s all about balance!), but when things get busy it’s easy to forget we need to rest and recover too.

  1. Prioritise Relationships Outside of Work

What do people remember on their deathbeds? The people in their lives and the experiences they shared with them. Make sure you are prioritising your relationships outside of work, both at home and with friends. Find time to do activities with your friends and family, preferably face-to-face, such as taking holidays, going for walks, or having meals together. The benefits of having strong social connections are endless, and include living longer, being happier and being more resilient to illness, just to name a few. The great news is that you can roll #2 and #3 together sometimes for a double whammy.

If you don’t have many close friends and would like to have more, just remember, you need to invest the time. There is no quick fix here. The latest science shows that it takes about 200 hours to become a close friend with someone. So, try looking for a class or long-term activity that you can commit to that could help ease the awkward period between acquaintances and friends.

Why not make 2020 the year of balance? And if all else fails, you can just jump ship, like I did, and start again!

“Work is a rubber ball. If you drop it, it will bounce back. The other four balls—family, health, friends, integrity—are made of glass. If you drop one of these, it will be irrevocably scuffed, nicked, perhaps even shattered.”

Gary Keller

Dealing with Burnout

Remember throughout it all that there are science-backed activities you can do to better manage your stress and build your resiliency. Check out the posts under the below topics for some ideas on how to manage your stress, or speak to a professional.

Community and Connection: Connecting with others and contributing to your community are proven to build emotional resiliency and make your life happier. It is so important not to neglect this part of your life, especially if it doesn’t come easily, like when work is really busy or if you’re a natural introvert.

Health and Wellbeing: Your health and wellbeing is critical to your happiness. Luckily, there is a wealth of information about how to make small changes to your life to make it healthier and improve your wellbeing.

Meaning and Purpose: Having a sense of meaning and purpose in life is critical to resiliency and living a happy life. You need it to thrive and flourish. It’s about having a reason to get out of bed in the morning, setting goals and having commitments. Some lucky people get that purpose through their job, but many of us get our purpose through other activities such as volunteering, learning or experiencing new things or caring for others.

Related content: Read Moving On article Stress Reduction Lessons from Marie Kondo, listen to our Podcast: The Importance of Having Fun In Your Life – Interview (E27)

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: balance, burnout, career change, change, cope with change, employee engagement, employees, engagement, happiness, Job burnout, resilience, resiliency, stress, stress management, work, workers

How to be happy – 50 science-backed ways to improve your happiness

12/01/2020 by Marie

Are you looking for some ideas or inspiration to help reduce anxiety, build resiliency, cope with the stresses of modern life or lift your mood?

Positive Psychology is a fairly new sub-field within the study of psychology. It is the study of happiness and looks at how people can live a more fulfilling, satisfying and meaningful life. There has been an explosion of research over the past couple of decades, and one thing is absolutely obvious: you can practice happiness.

Happiness is not about being in a constant state of joy, or about being on a constant high all the time. It’s about positivity and mental wellbeing. It’s enjoying the good times and being able to bounce back from the bad times. It’s grieving when we need to grieve and being resilient when we need resilience.

Take a read below of the top 50 science-backed activities you can incorporate into your life that are proven to help you be happy. Try one or try them all. Try them once or make them a part of your daily, weekly or monthly habits.

But remember, as author Stephen Covey said, “The key is not to prioritize what’s on your schedule, but to schedule your priorities.” So, if you want to be happier or reduce stress, anxiety and negative emotions, pick a few of the below options that work for you, and schedule them into your weekly planner.

50 tips for how to be happy

1. Get a pet or interact with animals

The research shows that interacting with pets increased cortisol levels, making you happier.

2. Build a growth mindset

Having a growth mindset means you never stop learning. Now research shows that it also impacts how you see the world and makes you more likely to thrive in life.

3. Practice smiling

Science shows that once you smile, feedback loops go back to the brain which reinforce feelings of joy and happiness.

4. Be authentic to yourself and your truth

Humanistic psychologists have shown that as their clients become more authentic, they become happier and their psychological wellbeing increases.

5. Reduce your commute time

There are many changes you can make to your life to impact your happiness levels, and one of them is moving closer to work or finding a way to reduce your commute time. It turns out that having a bigger house doesn’t make up for having a longer commute.

6. Plan a holiday

Holidays are great, we all know that — take them whenever you can. But did you know that the biggest boost in your happiness comes not from the vacation itself, but from the act of planning the vacation?

7. Take your lunchbreak and get outside in the sun

A recent study shows that spending time by the sea makes people happier. It also showed that just being outdoors makes you happier — preferably in a non-urban environment, but hey, we’ll take what we can get!

8. Make time for family

There is substantial research into the benefits of close social bonds, but this study looks at the economic impact of having a happy marriage, and a good social life. The results? Good relationships and social bonds not only make you happier, they also make you richer!

9. Meditate

There are many types of meditation, and they all help with happiness. Research shows that participants report feeling more positive emotions and more energetic.

10. Eat lots of fruit and vegies

There is increasing research linking a healthy body to a healthy mind, including this study that showed eating more fruit and vegies led to an increase in motivation and vitality.

11. Discover your purpose or meaning

This one is a no-brainer. Many, many studies have shown that having purpose or meaning is key to happiness. But how do you find your purpose? Check out this article for some inspiration.

12. Do some gardening and plant a tree

Not only does being around trees increase our mental wellbeing, it also has a positive impact on our immune system! Who knew?

13. Practice self-compassion

Give yourself a break! Constantly aiming to be better is exhausting and focusing on what’s ‘wrong’ or needs improvement can lead to negative self-talk. So make sure you balance things out with some self-love and positive talk, or even better, work to stop judging yourself altogether.

14. Be social

Humans are genetically wired to be social animals, after all there is strength in numbers! So make sure you take the time to be social, even if you’re busy or introverted. You could meet a friend for coffee or organise a group to have dinner.

15. Buy some happiness

Let’s be clear: money doesn’t buy happiness (as long as you have enough to cover your basic needs). But you can use money to pay someone else to do the things you don’t like and free up some time for you to do things that will bring you joy.

16. Cut down on sugar

I’m so sad to see this one on the list, but not only is sugar bad for our waistlines, it may also increase our long-term risk of mental health disorders according to this study. Best to limit sugar to special occasions if you can.

17. Find happy people to be around

Sometimes we need to protect ourselves and cut toxic relationships out of our lives. But, have you stopped to consider the impact your partner’s happiness has on your life? Research shows that people with happier partners live longer! A thought worth considering when you’re dating. If that ship has sailed, then why not do something nice for your partner to bring a smile to their face once you’ve finished reading this article?

