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Brainpower For The Overwhelmed by Eileen McDargh
Walk into the room and can't find your keys? Or forget why you
entered the room in the first place? Wondering what has happened
to your short term memory? Feel overwhelmed by information, people,
to-do lists and demands on your time?
You very well could be suffering from SAAD - situational attention
deficit disorder, a term coined by Anderson Consulting Institute
for Strategic Change. Specifically, most of us are now in situations
in which we are bombarded by so many demands for our attention that
our brains close down.
It's a phenomenon of our time. Our brains, evolved over eons to
respond to our environment and each other are exponentially being
taxed by the growth in information and technology. Everyone and
everything is vying for attention. We are hardwired to respond but
when it's deluged like that, the brain just "goes blind".
Engineers discovered this phenomenon when they installed hundreds
of communication devices in cockpits, thinking it would improve
the pilot's performance. Instead, when the pilots performance decreased.
Information and technology will not go away. But there are ways
to turn from "SAAD" to glad.
1. Determine your priorities and focus on them.
Don't let yourself be pulled into anything from meetings, to readings,
to conversations that thwart your priorities. Literally block out
space on your daily to-do list for things that are important to
you: from projects, to exercise, to family time. Hold these times
as sacred.
2. Say "no" to answering every message.
The average American receives 201 phone, paper, and e-mail messages
a day. Take care of those that are priority and let the rest drop
off. Ignore the messages that are uninvited and unnecessary.
3. Let technology work for you in prioritizing.
Called ID and voice mail can allow you to screen calls. For those
who depend upon business coming in via phone and need to take every
call, develop a way to shorten incoming sales calls. Telemarketing
calls that come in via a computer dial-up have a few seconds of
silence before a voice is heard. If that's the case, just hang up.
If you are solicited, ask them to please out your name on the DO
NOT call list. And then hang up.
4. Create a centering place.
Whether it is in the silence of your car, or in a shower, or closing
your door, take 15 minutes per day to practice paying attention
to ONE thing: your breathing, a flower, a fish tank. Like the muscle
in our bodies, the brain gets strong I the places where we train
it. Focus turns SAD into glad.!
To Your Success,
UniqueGuidance Team
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