Burnout Recovery

Ep#38 Creating Safety

Dex Randall Season 1 Episode 38
  • When our sense of security falls apart.
  • How loss of safety and trust blows up in burnout.
  • Generating a sense of wellbeing.
  • Championing yourself.

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[00:00:00] Hi everyone, my name's Dex Randall, and this is the Burnout to Leadership podcast, where I teach professional men to recover from burnout and get back to passion and reward at work.

[00:00:22] Hello people, this is Dex, and today we're talking about creating safety, because it's fundamental to recovery from burnout. Where everything's gone out of control, we feel like we're dropping the ball, we're failing all the time, we're letting our people down. Um, usually when we think where other people are judging and criticizing us non stop, clue, it's really us.

[00:00:45] Um, and often we get, because of that very insecure, we get imposter syndrome, probably think we're going to lose our job, and we develop this kind of generalized anxiety around people, around work, family. Uh, home, finances, the whole thing, health, anything else we hold dear, like, I mean even our favourite seat at a cafe, we think we're going to lose it.

[00:01:06] The availability of toilet paper in COVID, that was a good one. Well right now as I'm recording this, of all things, the escalating price of lettuce is making news right now. And it is. So really this whole thing is, we see this seemingly secure and predictable life that we've been building for years and years start to fall apart and fray at the edges, and we get all overwhelmed and helpless, don't we?

[00:01:33] And then because of that we become defensive, aggressive. Uh, withdrawn. And as we say here in Australia, we basically crack the shits with the whole thing. And in my case, you know, in Burnout at Work, it was extremely destabilizing for me and it led to panic and night sweats. And I was really just looking around myself, seeing my whole work, kind of little cosmos crumble.

[00:02:00] And I was blaming myself really severely. There's huge cracks appearing in everything. And I knew I was going to get found out any minute. And I went from being this infallible. Kind of fixer of all things to this conscious incompetence. Well, I think in my case it was actually hyper conscious. Or maybe conspicuous incompetence.

[00:02:23] And I, I, that's just how it felt all the time. And I dreaded everything and I really did not enjoy that. And at the end of my burnout, I was imagining myself destitute, you know, like the airline pilot who ends up living on the streets. It was really. Very, very scary. So, okay. If that's kind of the general scene, safety is missing, right?

[00:02:46] And if you're coming to me, listening to this podcast, maybe it's missing in parts of your life as well. And maybe you're a little bit concerned about that. Maybe you're feeling anxious and overwhelmed at work or maybe at home. Uh, maybe you're sleeping badly, waking up in a bit of a panic, but no wonder.

[00:03:02] It's all I'm going to say. I, I call this whole situation that we've got now a systemic or societal burnout because it's so widespread. And you know, hold tight because I'm going to talk a little bit about what I mean there. Why so many of us live now in this bubble of anxiety and overwhelm like, you know, putting a little space helmet on and closing ourselves in it.

[00:03:24] Uh, and so this episode is going to be in two parts. I'm going to talk about why I'm calling it societal burnout and go through that a little bit. Why you might be experiencing what you're experiencing. And then the second part, we're going to talk. About what to do about it. And I want to talk about the reasons because really it's important to normalize our experience of this and recognize just how the way that we're trying to live today cultivates this sense of unease, this sense of unsafety.

[00:03:51] We're living on a bit of a knife edge all the time, uh, alone and together. When we round, round all this information up in one batch, you'll be able to see Why we've ended up here in burnout altogether, and don't worry yet I as I said, I am gonna go on then to explain how you can create a sense of safety for yourself It's quite a bit simpler than you think and you can do it because burnouts fixable You need to learn a few new skills And and if you do that, you can bounce back fully whether you're in burnout now Whether you're just a little bit anxious and depleted and irritable.

[00:04:29] Maybe you're on the road to burn out But those things don't get better on their own. And I think you know that because I think you've probably already tried to fix all of this yourself. But you can learn a much better way to tackle work and life. Um, that's going to basically put the smile back on your face and it's going to do it by creating a little bit of safety for you and your environment so you're not living on that knife edge all the time.

[00:04:52] Because when you do step back a little bit from that brink, Um, And think about safety. Now, you know, we'll go through it a little bit together. Not the animal level of safety, which I've talked about in other episodes. But it's my view that modern life has this kind of endemic lack of safety in it. And many of us, I think as a result of that experience, a really big mistrust when we're in burnout.