18. Find time for your close friends

Life gets busy, we know, but it’s important to keep your relationships strong, particularly as you age. This recent study shows that having just one strong friendship is enough to stave off mental decline as we age.

19. Find or create moments of awe in your life

Studies show that experiencing moments of awe makes us moregenerous and patient, and helps you deal with stress better.

20. Prioritise positivity

This is a tried and tested hypothesis and it’s true: how you see the world impacts your mental wellbeing. Or put another way, your beliefs affect your emotional experiences. Why not try this little trick to bring some more positivity into your life?

21. Have a family meal

We know that being social is important, so family mealtime is a no brainer, we have to eat so why not do it together? But what you may not know is that eating together benefits your kids’ mental and physical health. So, try to prioritise at least one family meal per day where you put phones and distractions away and be present with each other!

22. Have a laugh at yourself

You might think that people who are self-deprecating have lower self-esteem, but this study shows it’s the opposite, and people who make fun of themselves are in fact happier and better socially adjusted.

23. Learn to forgive your mistakes and accept yourself

It’s one thing to practice positive self-talk, but why not take it even further and forgive yourself altogether and accept your faults. In this study, acceptance was the habit that was most strongly linked to life satisfaction.

24. Try yoga

Yoga is a mind-body practice that has risen in popularity over recent decades, and it has also recently been proven to help people with depression.

25. Get creative

Find a passion and get creative, you could try writing, dancing, acting, cooking, painting or any number of other creative pursuits. No matter what you choose, one thing is sure, being creative helps people deal with trauma and is helpful to both physical and mental wellbeing.

26. Have (a little bit of) chocolate

Studies into how eating chocolate impacts mood showed either an improvement in mood or a reduction of negative mood.

27. Get a dog

Having a dog has been proven to increase physical health — after all you have to take them for walks. But dogs are also good for mental health too. Studies show that owning a dog reduces a person’s risk of premature death by up to a third!

28. Be kind

Kindness increases happiness, energy, the love hormone (oxytocin), pleasure and it even increases your lifespan. It’s also really easy to practice and has recently started a global movement you can get involved in #RandomActsOfKindness

29. Attend a spiritual retreat

A study showed that people who attend spiritual retreats report greater psychological well-being and show retreats may increase levels of “feel-good” hormones in the brain.

30. Build your work friendships

Positive and warm relationships at work can make us feel happier and healthier, while also increasing productivity.

31. Take a break or limit overuse of social media

We’ve all heard the doomsday reports on the negative effects of social media. It turns out the key to social media is to be active in your use (not passive). When used actively to build or maintain social ties, social media can be a positive force, but beware of passively scrolling through feeds for hours — this can lead to liking yourself less and feeling envy. Also taking a week off can boosts well-being too. In the end, the research says to use social media wisely, deliberately and sparingly.

32. Take a moment to look at nature

On your way to work? Popping into the shops? Wherever you are, be sure to stop and smell the roses, or at least notice them. Research says that observing nature — wherever you may be — will make you feel happier.

33. Cook a new recipe for dinner

Cooking is a form of self-care and cooking for others is a way of nurturing people and sharing a meal is a great way to create deeper social bonds.

34. Practice loving kindness

Research has shown that helping others through acts of charity or volunteer work can make you feel better and happier, but more recent research finds that simply wishing someone well may have a similarly positive effect on our moods.

35. Get active

A study that examined data from almost 34,000 people has found that as little as one-hour of exercise per week, regardless of intensity, can help to prevent depression. So, get out there and something, anything, for just an hour and you can reap the benefits!

36. Give up smoking

Sorry smokers, I know it feels like everyone is ganging up on you, and I don’t have good news for you either. Research shows that giving up smoking is linked to greater happiness and elevated mood.

37. Get enough consistent sleep

Recent research has suggested sleep should be considered a major public health concern, and shows that the effects of a good night’s sleep are as beneficial for our happiness and well-being as winning the lottery might be!

38. Play some happy music

Music has not only been proven to help people with anxiety and depression, but it is also a major key to happiness, alleviating pain, keeping your brain healthy and improving mood.

39. Take control over your life

Developing greater control over your life can help you make important life decisions and feel less overwhelmed, stuck and lost. Read on for 7 ways to take control of your life.

40. Go for a hike in the mountains or a walk along the beach

Researchers have found that simply going for a leisurely walk can improve mood and boost subjective well-being, particularly for adults who are normally sedentary.

41. Go outside

The findings are in: the more green space in the neighbourhood, the happier people report feeling. Quite simply, if you want to feel better, just go outside.

42. Be generous

Research shows giving to others activates an area of the brain linked with contentment and the reward cycle. So, performing selfless acts makes you happier.

43. Get a cat

You either love ’em or hate ’em, but the benefits are clear, cats make our lives happier and healthier.

44. Join a choir or sing with friends

Music helps to synchronise our bodies and our brains, making it the perfect social glue. Participants in a sing-along reported feeling closer and more connected because of the experience of singing together.

45. Do some volunteer work

Research has shown that volunteering is rewarding in and of itself, and helping others is a way to higher individual wellbeing.

46. Set some goals and work to achieve them

Research shows that people who are making progress toward or are achieving meaningful goals are happier. Whether they’re health and fitness goals, or family goals, or work goals, the key is to be making progress.

47. Practice gratitude

In positive psychology research, gratitude is strongly and consistently associated with greater happiness. Gratitude helps people feel more positive emotions, relish good experiences, improve their health, deal with adversity, and build strong relationships. One tip that has shown results is to keep a gratitude journal.

48. Forgive others

Forgiving others is a great way to let go of negativity. Follow this guide to work through the 9 steps to forgiving someone.

49. Have sex with someone you love

A number of studies have shown that sex is a key ingredient of a happy marriage — producing and ‘afterglow’ that can last up to two days.

50. Chasing happiness can have the opposite effect!

Beware chasing happiness for the sake of happiness. The above tips are all great activities you can pursue that have been proven to increase happiness and/or decrease negative moods and feelings. But it’s worth pointing out in our last tip that simply chasing happiness is not the way to find it.

Conclusion

The research shows that you can’t chase happiness, but you can fill your life with new and novel experiences, preferably shared with friends and family, that bring meaning to your life and the lives of others. If you can find the balance between the activities that you choose, and those you must do (often your day job), you might just succeed in finding happiness.

Ever wondered how to be happy? Are you looking for a few ideas or some inspiration to help reduce anxiety, cope with the stresses of modern life, or lift your mood? Here are 50 science-backed activities you can incorporate into your life that are proven to help you be happy.

Try one or try them all, try them once or make them a part of your daily, weekly or monthly habits.

