On Food and Decision-Making

On food and decision-making

In Sex and the City, Carrie Bradshaw said, “Before 10am, everyone is guilty”.  It turns out she wasn’t far from the truth!

A recent study at Columbia Business School and Ben Gurion University[1] found that Israeli judges were 65% likely to parole an inmate at the beginning of the day or after a lunch break, but 0% likely to approve parole in the cases seen in the slot immediately before a food break!  The data shows that their clear thinking and impartial judgment was affected by their hunger.

I have become aware of how my energy levels, my ability to navigate challenges and my emotional robustness directly correlate to my blood sugar levels.  Just like those judges, in the days before I’d sorted out my nutrition, on a difficult morning I was at risk of falling back into less than optimal behaviours.  These days I have built good nutritional practices into my life to ensure I am able to be the most calm, clear-headed, positive version of myself I can be.

At 7pm on Thursday 1 August I’ll be hosting an information session on stress, energy and nutrition with Dr. Rupal Naik in Islington, London. Dr Rupal has been a practising GP and partner in one of the UK’s largest surgeries, with 26,000 patients.  She is now in private practice using her twenty years’ plus experience to consult on stress, nutrition and well-being.  In the session we’ll be talking about the importance of correct nutrition in support of excellent mental and emotional function

We will cover:

  • Why traditional breakfast choices are like punching a hole in your fuel tank each morning
  • How macro and micro nutrients are essential to creating energy molecules to fuel your morning
  • How excellent nutrition will ensure you remain clear headed and in control
  • A practical solution to excellent nutrition that won’t have you wasting your busy morning in the kitchen

Do you feel that your diet could use a boost and you could benefit from more energy and better nutrition? Then click here to RSVP or simply drop me an email.


[1] Shai Danzigera, S., Levavb, J, Avnaim-Pessoa, L., “Extraneous factors in judicial decisions”, PNAS April 26, 2011 vol. 108 no. 17 6889-6892

Image Credit: Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity via Flickr

 

Busting the B.S of Procrastination

Busting Procrastination

Many of my clients have big dreams and plans for their future but get stuck when it comes to executing them.  They know what they “should” be doing, yet find themselves doing anything but!  In a recent lecture at the Institute of CBT Coaching, Professor Windy Dryden put forth a Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) approach to breaking apart procrastination.

First, a definition of procrastination  – Procrastination is putting off to do later what is healthy for you to do now as defined by you.  This last part of the phrase is important.  The decision must be self-initiated.  If you don’t believe it’s healthy to do this activity but your spouse/boss/mother does – that is not procrastination.

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy breaks a situation apart into three pieces:

A. The Activating event.
B. The Beliefs we have about that event.
C. The emotional and behavioural response that are the Consequences of that belief.

By splitting a situation into these three pieces we can see that it is B, the belief systems (B.S) that we hold about events have the influence on how we feel and behave.  When we challenge and change those beliefs we change C, the emotional and behavioural response.

In the context of procrastination, belief systems about when one can commence work trigger the behaviour of procrastination.  Do you recognise this scenario?

You have a piece of work due on Friday.  You put aside an hour at 2pm on Wednesday to do it.  When you sit down to start work you suddenly find that your desk is so cluttered that you can’t possibly begin. So you spend twenty minutes tidying and organising your desk.  Now you’re ready to start.  But, before you do you make a small snack – you need your energy to think clearly.  Twenty minutes later you sit back down ready to commence.  Now the lighting at your desk is not quite right, it’s distracting, so you spend another 15 minutes sorting that out.  Then you find you’ve run out of time and its time to move onto the next thing.  The work does not get done, you feel bad and have to reschedule another time to do the work.

In this scenario there is an underlying rigid belief that “I must be comfortable in order to work”.  The consequences of that rigid belief are to procrastinate until a level of “comfort” is achieved – this may involve tidying, organising, getting snacks or drinks, exercising, adjusting the chair, changing the lighting, moving locations, the list goes on…

Or perhaps your rigid beliefs around starting work fall into one of the following categories?