[00:05:19] Not terribly surprising considering how out of control we feel. Um, and I talked a bit about that in episode six on feeling out of control and trust. Maybe you want to also listen to that episode. But the upshot is we don't trust other people when we're feeling a bit frazzled. But we don't trust other people when we don't trust ourselves first.

[00:05:41] And yet, finally, our environment. Is playing a big part in that. The world is shifting gears. I've seen it, I think, in my lifetime, since, particularly since about 1995, when the internet was taking off. The rate of change has, has done nothing but accelerate, and our model of our world, and our model of who we should be in that world, has changed really radically.

[00:06:07] And so I think about it like this, in terms of, The loss of the pillars of society, of safety, that people in previous generations, uh, did enjoy. So, let me go through a few of them with you now. So, let's start off with the government, and you might also want to think about this as capitalism or the patriarchy.

[00:06:29] There's really a big investment in keeping us separate, keeping us powerless and scared, and obviously then very malleable. And I think it's a really interesting watching the journey of the concentration of power and wealth into the hands of the few. I mean, interesting in a horrific way, not in a good way.

[00:06:47] But I think all of that leads to this kind of national and international sense of insecurity around trade, finance, uh, defense, the valuability of food. Water and power resources, um, and I think all of this is exacerbated as well by the kind of people that we're electing these days, for one thing, but also the non continuity of governance.

[00:07:11] We get one bunch of people for a few years and then we trade for a new bunch and they reinvent everything and we get scared all over again. And, um, so that's the government kind of side of it. But also, um, We don't really have a stable job and income these days. Used to be that people had a job for life.

[00:07:29] Now we're lucky if we can get a job after college. We got this, you know, the gig economy going, the fame culture where it's all about who you are. Um, and we're expected to have not just multiple jobs, but multiple careers in a lifetime now. And I think what happens in all of that is there's very little loyalty either way now.

[00:07:48] Employer, employee, Contractor, however you want to see it. Um, that kind of longevity of relationship isn't anticipated anymore. So people don't invest in each other in a work environment very more. And, and that's resulted in us having cultural expectations at work to value. Productivity, innovation, problem solving, and all of those things over humanity.

[00:08:14] And obviously feeding into all of this insecurity about jobs is the speed of technological and cultural change, ideas change. And then we had wham on the top of that COVID didn't really help. And I think behind this, there are sort of community level difficulties as well. We don't have the same reliance.

[00:08:32] In religion, as past generations had, and that religious aspect of communities provided a framework. Those people who lived in those frameworks knew what the conditions were for belonging and approval. And even in religious wars, people knew what they stood for. They stood for something bigger than themselves.

[00:08:52] And man needs this because we need meaning and purpose. We need cohesion and belonging. Um, and it's the same a little bit in communities. For generations, humans stayed in one place, often the place they were born. It was familiar, it was comfortable. And you know, we become very partial to that. Like when we have little habits on our desk at work, we put all our things on the desk to make us feel at home.

[00:09:17] We knew, again, we know where we stand, what to expect. We knew who we could rely on in those days where there was a stronger community. Now of course we've got this media, a completely different filter on information from the world and the part that we should play in it. Individualism is now success. Um, referring again back to the divide and conquer mode of governance, and it kind of gives rise to a polarization in attitudes about the differentness of others.

[00:09:49] And I think that this lends itself to racism and phobias and all of that. And then of course we feel separate, we feel lonely, we feel unvalidated and unseen. in our lack of integration and belonging into communities. So we stop being able to connect through our hearts, open up, um, to our sense of relationship with others, and we stop expecting or even looking for a deep connection.

[00:10:16] And I think radical views are one of the results of this. But also, um, when we have no real sense of connection and belonging, We also have a diminished need to play by the rules. It's, it's everyone for themselves. Um, except, we're not actually connecting with ourselves either. We've forgotten how. We don't get taught that.

[00:10:39] That's not the expectation. And so I think this is what contributes, all of this is what contributes to the rise of mass shootings, uh, increase in domestic violence, addiction, suicide. I don't think they're spontaneous happening or, or idiopathic happenings. And leading on from community, most of us don't live near to our family of origin either, anymore either.