But remember, as author Stephen Covey said, “The key is not to prioritize what’s on your schedule, but to schedule your priorities.”

So, if you want to be happier or reduce stress, anxiety and negative emotions, pick a few of the below options that work for you, and schedule them into your diary to make them habits.

“Work is a rubber ball. If you drop it, it will bounce back. The other four balls—family, health, friends, integrity—are made of glass. If you drop one of these, it will be irrevocably scuffed, nicked, perhaps even shattered.”

Gary Keller

Share your tips for a happier life below! We’d love to hear them.


Don’t miss out! In 2020, we’ve got a jam-packed editorial calendar of science-backed content on topics like ‘the power of being bored’ and ‘the importance of finding ‘flow.’’ There will be reviews of books, research and talks in the positive psychology space, and we’ll be launching a new podcast called Happiness for Cynics. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss out!

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: happier, happiness, happy, inspiration, mental health, mental wellbeing, resilience, resiliency, wellbeing, wellness

TED’s top 11 positive psychology talks

05/01/2020 by Marie

Are you new to the field of positive psychology? Maybe you’re overwhelmed with all the content out there and not sure where to start?

It’s not surprising. Positive Psychology is a fairly new sub-field within the study of psychology. It is the study of happiness and looks at how people can live a more fulfilling, satisfying and meaningful life, and there has been an explosion of research and content over the past couple of decades.

To get you started on all you need to know, here’s a look at the best TED talks by some of the top positive psychology superstars around the world.

  1. Martin Seligman: The new era of positive psychology (23:42), July 2008. Commonly known as the founder of Positive Psychology, Martin Seligman is a leading authority in the fields of Positive Psychology and resilience.
  2. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Flow, the secret to happiness (18:55), October 2008. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi is a Hungarian-American psychologist. He recognised and named the psychological concept of flow, a highly focused mental state conducive to productivity and happiness.
  3. Dan Gilbert: The surprising science of happiness (21:16), September 2006. Dan Gilbert is an author and Harvard psychologist who says our beliefs about what will make us happy are often wrong.
  4. Robert Waldinger: What makes a good life? Lessons from the longest study on happiness (12:46), December 2015. Robert Waldinger is a Harvard psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, Zen priest and director of the longest study on adult life and happiness.
  5. Carol Dweck: The Power of Believing That You Can Improve (10:24), November 2014. Stanford university psychologist Carol Dweck researches “growth mindset” — the idea that we can grow our brain’s capacity to learn and to solve problems verses having a ‘fixed mindset.’
  6. Emily Esfahani Smith: There’s more to life than being happy (12:18), September 2017. Emily Esfahani Smith is a writer who draws on psychology, philosophy, and literature to write about the human experience—why we are the way we are and how we can find grace and meaning in a world that is full of suffering.
  7. Brené Brown: The power of vulnerability (20:19), December 2010. Brené Brown is a research professor at the University of Houston where she studies courage, vulnerability, shame, and empathy. She is the author of five #1 New York Times best sellers.
  8. Shawn Achor: The happy secret to better work (12:20), February 2012. Shawn Achor is an American author, and speaker known for his advocacy of positive psychology. He authored The Happiness Advantage and founded GoodThink, Inc.
  9. Angela Lee Duckworth: Grit: The power of passion and perseverance (6:12), May 2013. Angela Duckworth is co-founder and CEO of Character Lab, a nonprofit that uses psychological science to help children thrive, and a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania.
  10. Adam Grant: The surprising habits of original thinkers (15:25), April 2016. Adam M. Grant is an American psychologist, author and professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania specializing in organizational psychology.
  11. Susan David: The gift and power of emotional courage (16:48), January 2018. Susan David, Ph.D. a renowned psychologist and expert on emotions, happiness, and achievement, believes that one of the keys to a happy life is knowing yourself. She talks about recognising your feelings and understanding what they are really telling us.

Got a favourite Ted talk that’s not on this list? Share it below.


Don’t miss out!

In 2020, we’ve got a jam-packed editorial calendar of science-backed content on topics like ‘the power of being bored’ and ‘the importance of finding ‘flow.’’ There will be reviews of books and other resources in the positive psychology space, and we’ll be launching a new podcast called Happiness for Cynics. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss out!

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: career change, change, cope with change, courage, flow, grit, habits, happiness, happy, inspiration, new career, new job, passion, plan for change, positive psychology, resilience, resiliency, vulnerability

Top 12 positive psychology articles of 2019

15/12/2019 by Marie

Even though the field of positive psychology is relatively new, there is so much good content out there and new research to learn from and apply.

Here’s a look at the must-read articles from 2019, covering topics such as resiliency, burnout, happiness, gratitude, meaning, positivity and vulnerability. Enjoy!

1. Five Ways for Workplaces to Support Employee Happiness (Greater Good Science Centre)

From fostering purposeful work to encouraging authenticity in the workplace, the 6th World Congress of the International Positive Psychology Association offered research and practical tips on the keys to well-being at work. These are the key takeaways.

2. How a Little Humor Can Improve Your Work Life (Greater Good Science Centre)

Laughter and jokes can make us happier and more productive on the job. The funny stories they shared remind us that a little playfulness goes a long way toward a more enjoyable work life.

3. Resilience Is About How You Recharge, Not How You Endure (Harvard Business School)

We believe that the longer we tough it out, the tougher we are, and therefore the more successful we will be. However, this entire conception is scientifically inaccurate.

4. Ten Daily Habits That Can Actually Change Your Life (Forbes)

Your attitude determines your altitude. So, don’t let old habits hold you back.

5. What causes us to burnout at work? (World Economic Forum)

Positive stress and adrenaline in the right circumstances can make us stronger, happier and healthier. Yet, in certain work environments, chronic stress provokes anxiety, detachment and fatigue that can lead to burnout.

6. The Unexpected Benefits of Pursuing a Passion Outside of Work (Harvard Business School)

While pursuing passion at work is known to increase work engagement and job performance, it’s both unrealistic and risky to rely on work as the only means through which to do so

7. The Business Impact of Gratitude (Forbes)

While many of us tend to view and express gratitude in relation to our personal lives, gratitude in the workplace is especially critical because it satisfies the higher psychological need to feel a sense of belonging to something greater than ourselves–to feel a sense of meaning at work.

8. Three habits of positive people (Moving On)

You can train your brain to be more positive and happier! Here’s the science backed way to do it.

9. I Tried the Morning Routines of Oprah, Tom Brady, Melinda Gates and Chrissy Teigen (Thrive)

However you spend it — a solid morning routine has the power to ease our stress and help us feel focused and composed throughout the day.