  • I must be in the mood to work
  • I must be motivated to work
  • I must be under pressure to work
  • I must feel competent to work

The CBT breakthrough comes when the client consciously decides, “I would like to be comfortable but this condition isn’t necessary for me to work”.   Using hypnotic and NLP techniques that work with the unconscious mind, we can embed these new, more flexible beliefs, at a deeper level so that they are a natural choice in the client’s neurology.

My CBT challenge to you is to identify your rigid beliefs about your preconditions for starting work and then deliberately break them apart!

  • Set a specific time when you are going to work on something that is in your interest to do at a time that is in your interest to do so.
  • Identify the feeling that, in the past, would have triggered the procrastination behaviour (e.g. feeling uncomfortable with clutter)
  • Use that feeling to identify the rigid belief (I must feel comfortable in order to start work)
  • Start work anyway in the absence of that condition reminding yourself that it is desirable that the condition be met before you start work but not necessary.
  • Collect a bank of experiences where you challenged the rigid belief and got work done anyway! This is your path to freedom and flexibility to be productive regardless of other factors.

Get started now ; ) What rigid beliefs about starting work do you have? Share them in the comments below.  I invite you to celebrate your successes with this approach and share them!

 

Image Credit: guccio@文房具社 via Flickr

Get your dreams back on track with ease

January has come and gone. New Year’s Resolutions set with verve and enthusiasm may be gathering dust along with the running shoes in the closet.

If you need a boost to get those dreams for 2013 back on track then I invite you to read my new article which has been published in the Mind Body Spirit online magazine Healium.   The article teaches you a very different goal setting technique called Intentional Goal Setting that uses the power of the brain’s Reticular Activating System to allow you to easily achieve your goals.

Intentional Goal Setting is the perfect antidote to endless To-Do lists and will allow you to sail through the rest of the year with ease and joy!

Read the article here

I invite you to share your experiences of Intentional Goal Setting in the comments section below!

 

Image Credit: Olga Caprotti

New Year’s Gift!

I’m thrilled to share with you a powerful guided six-minute goal setting process called End-Visioning.  This process sets goals so powerfully in your unconscious mind that you find yourself unstoppable in your achievement of them.  I have personally used this process to land a highly remunerated corporate position within just two-weeks of immigrating to the UK, and again to buy my first apartment on the exact date that I declared!

Before you do the guided process, I encourage you to get clear about your goal by identifying the End Step (also known as the Evidence Procedure) that tells you that you have achieved it.  If your goal is to weigh your ideal weight, then how will you know when you’ve achieved it?  Will it be when you stand on the scales and you see that weight? Or will it be when you can fit into a favourite pair of jeans?  Each person has a different End Step, spend a moment discovering yours.

Now, state your End Step in the present tense and give it a date.  Use the following sentence structure and fill in the blanks:

It is now (insert future date)____________________.  I am/ I have (insert the End Step of the goal you have achieved in present tense) ________________________

For example: It is now 31st March 2013.  I have just finished running my first sold out workshop on goal setting and I feel so fulfilled to share this work with my inspiring clients.

Tip: Including the emotion that you feel as you achieve your goal will give your unconscious mind extra power and motivation.  

I hope you find this process beneficial and enjoy the gift!

Are you ready to make 2013 the year you achieved your heart’s desire? Or do you want to get clear on what you really want to create? I am offering a 20-minute telephone consultation at no charge to discover how I can help you make this year a powerful and fulfilling one.  Please contact me to arrange an appointment.

To your joyous and successful 2013!

Kelly

Technical instructions: This recording is in MPEG-4 Audio file (M4A) format.  Download it and open it with iTunes or Windows Media Player.

Download the End-Visioning guided process here

Image Credit:  ShereenM via Flickr