[00:11:05] And we wouldn't have been raised by a village, and indeed we wouldn't have very much contact with our roots at all, many of us. Often intentionally in the, this kind of cult of the individual we've got going now, you know, they don't call them roots for nothing. They were our fundamental source of strength and integrity at one time.

[00:11:25] I mean, and even now look at, look at the rates of family splits and divorce and again, this kind of cultural divisiveness. We're really, these days, expected to overperform, to excel, alone. And the impact that's had on parenting. Parents overburdened with the shoulds of parenting in a completely unprecedented way.

[00:11:50] Parents are becoming super anxious, both in their own lives, and also in how they think about themselves as parents. And that anxiety just spreads, it's kind of contagious, and we live in a culture that predisposes helicopter parenting, insecurity, inadequacy. We've kind of got Olympic levels of compare and despair about parenting.

[00:12:14] So when we think about all of those fundamental kind of environmental factors for us, you know, here we are, we're in this unstable and disunited, or maybe I just mean actually demented there, world. And it's governed essentially by ego and, okay, that's what's happening. That's how humans are right now.

[00:12:35] That's how the human race is right now. Afraid and all at once grabbing for power and safety. And I see this where I live in COVID, where there's a, the construct, the construction industry here is going broke, mostly because of the effects of COVID. Um, every second house is being renovated. As if we could provide ourselves some kind of security and stability from that.

[00:13:00] So okay, given this unholy mess we're in now, it isn't surprising that there's a burnout pandemic. It's really an expression of mass helplessness and fear and loss of control. So if that's you, I want you to know it's not your fault if you're scared or if you're overwhelmed, if your thoughts are a bit panicky or resentful or anxious or dreading, you're dreading getting up to face your day.

[00:13:30] I really present some of that information about lack of safety here because it's so important for us to recognize that we're the product of what we know about the world. And the world is just this hotbed of anxiety inducing stimuli, right? We're being trained into being anxious, ADHD, obsessive, and all of that.

[00:13:58] So now that we've kind of gone over that, and I know that's a little bit painful, I find it painful. Even thinking about it for myself, but I think it's so necessary just to not put the whole burden of this on us as an individual. But anyway, now let's come back to safety, shall we? In a minute we're just going to talk about safety, because if unsafety is we don't trust others when we don't trust ourselves, it's kind of looking for safety outside of us in our environment, in the acceptance and approval of others.

[00:14:31] You know, we want, actually what we really want in Unsafety is we want somebody outside of us to come and rescue us, because we don't think we can do it. So the antidote is paradoxically not to look for outside of ourselves for trust, but to trust ourselves more. And then we're naturally going to be less affected by fear, and we'll kind of open up just enough to start trusting the basic goodness of life a little bit more.

[00:15:01] Be able to rest in the present moment a little bit more, instead of the past, which is depressive thinking, and the future, which is anxious thinking. We'll come back to the present moment a little bit. It'll be a little bit more comfortable for us to be there. And in the present moment, it's very rare that anything's actually gone wrong.

[00:15:18] Normally, we're worried about the future, or what's happened in the past. Because unsafety is actually a feeling. We interpret what's happening in the world with our thoughts, don't we? So, negative thoughts lead us into fear and trigger our fight or flight, which all by itself exacerbates that fear, makes it continue.

[00:15:37] We watch the news and we worry what might happen. We see laws change and worry about loss of rights. And yes, I am thinking about abortion laws. Um, we see gun laws not changing and we worry about the safety of our children and all the rest. But safety The feeling of unsafe, of safety, actually becomes unavailable to us.

[00:15:58] Because now we're in fear, we're now we're constantly stimulated by the news to worry about the future incessantly and we're trapped in a fear cycle. But here's what I think, what if we're more powerful than that? What if we've got more inside us than that? Because positive thoughts on the other hand lead to a sense of security and well being.

[00:16:18] Not kind of head tra la la, nothing's wrong kind of well being, but more whatever's happening. I have the inner mental and emotional strength and resources to handle it. Because what if we can develop an internal sense of well being and, and that leads on to de escalating our reaction to what's happening in the world instead of blowing it up out of, out of all sight.