10. Three ways to bring joy back into your life (Moving On)

At a certain point in our lives, it becomes easy to get stuck in a rut. Somewhere along the way, we run out of novel experiences and daily inspiration. So, why not do something about it, here’s a bit of inspiration to get you going.

11. Five of the best sporting activities for a healthy mind (RedBull)

Medical experts and amateur athletes share their thoughts and experiences on the best activities to strengthen your mental fitness.

12. What’s Your Purpose? Finding A Sense Of Meaning In Life Is Linked To Health (MindShift)

Having a purpose in life may decrease your risk of dying early. People who didn’t have a strong life purpose — which was defined as “a self-organizing life aim that stimulates goals” — were more likely to die than those who did, and specifically more likely to die of cardiovascular diseases.

Have you read anything this year that’s worth sharing, if so please let us know in the comments below!

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: burnout, daily habits, exercise, gratitude, habits, happiness, meaning, passion, positivity, purpose, resilience, resiliency

5 Ways to Teach Kids Resiliency and Happiness

12/12/2019 by Marie

Change is here to stay. In fact, the rate of change is only going to get exponentially faster, leaving the unprepared feeling burnt out and frazzled. We’re living in a Change Storm. That’s why it’s so important to teach our next generation about how to cope with the ever-evolving world we live in.

Think about it. We teach kids to read and write, we teach math, science and history, but nobody teaches kids how to deal with the complicated business of existence itself. Who is teaching kids the social and emotional skills needed to navigate life in a mentally and physically healthy way?

Sorry, I don’t have the answer for you, but I do have 5 great products that can help your kids develop the mental and emotional skills needed to become resilient, emotionally mature and happy adults.

Big Life Journal

The Big Life Journal

The Big Life Journal is a kids’ workbook that is designed to help kids develop a growth and resilient mindset so they can face life’s challenges with confidence. The activities in the book encourage better self-esteem and resilience, while infusing a love a learning and an openness to taking on new challenges. Find this on Amazon.

Awesome Ends In Me gratitude journal

Awesome ends in ME is a guided gratitude journal which teaches kids how to get the most out of practicing gratitude. The book also includes activities so kids aged 5-12 can learn to manage emotions, create a growth mindset, focus on their strengths, create meaningful connections, and maintain healthy habits to live a happy life. Available on Amazon or check out the AwesoME Inc website for some great adult products too.

Superhero Strengths: Card Game

This is a fun game for kids and teens aged 6-14, teaching skills in strength, coping, feelings, resilience and relationships. Kids play the role of superhero collectors while learning to identify their strengths, deal with feelings, build coping skills, and improve resilience. Available on Amazon.

The Tower of Self Esteem

This game helps kids learn to choose positivity and while boosting self-confidence and social skills with creativity, problem solving and teamwork. Kids work with family and friends to build a joint tower in additional to a personal tower using cards that instil positive thinking. For ages 6 and up, available on Amazon.

No Waries Social Emotional Game

This fast-paced game for kids and adults ages 5+ is based on the classic game called War. It helps kids learn new feeling and emotion words, gaining an understanding of a variety of emotions so they can acquire and apply social emotional skills. Visit Amazon to puchase.

UPDATE: New product!

Snakes and Ladders: Climb to Emotional Maturity

Since posting this article, I have also come across a great game by The School of Life which teaches kids about emotional life. They’ve reworked the old Snakes and Ladders game: the ladders represent all those moments when you learn how to be more of a grown-up, the snakes the times when you end up acting, against your better nature, like a tantrum-prone toddler. Visit The School of Life’s website to order the game.


Comment below! Do you have other recommendations for great products that can help children develop the skills to be happy and resilient adults? Tell us below in the comments.

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: Christmas, gifts, happiness, inspiration, Kids, present, resilience, resiliency, strength

How Caregivers Can Stay Resilient

08/12/2019 by Marie

There’s a special place in heaven for caregivers.

With an ageing population, caregiving is something that more and more of us will have to step into at some time in our lives. It’s an often-thankless role, involving putting one’s own needs aside, neglecting oneself even, to focus solely on the care and comfort of a loved one.

Who is Caring for the Caregivers?

Looking after others, particularly if they’re approaching the end of their lives, can be the hardest thing a person can go through. Yet, all the focus is often on the person who is sick.

The simple fact is that the psychological, social and health impacts of caring for others can take its toll on even the most resilient and positive of people, and more often than not, the role of caregiver also ends with devastating heartache.

When I was in hospital following a motorbike accident, my husband took time off work and was constantly by my side for weeks. He eventually had to go back to work, or risk losing his job, but he continued to visit me every evening as soon as he could and would stay until the nurses told him to leave for the night.

After leaving the hospital, he would go home and start the household chores, which had suddenly all fallen to him. He’d cook and prepare meals for the week, he’d do the laundry, clean the house, pay the bills, feed the cat and take her to the vet for vaccinations. He lived among a pile of boxes for months, as we had only just bought our first apartment and hadn’t yet moved in when the accident happened.

His life revolved around me… my doctors visits, my surgeries, my recovery. But in some ways, he was lucky, because he could escape the banality of my hospital room and the stress of the situation and go to work for 9 hours a day. He got a small reprieve every day – granted it was only work – but many don’t. Still, it was hard on him, I could see it.

The good news is that research shows us that caregivers who practice positive emotion skills benefit greatly, with increases in positive moods and ultimately less depression.

Caring for the Caregivers

Researcher Judith Moskowitz explains that building moments of positivity into caregivers’ weeks can help to cope with the stressors of caregiving and can build your resiliency to deal with what’s going on in your life.

“We’re really clear in this intervention—or we try to be—that this is not about pretending like things aren’t bad or difficult, or that you’re not distressed or stressed. It’s about understanding that you can experience positive emotion alongside the negative. The negative is what it is; it should be acknowledged and addressed if it’s at high levels that are unsustainable,” said Judith in an interview with Greater Good Magazine.

Here are three types of interventions, backed by Judith and her team’s research, that you can take to help bring more positivity and resilience into your life as a caregiver:

  1. Being thankful: Take the time every day to notice the positive things you have in your life. Every evening before bed, write down 2-3 things that you are thankful for and, over time, watch your outlook on life change.
  2. Mindfulness: Adapted from Buddhist practices, everyday mindfulness is about being self-aware and accepting of our thoughts. It is proven to reduce stress and can help to make you feel better. There are plenty of resources online to help you develop mindfulness practices.
  3. Goal setting: Make sure you set some goals outside of the immediate needs of caregiving and work to achieve them. Having goals and something to work towards give additional meaning to your life and is critical for This could be as simple as planning and going on a picnic or a weekend getaway, or you could focus on developing or mastering a skill.

