Hello everyone.
Congratulations, you’ve made it to the end of the teaching phase of the semester. It’s a good practice to celebrate even the small victories. This is also a good practice for your mental health and general well-being, which are essential to your role as an educator and overall human being. Teaching and learning can be demanding physically, cognitively, emotionally and otherwise for all involved. For this reason, it is important that we seek balance in satisfying our professional duties and our personal (emotional, physical and mental) needs.
A – Understanding Well-being/Wellness
Well-being may be defined as a state of comfort and contentment, being healthy and happy. More specifically, well-being includes having more positive emotions (such as contentment and happiness), and less negative emotions (such as depression and anxiety). Other indicators of well-being include one’s satisfaction with life, feelings of fulfillment, and positive functioning. More than just the absence of disease or illness, well-being/wellness is a complex combination of a person’s physical, mental, emotional and social health factors. It is also important to identify factors that may work against your well-being, including stress, toxic relationships, and unhealthy environments.
B – Tips For Well-being/Wellness
While there are factors that can work against wellness, there are simple things that you can do to ensure your well-being/wellness. The following are tips that may guide you in promoting your well-being. These tips are easy to implement and will help you reap great rewards by reducing stress and improving your well-being.
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Meditation/Mindfullness: Meditation, allows you to focus your attention and quell the stream of jumbled thoughts that may be crowding your mind and causing stress. Meditation/Mindfullness is effective in reducing stress and anxiety as it may provide you with a sense of calmness, peace and balance that can help both your emotional well-being and your overall health.
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Network/Connect With Others: We may all experience moments when we feel stressed and irritable. During such times, we may have a tendency to isolate ourselves from others. But this may not always be the best practice for our well-being. Instead, you may consider reaching out to family and friends, making social connections. Even one good friend or confidant who listens can make a difference. Social contact is a good stress reliever because it can offer a welcomed distraction, give support, provide an avenue for synthesizing and expressing your thoughts, and help you put up with life’s up and downs.
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Write It Out/Journal It: We all need an avenue to express our thoughts and regulate our emotions. Teaching and learning provides us with a range of experiences and personalities which we often need to consolidate and make sense. To this end, writing down your thoughts and feelings can be a good release for otherwise pent-up feelings. Don’t overthink about what to write — just let it flow. Write anything that comes to mind. No one else needs to read it. So don’t aim for perfect grammar or spelling. Let your thoughts flow on paper, or on the computer screen. Once you’re done, you can toss out what you wrote or save it to think about at a subsequent time.
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Get Creative: Listening to or playing music is a good stress reliever. It can provide a much needed mental distraction, lessen muscle tension and lower stress hormones (e.g. cortisol). Don’t be afraid to find some alone time and turn up the volume and let your mind be absorbed by the music. Even if music isn’t one of your interests, turn your attention to another hobby you enjoy such as cooking, hiking, gardening, sewing, reading or even drawing. The Arts have been scientifically shown to reduce stress. Even if you don’t think you have a hobby, now might be a good time to discover one by trying something new!
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Laugh more: A good sense of humor can’t cure all ailments, but it can help you feel better – even if you have to force a fake laugh through your grumpiness. Laughter is often seen as a medicine and an antidote to stress, anxiety and other things that may work against your well-being. When you laugh, it lightens your mental load. It also causes positive physical changes in the body such as releasing muscle tensions. Laughter fires up and then cools down your stress response. To capitalize on the power of laughter for stress management, read some jokes, tell some jokes (even if they’re not so funny), watch a comedy or hang out with your funny friends. Laugh a little (or a lot), and see how quickly your mood and physical body changes.
C – The CETL’s Laugh Out Loud
As we are on the topic of wellness and laughter to commemorate your accomplishment of completing your teaching responsibilities for the semester, The CETL is also providing you with an avenue to laugh a little (or a lot) through its Laugh Out Loud event. Scheduled for Thursday 27th November, 2024 at 5:00 PM in the Teaching and Learning Complex (TLC), Auditorium A, this event is an opportunity for all staff at the UWISTA to engage in friendly games such as spoken word, extempore and musical parody, and experience joy and laughter. In addition to building relationships, there will also be several prizes to be won including prizes for participation, team spirit, and representation. ALL STAFF MEMBERS are invited to this FREE event. We highly recommend persons to:
PARTICIPATE (SOLO/TEAMS): https://cetl-workshops.corsizio.com/event/670d32076cca3e1353425530
Or
ATTEND: https://cetl-workshops.corsizio.com/event/65c39260e759b025f063e981Â
Games – Prizes – Fun…this will be EPIC!
We hope these tips are useful to you.
We look forward to seeing you at our upcoming LOL event!