One of the books that I have enjoyed reading this year is
the Power of Full Engagement by Jim Loehr and Tony Schwartz. The key
point in this book is that managing energy has more impact than managing time.
During the next few months I would like to share some of my learning and
understandings about the importance of energy.
I have included a link on my web site
www.coachpinney.com to
listing of Power of Full Engagement on Amazon. Just click on Partnerships
and Amazon and you will find it.
Becoming
Fully Engaged - (Part 1)
Managing Energy, Not Time
Just about everyone is in a hurry these days,
juggling work, family and play like so many balls in the air. We pride ourselves
on our ability to multitask. We use email, cell phones, and other devices to
keep in touch so we don't miss anything. About the only thing that seems to be
slowing us down is traffic, and then we use that to catch up on phone calls and
messages.
However, the more time-saving devices at our disposal, the more time we have to
cram in extra tasks, more contacts, and more meetings. Instead of saving time,
we are creating more possibilities. We are wired up but melting down. We assume
if only we had more time, we could accomplish more and be more satisfied.
We survive on too little sleep, grab a bite here and there without taking time
to enjoy a meal in good company; fuel up on coffee, chill out on alcohol, and
throw medications at symptoms of stress. Faced with relentless demands at work,
we return home exhausted, only to face children and spouses with less than a
cheerful disposition. Instead of experiencing our families as a source of joy
and renewal, they are one more demand in an overburdened life.
We say we are starved for time. Even if we manage our time more efficiently,
there is still never enough of it in a 24-hour day. We cut back on sleep, skip
meals and exercising, cut down on meetings, but the schedule just gets filled up
again. That's because time isn't really the key issue in the first place.
Energy is the Key
The issue isn't time-or time management. It's energy. And this requires us to
rethink much of what we've believed about organizing our lives. Managing time
efficiently is no guarantee we'll bring sufficient energy to whatever it is
we're doing. We need to learn two new rules:
-
Energy is the fundamental
currency of high performance.
- Performance, health and happiness are grounded in the skillful management of
energy.
According to Jim Loehr and
Tony Schwartz, in their recent book, The Power of Full Engagement (Free
Press, 2003), the skillful management of energy-individually and
organizationally-makes full engagement possible. To be fully engaged in our
lives, we must be physically energized, emotionally connected, mentally focused
and spiritually aligned with a purpose beyond our immediate self-interest. This
is a phenomenal insight most of us ignore.
Everything we do requires energy. As obvious as this is, we fail to take into
account the importance of energy at work and in our personal lives. Without the
right quantity and quality of energy, we are compromised in any activity we
undertake.
We take energy for granted, assuming we have unlimited amounts. We don't take
time for recovery or renewal. We get angry when we get tired or forgetful. We
don't appreciate the impact focus and energy have on our successful interactions
with others. When you think about it, the ultimate measure of our lives is not
how much time we spend on the planet, nor how much we get done, but rather it is
in the quality of our moments. We can't have memorable moments without
investing energy.
Performance, Health and Happiness
Performance, health and happiness are grounded in the skillful management of
energy.
Research by the Gallup Organization reports less than 30 percent of employed
people are fully engaged at work. Over half are not-engaged, and 17 percent are
actively disengaged. That means over two-thirds of people at work are not
enthusiastic about what they are doing. While the causes may be varied, and it
is hard to say if lack of energy is the cause or effect, it is hard for people
to change if they are exhausted.
Four Principles for Energy Management
Here are four important principles put forth by Loehr and Schwartz in their
book:
PRINCIPLE 1: Full engagement requires drawing on four separate but
related sources of energy: physical, emotional, mental and spiritual.
PRINCIPLE 2: Because energy capacity diminishes with both overuse and
under-use, we must balance energy expenditure with intermittent energy
renewal.
PRINCIPLE 3: To build capacity, we must push beyond our normal limits,
training in the same systematic way elite athletes do.
PRINCIPLE 4: Positive energy rituals - highly specific routines
for managing energy - are the key to full engagement and sustained high
performance.
It becomes evident the key to living a life more fully engaged-one leading to
more health and happiness-is not in the quantity of things but rather in the
quality of crucial moments.
Forget time-we all have the same amount. But we can learn to improve the quality
of our energy. There are actual steps we can take to increase our energy
capacity in all four domains: physical, emotional, mental and spiritual.
To Be Continued.
One of the ways to improve your energy capacity is to explore these issues with
your coach. Your coach can help you become aware of the ways in which you expend
energy and how you can improve your ability to renew it. The four domains of
physical, emotional mental and spiritual all need to be examined. In some cases,
you may need to stretch yourself to expand your capacities. In others, you may
need to build in renewal and recovery rituals.
If you know anyone who would like to experience coaching, I would be happy to
offer a few free coaching sessions to introduce the power of coaching. Just give
me a call 312-842-4577 or drop me an e-mail at
jcpinney@aol.com.
Attaining full engagement in life involves having positive habits or rituals
which will help you connect with your deep sense of purpose. Such rituals help
us to conserve energy rather than deplete it. These rituals may include writing
in a journal, meditation, a regular workout routine, praying, reading something
inspirational or looking daily at your vision statement of what you're trying to
achieve in your life. They help connect you to your purpose, and complement the
changes you make to help improve physical energy. Together, they can help you to
manage your energy and achieve high performance.
To be continued.
Final Thoughts
Thanksgiving is a time to be grateful for the gifts of the past year and
think about all the special people who have touched our lives. May Thanksgiving
inspire each of us to give a little of what have, to share a little of whom we
are, to help this become the kind of world that it was meant to be.
Coach Jerry
www.coachpinney.com
The highest compliment you can give us is to refer your family and friends.