So, please, take the time to look after yourselves too caregivers! And if you think you don’t have time to dedicate to yourself, then let me leave you with the most important takeaway from Judith’s research: people who were happier were better caregivers.


Related content: Read Moving On article Resiliency Is About Recharging And Self-Care, But Are You Doing It Wrong? , listen to our Podcast: Positive Affirmations (E29)

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Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: adjust to retirement, Caregiver, change, elderly, enjoy retirement, happiness, inspiration, plan for retirement, prepare for retirement, resilience, resiliency, retired, retirement, support

3 Habits of Positive People

25/11/2019 by Marie

Robert Collier, one of America’s original self-help authors who believed happiness and abundance were achievable by everyone, once famously said “Success is the sum of small efforts, repeated day in and day out.”

What if positivity was the same, and all you had to do was repeat the same few habits and you could be a happy person?

Well, the research shows that’s exactly how it works. You can train your brain to be more positive and happier! Here’s the science backed way to do it.

1. Practice Being Grateful, Every Day

Write down 3 things you’re grateful for each day.

“In just a two-minute span of time, done for 21 days in a row, we can actually rewire your brain, allowing your brain to work more optimistically and more successfully,” says psychologist and CEO of Good Think Inc., Shawn Achor, in his Ted Talk The Happy Secret to Better Work.

Shawn and his team have worked with a whole lot of companies, and by the time they’ve finished this simple exercise people’s brains are starting to retain a pattern of scanning the world for the positive first, not the negative. If that doesn’t work for you, try making it a habit to talk to your family each night about one positive experience you’ve had that day – this allows your brain to relive it. 2.

2. Exercise Regularly

This one is tried and true. We’ve heard it all our lives, do exercise, it’s good for you in so, so, so many ways.

There are a whole lot of YouTube videos for 10- and 20-minutes exercise sessions you can do before work or bed each day. Make sure you start small and work your way up. Remember it’s better to do a bit somewhat regularly, rather than a lot all at once then quit.

If you’ve never really been into exercise in the past, I recommend starting in your lounge room, with a 10-minute exercise like this one for beginners or for a more intense cardio workout try this session from Brookes. Try doing this three times per week for a month, then try making this a regular pre- or post-work habit and doing it five times a week. After a few months, or when it becomes too easy, move to a 15-minute session.

3. Make it a Habit to be Nice

And finally, be nice. If you make being nice or kind a habit, you become more positive and see more niceness in others’ actions and around you.

On top of that, according to Dr. Ritchie Davidson at the University of Wisconsin, being nice makes you nicer too! “It’s kind of like weight training, we found that people can actually build up their compassion ‘muscle’ and respond to others’ suffering with care and a desire to help,” says Ritchie.

Check out these other studies that show the benefits of being nice. There are so many easy and free things you can do to be nice, such as writing an email to thank a colleague for a job well done, or leaving positive comments on a blog or online article. For more inspiration and resources, visit https://www.randomactsofkindness.org.

The research is conclusive and shows you can train your brain just like you train your body. Life’s too short to not be happy with it, why not put these 3 things into practice today?

Related content: Read Moving On article TED’s top 11 positive psychology talks

Tell me what you do to stay positive in the comments below!

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If you’re enjoying this blog, don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss out on any posts! Just pop in your email address on the home page, and I promise to treat your personal information with respect and not spam you with stuff you don’t want or need. NOTE: I receive no payment or endorsement for this post. It is my opinion only.

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: cope with change, happiness, inspiration, positive, resilience, satisfaction

I Choose to Get My Ass Kicked

27/10/2019 by Marie

There’s nothing more life affirming than getting your ass kicked, and being OK with it. It’s the simple act of showing up, of not knowing if the outcome will go your way, and participating anyway. 

It’s about making yourself vulnerable, knowing it, and doing it anyway.

Get in the arena and fight, or lay down and die.

The latter is exactly what I did when I got out of hospital after 3 months of fighting. Yep, you read that right. I just opted out. I don’t know why, but it turns out that many people do it following big life transitions.

It’s been a long road since then, and I’m only just wrapping my head around all the research in this space, but I want to start by talking about vulnerability.

The Power of Vulnerability

There’s a certain rush that comes with it, not quite like jumping out of a plane, but close enough without putting your life in danger. It’s the rush of fear and loss of control – which is particularly hard on us Type A people!

Vulnerability is exactly what Dr. Brené Brown has been advocating for since spoke at TedxHouston in 2010. Since then, her talk “The Power of Vulnerability” has become one of the top five most viewed TED talks ever, with 44+ million views.

Brené, a research professor at the University of Houston, has spent more than two decades studying courage, vulnerability, shame, and empathy. She is the author of five #1 New York Times bestsellers. And she has recently filmed a talk on Netflix, “The Call to Courage,” which was launched in April 2019.

With a great sense of humour, Brené talks about choosing courage over comfort, and I couldn’t agree more. I highly recommend you find the time to watch these videos, because as Brené says: “I want to be in the arena. I want to be brave with my life. And when we make the choice to dare greatly, we sign up to get our asses kicked. We can choose courage or we can choose comfort, but we can’t have both. Not at the same time.”

So thank you Brené, and yes, I too choose to get my ass kicked.

Related content: Read Moving On article My Story

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: Brene Brown, moving on, resilience, show up, vulnerability

The Change Storm

10/10/2019 by Marie

We’re all living in a change storm – experiencing more change, more often than ever before.

Whether we’re starting our first job, moving interstate or overseas, changing careers or retiring, it’s clear that life is full of major transitions and changes. So, why are so many of us unprepared? Why are we so often not equipped to deal with that change, even though quite often we know it’s coming and sometimes we’re even looking forward to it?!

Can it really be true that we all go through major life changes, yet none of us are taught how to be prepared to do it well?

We’re Living in a Change Storm

Globalisation and technological change are transforming companies, industries, countries and societies. More than that, they’re leading to uncertain, volatile ways of living and working. We’ve all heard it before, the only constant is change, and there’s no escaping change in our lives.

For instance, did you know…?

  • Globally, 14 percent of jobs could disappear in the next 15-20 years, and another 32 percent are likely to change radically.
  • In Australia, some jobs cuts are estimated as high as 40%, and possibly even more in rural areas. This means many Australians should prepare to lose their jobs or have to change jobs in the future.
  • In the US, more than 70,000 baby boomers will reach retirement age every single week until 2030, and hundreds of thousands of service members separate from the military each year.
  • In the UK, there were 2.34 million higher education students in 2017-18 who were preparing to enter the workforce.
  • And the latest research shows that most people will change their career 5 or more times in a lifetime.
The Change Storm

You Can’t Ignore the Change Storm

Now, I am no stranger to change and stress. I come from an elite sports background. I started my career in journalism before moving to a successful career in public affairs, advising top executives in multinational corporations both here in Australia and in the U.S.