[00:16:46] We're human, right? We're equipped to survive a great deal of adversity. We're kind of lucky that way. Because the world's really, when you think about it, it's always been turbulent. There's always been war, famine, plague, disaster, etc. We're all going to die. That's not changed. So, instead of seeing ourselves as primarily weak and prone to emotional collapse, We can start seeing ourselves as primarily strong, able to rise to the challenges of life, and even grow from them.

[00:17:17] And what I'll do right now is, I'll go through some practical ways to do that. So, it all rests on your relationship with yourself. Fundamentally, to create safety inside of ourselves, We have to be unconditionally loving, accepting, supporting, kind, gentle, appreciative, and caring towards ourselves, just to name a few.

[00:17:41] We need to be our own best friend, and we need to find ways to make it safe for us to be a human being. And the easiest and best way to do that is in our relationship with ourself. So, I'll just talk a little bit about some of the ways that we can in fact do that. And I think the first thing is, that we don't think we can do, but we actually can, is you can choose to tame your reactive thinking.

[00:18:07] When you wake up in the morning, if that's a time when you feel dread and anxiety and worry, then you Just journal and meditate the worries out of you. Just kind of get the poison out of you onto paper or disperse it in your energy. Instead of reaching for your phone, which is going to make the worry worse.

[00:18:24] Also, you can retire your inner critic. Probably, you might be a bit skeptical about that if your inner critic's completely on fire like mine was in burnout. But the thoughts we have in our head are not outside our control. So the inner critic is just your thoughts. And the, um, stream of thoughts is involuntary.

[00:18:44] You'll always have thoughts going through your head. But you don't have to believe them. So if a criticism comes up, you can just agree with yourself that you're not going to use that weapon against yourself anymore. You can decide not to believe the thought and to choose a better one instead. And that's one of the practices that we work on a great deal in coaching.

[00:19:05] So if you, are leaning towards coaching for your burnout, then one of the big upsides is retiring your inner critic. And the next thing, kind of the same, is don't listen to so much news because, uh, the stress cycle of engaging with news non stop, doom scrolling, becomes kind of addictive to our systems and it's also quite self destructive.

[00:19:31] Instead, kind of one of the things you can do is Take moments in your day to notice the tiny successes you have each and every day, but overlook regularly because you won't be looking out for them. Well, choose to look out for them. Choose to celebrate yourself for the tiniest little thing, even if you just smiled at somebody or even half smiled at somebody, even if you did somebody a tiny favor or completed a job that you wanted to complete.

[00:19:57] Um, Really celebrate yourself on purpose. In writing, I recommend. And kind of the way that might look is you can just reward yourself for getting any task done in that superhero way you do. Just take a few minutes break to breathe, move, look out the window, listen to a tune, and be deliberately, intentionally nice to yourself.

[00:20:22] And while we're on that, breath work very much helps with, uh, anxiety and stress because it has a relationship with our autonomic nervous system, our fight and flight system. When we take really deep, slow breaths, that's a signal to our body, to our nervous system, that we're in safety because we're, when we're running away from the tiger, we're not going to be taking deep breaths, are we?

[00:20:44] So those deep, slow breaths are a real signal to our system to slow down, um, puts us back into parasympathetic. Um, it, you know, although it may not make worry go away, When you give yourself, when you give your body that safety signal, you do lower the physical responses to stress like your heart rate, your blood pressure, and all of that.

[00:21:11] Another way to diffuse worry, we all know about this, but sometimes we don't do it, particularly if we feel guilty. Share your worries with someone else, or even with your pet if you don't want to tell anybody. And also being in the room with somebody else who is feeling safety also synchronizes our Autonomic Nervous System, RANS, that's something that happens subconsciously when we're around somebody who feels safe, then we automatically feel a bit safer too.

[00:21:38] So it can have a double, uh, effect. And the next thing for all you Nagoski fans, complete the feeling cycle. So this is all about feeling all the way through an emotion, it's going all the way through the tunnel of an emotion until you've completed the feeling cycle. and allowed the energy of that emotion to release from your body.

[00:22:00] And I've heard it described, I think it might have been by the Nagoskis, as like two ducks fighting on a pond. When they finished their aggressive display, as they're swimming away, they shake all of their feathers just to release the energy of that aggression. And again, it signals to your nervous system to calm down.