But, a couple of years ago, I had just finished a season as the captain of the NSW State Women’s Volleyball team, and I was on holidays in central Vietnam with my best friend when I had a motorbike accident and nearly died.

But here’s the kicker, that wasn’t the worst part.

The worst part wasn’t when I thought I would have to have my leg amputated. It wasn’t the 12 surgeries, and years of pain and rehab. And the worst part wasn’t being told I would never play volleyball again – even though that was a devastating day.

The worst part was months after my accident. That was when everything fell apart, and it was a long road to regain my mental health.

Once on the other side of that dark place, I began to really question why my resilience had left me then. Why was I mentally tough when I had played volleyball in packed stadiums, and when counselling angry executives during huge crises, or even during my horrific accident, but not when I was making progress in recovery and looking forward to going home?

As I was trying to unpack everything I had experienced, I began to talk to people who’d had similar periods of depression following big life changes. And I went from feeling alone and ashamed that I hadn’t coped well, to feeling indignant that this was so common, yet no one had warned any of us what to expect!

The Three Resilience Foundations

So, being an ex-journo, I decided I needed to interview people all over the world. I’ve spoken to Olympic athletes and coaches, to current and former military personnel, to people who have retired, changed careers or been made redundant, and I’ve spoken to people who’ve had heart-breaking diagnoses and accidents.

And here’s what I’ve learned: Resilient people – the people who deal with whatever life throws at them – have balance across 3 key foundations.

This isn’t to say that when things go wrong or bad, that resilient people don’t feel pain and sadness. It means that despite the change storm, resilience people did not let times of higher stress overwhelm them or lead to depression.

1. Purpose and Meaning

Firstly, they have purpose and meaning in their lives, and this is often tied to a strong sense of identity and self. This is about having something to get you out of bed in the morning, and about having goals, plans and commitments.

2. Community and Connections

Secondly, they have strong community and connections. They have a core group of people they could talk to and depend on, they also tend to have a wider community network, through activities like church or regular volunteering.

3. Healthy Mind and Body Habits

Thirdly, they practice and prioritise some positive habits for a healthy body and mind. That could be getting out into nature for walks, going to the gym, or playing on a sports team, or it could be meditation, drinking water, and making sure they get 8hrs of sleep. The activity itself varied, the main point was that resilient people prioritise their own self-care habits.

3 resilience foundations

So, there is nothing particularly ground-breaking here, this is common sense, right? So, why are we getting it wrong?

My Story

Being discharged from hospital was a monumental achievement and happy day, but what I had failed to understand, is that while I was in hospital the fight to survive and keep my leg had given my life meaning and purpose. Similarly, I had the support and daily interactions with the army of healthcare professionals, friends and family who had rallied by my side.

But in one fell swoop, I lost it all. The second I came home, I was left mostly alone and with no real purpose. There were a lot of empty hours in the day, and it didn’t take long for me to crash.

My mental health recovery was gradual, and largely due to dumb luck. There were two changes that happened around the same time that helped me find my mental health again.

Firstly, I had been quite frustrated at how slow rehabilitation is. I’d been an athlete, and I am quite competitive, and I was already bored. So, one day I rolled my wheelchair into the gym and told my physio I had booked flights to Machu Picchu in a year’s time. That gave me a goal and lit a fire.

Around that same time one of my good friends begged me to help him establish a competitive volleyball program for Sydney’s LGBTIQ Volleyball Club. They needed a coach who could launch and run a new program. He had it all planned out, so I didn’t have any excuses. I reluctantly agreed, not having the strength to look him in the eye and say no, even though that’s all I really wanted to say. A few weeks later, I rolled my wheelchair into the gym for tryouts, preparing myself for the looks of confusion and doubt from the adult men in the gym. I couldn’t have known at the time that these fabulous, dramatic, caring men would save me. Because they might not know it, but they gave me back my identity, my community. They gave me back some meaning and purpose. And slowly, I began to heal. To move on.

Weathering the Change Storm

So, my question to you is simple: are you the most resilient you can be to ensure you can weather the change storm?

If nothing else, there are two things I hope you take from this site:

Firstly, if you’re going through change, and if you’re struggling, please know you’re not alone. This story is far more common than we are led to believe.

Secondly, good change and bad change will happen. You can’t escape it. So here’s my challenge to you: take stock of your life now and the balance you may or may not have in your three resilience foundations, because it’s too late after you’ve retired, or been made redundant, or had that accident. But if you maintain and protect these foundations, you can weather even the fiercest of storms.

Unless you plan on hiding under a rock for the rest of your life, you will face a major life change at some point, if you haven’t already – so be prepared.

Related content: Read Moving On article 5 ways to teach kids resiliency and happiness, listen to our Podcast: The Benefits of Psychological Safety (E16)

Thanks for visiting and please reach out to me with any questions! Wishing you all love and best wishes for your change journey.

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: adjust to retirement, burnout, career change, change, change storm, cope with change, happiness, new job, overwhelmed, plan for change, plan for retirement, redundancy, resilience, resiliency, retirement, retrenched

My Story: Finding Happiness

02/10/2019 by Marie

Marie Skelton

I Can’t Really Complain

I’d never had trouble with finding meaning in life. I’ve moved pretty effortlessly from one goal to another, following my heart and my passion at the time. Don’t get me wrong, I have known hard work, but I enjoy and even relish a challenge, as so many people do. 

As a kid, I went to a bilingual school and learned French and English. Although I came from a decidedly middle-class family, attending a bi-lingual school had its advantages and I was lucky to go on exchange to two beautiful French islands, Tahiti and Reunion.

Australian Volleyball League finals, 2015

As a teenager, I discovered I was a natural athlete, regularly medalling at State Championships in high jump and the 100m and 200m. I achieved my black belt in Tae Kwon Do, but gave it up not long after discovering volleyball, which became an absolute passion. I was selected to represent my state and then my country in volleyball, and I was hooked on the sport instantly. After high school, I dreamed of becoming a journalist, so I enrolled at the University of Canberra and interned with The Canberra Times.

I applied for a scholarship as a student athlete at George Mason University in America, where I studied, played volleyball and landed a coveted internship at USA Today. I juggled my social life, being an athlete, working, and studying well, and was named to the USA National Dean’s List, graduating Magna Cum Laude with an offer to continue my studies at Oxford University. I instead joined a fortune 500 company working in public affairs and directly supporting tech industry leaders early in my career.

After returning to Australia with my amazing husband in tow, I found a great balance between growing professionally in Australian corporate life, playing competitive volleyball, including captaining the NSW women’s volleyball team, and exploring the world in any free time.

Life wasn’t always exciting or challenging, and it certainly wasn’t always easy, but life was good.

The Day Everything Changed

Jo and Me
Jo (L) and me (R) on the morning of the accident

In 2017, it was on a trip to Cambodia and Vietnam with my best friend, Jo, and everything took an unexpected turn. In regional Vietnam, I took a corner too fast on my moped, hit the side barrier, went flying into the air over the barrier and tumbled down a mountainside.

It’s funny the things you think, in moments like that.

I was tumbling down the side of the mountain like a rag doll doing cartwheels. I remember the “thud, thud thud, thud” on my helmet and thinking “lucky I’m wearing a helmet” before thinking “oh jeez, I hope I don’t break my neck.”

I eventually stopped tumbling. The fall could have easily killed me, but I was lucky. Once I’d stopped tumbling, I looked down to see my thigh bone sticking out the end of my left leg. It was the end of my leg because I couldn’t see my knee or anything below it.

I think my brain was preparing me for the trauma, I remember knowing that my leg was gone below the knee, but not feeling anything with that realisation. It was just a fact.

Then the pain hit me. I mean, it really ‘hit’ me. Like the moment you get dunked by a wave and hit the sand and all the air leaves your lungs.

But the pain wasn’t coming from my leg. My right shoulder was in complete agony. I tried to move my arm and realised my shoulder was dislocated. Another fact, a clinical diagnosis, with no emotion or processing.

At that point, the pain was too much, so I stopped my self-assessment. Maybe it was my brain protecting me, I don’t think I could have seen any more without having to process the implications of just how serious my situation was. So I just sat awkwardly and waited.

I waited as people from the tour group slowly started making their way down the hill, including Jo who had been at the front of the motorbike group and at first had not realised there had been an accident.

Someone called an ambulance. Someone else threw up behind me… nice.

We waited.

I remember the heat and hot sun. I remember the rubbish around me, so common for the roadside in Vietnam. I remember the pain, and being decidedly frustrated that I hadn’t, couldn’t, just pass out.

At some point, the pain shifted to my foot as well, and I realised my leg was still there. It was just so unnaturally folded and twisted, and buried under me, that I couldn’t see it.

Two lovely French doctors stopped when they saw the accident. Not knowing I speak French, they spoke quietly to each other about how I would have to have my leg amputated.

There was no panic, just the pain and the heat.

The ambulance (a van really) came, with no doctor and no drugs. The French doctors sent it away and told the driver to come back with pain meds and a doctor. We waited again.

People began clearing a route for the stretcher, “should we go up or down?” Down. We waited.

The ambulance finally came back. I was given two vials of morphine. It made no difference.

Then somehow there was even more pain as I was moved to the stretcher and into the ambulance for the interminable and bumpy ride to the hospital.

Gee, Welcome Back Brain

It wasn’t until we got to the hospital that I started to panic. By that point, my brain had woken up and had processed enough to make me terrified. I didn’t want to lose my leg. All I could say as I was being wheeled into the surgery was “don’t let them take my leg.”

Again, I was so lucky. The local surgeon had trained in America. A world class medical education and training, and importantly, he spoke English. He did an amazing job of piecing my leg back together, the first of many procedures that would follow, but this would at least allow the bones to heal. He not only saved my leg, but given the severity of the open fractures, I was extremely lucky I didn’t get a post-surgery infection and lose my leg, as so often happens in these types of accidents.

It wasn’t all perfect, in their efforts to save my leg that day, they forgot about my dislocated shoulder. So, I went back into surgery the next day where they finally put the shoulder back into the socket, but accidentally cut into my arm to fix a broken bone that wasn’t broken – they had the wrong X-rays.

I don’t remember much about the next four days. I know my husband, Francis, arrived. I remember he spent a lot of time on the phone, with the insurance company, my family, and trying to organise to get me airlifted to a modern hospital. I remember someone tried to feed me Pho broth. I wasn’t hungry.

Eventually I was stable enough to be airlifted to Thailand – not being able to make the long trip back to Sydney yet. In Bangkok, I started my real recovery: eating solid food, taking calls from family and friends and checking my Facebook profile for the first time, which was overwhelming.

I couldn’t sit up due to the bruising in my abdomen. I couldn’t even roll onto my side due to my leg and shoulder injuries. But two weeks later, I flew home to Sydney with Jo, Francis and a medical team, strapped down to a stretcher the whole way.

Coming Out of the Fog and Preparing to Fight

Back in Australia, I found the old me. I was ready to make it through this.

There was a comforting rhythm with the day to day happenings at Royal Prince Alfred hospital. Mornings started with rounds from the doctors, sometimes they had students with them, and we’d have a chat. Then breakfast would arrive, followed by a wash in the bed I couldn’t yet leave, and then the sheets were changed under me while I tried to deal with the pain. Morning tea arrived, and a nurse would come it to replace my catheter or check my stats – starved of meaningful conversation, I would try my best to be cheerful and positive, have a joke and relate to the hospital staff who always had too much to do and not enough time.

Lunch would follow shortly after, again a slow affair when you can’t sit too well and only have the use of one arm. Not long later the kitchen staff would take my food order for the next day and drop off afternoon tea. Early in my recovery, I would nap in the afternoons, later I would mindlessly watch YouTube videos or binge watch Netflix series. Despite being a book lover all my life, I didn’t have the attention span or energy to read. Dinner was served at grandma time, and I would see my husband or friends and family in the evenings before going to sleep. I slept a lot, but I was mostly in good spirits.

Once the physical pain became more manageable, I started dealing with the physiological scars. For weeks after the accident, I would get complete body-wracking shakes just thinking about the accident. Yet every visitor asked, “what happened” and so I would tell the story. One day after telling the story for what felt like the hundredth time, I realised the shaking had stopped.

One morning while doing his rounds, I flinched when my surgeon reached for my knee. “You need to work on that, or it will become a thing,” he said before leaving the room. So that evening my husband and I Googled a variety of search terms before “psychological pain management” gave us results. We began ‘working on that’ by lightly pulling the sheet over my knee. Then I started trailing my fingers lightly over my knee, then I let my husband run the sheet over my knee, etc… Over time, that worked too and I stopped flinching like a beaten dog.

I had further surgeries on my shoulder and leg – a metal plate and bone graph from my hip helped the broken tibia which wasn’t healing. A skin graph from my thigh was needed to replace the missing skin around my knee and calf. Five full ligament tears and one partial tear were repaired in my dislocated shoulder, and I had multiple knee surgeries in the hope that I would get adequate use of my leg back, whatever that means. The gashes and bruises all over my body healed.