[00:22:18] So really, Making a choice to feel your fear, your worry, your anger, irritation, instead of blocking it down and letting it fester inside is a very powerful way of. Releasing ongoing anxiety and tension. Okay, now we get to my favorite. Practice championing yourself. Uh, and if you want to know how to do this, listen to episode 36 on championing yourself.

[00:22:42] It explains the whole thing. But basically, a champion is a person who vigorously supports or defends. So you can vigorously support and defend yourself. You know, how, ask yourself, how can you have your own back right now? Recognize the good that you're doing or trying to do. Think about your why. I mean, it could be that you're doing all these things because you're trying to pay the bills or support your family or save for a trip to see your mum.

[00:23:08] Any why is valid. Don't argue with yourself about it. It's okay to be you. It's okay to want what you want. It's okay to be working the way you're working. It's okay to be feeling the way you're feeling. Find little ways to show yourself that you matter to yourself. Listen really to what your mind and body need and try to give a little bit of that.

[00:23:34] Really, it's about making decisions consciously in support of yourself, even if that's not been your habit up until now. Really stand up for yourself. And also, on the same vein, you know, notice when you're people pleasing. Maybe if you want to know a bit more about people pleasing. Listen to episode 22 for how to overcome it.

[00:23:53] It's easier than you think, and it works better for both, both you and the other person. So all these habits of championing yourself work because you are mending a broken relationship with yourself, and you're gonna know it's broken. If you currently have no idea who you really are for what you like doing, you feel disconnected alone, not belonging.

[00:24:16] And probably unappreciated. And if that's true for you, then really it's time to offer yourself a new level of love and support and care and appreciation. And you can learn to belong to yourself, which will create a sense of belonging. Whatever it is you lack, give it to yourself. Just listen to yourself.

[00:24:38] And I call it championing myself because I kind of see this white, uh, knight on a white charger coming to rescue, and it's me. I am that knight. So, whoever your hero is, become that to yourself. What would that person do for you? And above all, really just choose to have your own back with infinite kindness.

[00:24:57] Because it's actually your birthright to be worthy. Be randomly kind to yourself at any time. Appreciate yourself. Pay yourself compliments. And if you feel like it, pay other people compliments too. Do this all the time. And finally, think about the child in you. Because that's the one who's suffering most in burnout.

[00:25:21] Burnout's really the expression of the little kid inside who doesn't feel safe and needs adult support. And you now can be both the adult and the child. So when you do this, you just find the kid inside of you crying out for help and treat them the same as you would your own children. Or if you don't have any, then somebody else close to you's children.

[00:25:43] Comfort them. Tell them you're going to support them and it's going to be okay. That they're okay with you and that you aren't mad with them. And if you, if you think you can't do this or if you think it's bunkum, you know, just try it anyway. Try the exercise when you're anxious. If, particularly if you're in a private place like at home, not in the office, um, ask yourself what age the kid is inside of you who's scared right now.

[00:26:07] And if you can find that age, then there's going to be a memory coming along with it frozen in time inside you and you already have the power to tend to and heal that traumatized child. Well, unless it's actually, if it's PTSD style, big T trauma, um, If that's the case, I suggest you go and find a mental health professional to help you with your healing process.

[00:26:30] Um, and that's not a judgement, it's just that regulating the nervous system in PTSD can be quite difficult to manage by yourself. But for other, if you like, difficult memories from childhood, you can do it yourself. You can comfort the child. You can ask the child what they need. And you can in some ways, so there's I think the foundation here to rescue your burned out self when the world around you isn't going to change, by creating your internal safety.

[00:26:58] And I've given you a number of ways of doing that today, because really you can't starve yourself to death and expect the world to nourish you. That's not really how energy works. But when you feed yourself, you build up the energy. The strength you need to be in this world as it is. So that's what I've got for you today.

[00:27:14] I've given you a number of steps you can take here, just practical steps to create a little bit of your own safety. You can experiment with those. Thank you very much for listening today. Appreciate you being here. If you're in burnout, you must come and talk to me about how to recover quickly and sustainably.

[00:27:30] And get back to your best performance and enjoyment inside working out. And I can help you with all of the things that I've talked about today, which will create a stable platform for you to recover from burnout. If you're in burnout and ready to recover, come and join my Burnout to Leadership program.

[00:27:49] You can book in to talk with me at burnout. dexrandle. com. Just tell me what's bugging you and let's make a plan to fix it.


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