The doctors had to make sure I had realistic expectations for my recovery. They told me I was lucky to have my leg and that some day to day activities would be difficult. With a few years of rehab, I should be able to walk, hopefully without pain.

“Years!?” I remember asking, “Really, that long? Surely not?” The doctor looked me in the eyes and said, “The alternative is amputation. You would be up and recovering a lot faster then, with a prosthesis.”

I laughed, before realising he was serious and he was presenting a serious option. My leg was truly that mangled, and it would be easier to cut it off. Our goal was to get me walking, hopefully without too much of a limp. I would never run again. I’d have to take stairs one at a time. I’d never play volleyball again.

That was a hard day and I mourned the loss volleyball, the sport that had been such a big part of my life and had given me so much, had given me. But I was determined and despite everything, I felt hopeful. I don’t know why, but I did. I took one day at a time.

Marie in hospital
My first time out of bed
in months (I didn’t get very far)

About a month after the accident, I was able to sit up. After two months, I could be helped out of my bed into a chair. Three months and 10 surgeries later, I was moved from the confines of my bed to the confines of a wheelchair, and I was allowed to go home.

Until that point, I had been a mostly passive participant in my recovery. I had been at the mercy of the doctors’ schedules, the nurses’ routines, and the realities of my friends’ and family’s lives outside the hospital – neatly packaged into visiting hours. I ate when the food arrived, washed when I was told to, and slept when the lights went out for the night.

At that point, I didn’t know that everything had been easy. Physical pain sucks, but the next part was so much worse.

The Hardest Part was Learning How to Live Again After Everyone Else Went Home

It wasn’t until I left hospital that the real challenge started. Now that I was out, it was all on me. I had wanted to be home so badly. I thought I was prepared for things to be difficult but doable. I had no idea what awaited me.

My brain told me I was lucky to have my leg, and there was hope. Sometime soon I could get out of the wheelchair and start learning how to walk again. My shoulder was recovering well, and soon I’d also be able to use my arm. The rest of my cuts and bruises were healed.

I was lucky to have an amazing boss, who allowed me to work part-time from home around my rehab schedule. Most of all, I was extremely grateful for all the times things could have gone wrong and didn’t. I was so lucky, and I was so grateful.

But suddenly, for some reason I couldn’t wrap my mind around, that was when I became desperately lost and depressed.

Four months after the accident…

… after the worst of the pain had subsided

… after the joy and excitement of being discharged from hospital

… my world fell apart.

I curled up on the couch and cried. I truly mourned for the first time since the accident four months before. After a while, I moved from my wheelchair into my bed and continued to cry. That was where my husband found me when he came home from work that night, sobbing uncontrollably into a soaked pillow. That was where I stayed, and all I did, for four days. It hurt. It was an emotional pain that was so much worse than the physical pain had been.

On day five, I got out of bed, showered and went to my standing physio appointment, but the positive, driven athlete and career-woman in me was broken. Gone. I felt flat and empty. I just really didn’t care anymore. I went through the motions of living, but I felt lost and empty. I went from feeling the most gut-wrenching emotional pain imaginable to feeling nothing at all.

After some time, I found the words to express that I felt lost. It was a Aha! moment. But then people would ask, “Well, what do you want to do?” And that just compounded the problem, because for the first time in my life, I just didn’t know what I wanted. I remember thinking, I know I need to get up and put my big girl pants on and move forward, but how do I do that when I don’t know what I want? So, I did nothing.

Next came the guilt. I was lucky. I had said as much multiple times in my recovery. I was also grateful. So grateful to the team of doctors and health professionals who had saved my life and my leg, to my family and friends who had rallied around me and continued to help me to recover. I was lucky and grateful, really I was, and I felt horrible for feeling horrible and being so selfish.

With hindsight, what I had failed to understand is that the fight to survive and keep my leg had given my life meaning. The hospital environment had given me structure and purpose. And even though being discharged from hospital was a monumental achievement and happy day, I was not prepared for the transition from being sick to being just another everyday person on this planet.

Being healthy and normal was what I wanted so badly, yet once I had left the hospital and the structure and support of my army of health professionals, my life lost purpose. And even though I had been discharged from hospital, I felt far from normal. I still couldn’t walk or stand, and I couldn’t use my right arm. I was still dealing with pain, which had changed from a constant deep overwhelming pain to the shooting pain that comes with nerve regeneration.

But time goes on.

I was mostly stuck at home, but three times a week, I went to physio. I worked from home for a few hours in the afternoon. I had 2 more surgeries. Friends and family would occasionally visit. Six months after the accident, I took my first steps. I slept. A lot. Life was happening, that was the most I could say about it.

Taking my first steps, 6+ months and 12 surgeries later!

Finding Happiness

One day, a good friend called me and begged me to help him establish a competitive volleyball program for Sydney’s LGBTIQ Volleyball Club. He wanted to grow the club by offering competitive opportunities to play volleyball, not only social participation, but they desperately needed a coach. He said he would drive me to and from trainings and look after me at competitions. He had it all planned out, so I didn’t have any excuses. I reluctantly agreed, not having the strength to look my friend in the eye and say no, even though that’s all I really wanted to say.

A few weeks later, he rolled me and my wheelchair into the gym for tryouts, and I prepared myself for the looks of confusion and doubt from the adult men in the gym.

I couldn’t have known at the time that these fabulous, dramatic, caring men would save me. Because they might not know it, but they gave me back my identity, my community and a purpose. They gave me back some meaning. And slowly, I began to heal. To move on.

My Next Chapter

Marie and Francis
We recently fundraised for some
new equipment for the RPA hospital
rehab and physio department.
This is us picking up four exercise
bikes to donate.

If you’re still with me this far down the page, thanks for sticking with this long story! I am happy to say that things have gotten a lot better since coming out of that very dark place.

I have set some pretty aggressive rehab goals, and am smashing all expectations. Last year, I hiked to Machu Picchu and despite what the doctors said, I have started playing volleyball again.

Since my accident, I have also become passionate about mental health and have launched this site and our podcast, which aim to raise awareness of the impacts of change on our mental health, build understanding of how we can be more resilient to change, and ultimately how to find sustained happiness.

Finally, I am also researching and writing a book to better understand how people cope with major life changes, focusing on why some people are really good at dealing with whatever life throws at them, while others struggle. If you or someone you know have recently been through a major life change and would like to contribute to this important work via a short interview, please reach out.

Thank you for reading my story,

Marie


If you want to see more, watch my 5-minute story on YouTube below.

Filed Under: Finding Happiness & Resiliency Tagged With: change, cope, deal, Marie Skelton, recovery, resilience, transition, trauma

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