Today, I'm going to talk about how emotional wellbeing leads
Vesna:to better results for leaders.
Vesna:So whether you're a business owner, a manager, a team leader, the way that
Vesna:you handle your own emotions impacts the results that you get in those areas.
Vesna:The ability to regulate our emotions is seen in nearly all
Vesna:top performers, and it's not about having the right circumstances.
Vesna:It's about the tools that we can access to access our emotional resilience
Vesna:using nutritional psychology habits and our mental game, which I'm
Vesna:going to talk about on this episode.
Vesna:So Warren Buffett, The famous billionaire, he had a famous quote and he said,
Vesna:If you can't manage your emotions
Vesna:you cannot manage money now I think this is very true and I see it in business.
Vesna:Cause when we look at business, it's an emotional rollercoaster.
Vesna:And if we don't know how to handle our emotions, we are going to
Vesna:go in the highs, really highs, and then in the lows, very low.
Vesna:And so we can catastrophize, get overwhelmed, which is very draining
Vesna:when we have to run a business or we have to manage a team, or we
Vesna:have a lot of responsibilities.
Vesna:I see this in a lot of clients who are kind of heading towards functional
Vesna:freeze or burnout is that they are very overwhelmed and highly strung
Vesna:because of this inability to regulate emotions and it does lead to burnout
Vesna:So what can we do to influence this?
Vesna:Cause as I said, when we look at top performers, it's not that they don't
Vesna:have challenges and stresses, they do.
Vesna:They just navigate it differently.
Vesna:And the difference can mean a lot in terms of if you're feeling very, very stressed.
Vesna:Emotionally overwhelmed, there's too much of a mental load in your current work.
Vesna:You are not going to enjoy that work as much.
Vesna:You may even dread going in and it's going to affect your performance.
Vesna:It's going to affect the way that you speak to your team, the way that you lead,
Vesna:the way you deal with problems, it's your ability to stay calm and confident
Vesna:amongst everything that's going on.
Vesna:So how do we influence it?
Vesna:Number one, we're looking at nutritional psychology.
Vesna:So our nutrition not only affects our body, it affects our brain.
Vesna:And so we need building blocks of nutrition to make sure that we create
Vesna:the right neuro transmitters which are chemical messengers in our brain
Vesna:to produce the feelings of calm, confident, collected, got it together,
Vesna:everything's going to be okay.
Vesna:And one of the first things that's really overlooked is dehydration.
Vesna:Water has a huge impact on our brain you know, just slight dehydration will
Vesna:increase the levels of cortisol, our stress hormone, and lower our serotonin,
Vesna:which is our feel good hormone.
Vesna:It makes us feel like everything's okay.
Vesna:So that's number one, check that you're, you know, you are drinking enough water.
Vesna:It doesn't have to be the full eight glasses, but even if it's five to six
Vesna:glasses a day to make sure that you're hydrated The second one in nutritional
Vesna:psychology that I often talk about is blood sugar level fluctuation
Vesna:So when we're living on this roller coaster of, the wrong kind
Vesna:of carbohydrates, we're missing meals, we're living off caffeine.
Vesna:And not having enough food, it sends the sugar levels up and down, And our
Vesna:brain needs glucose as its main source of fuel, and it can really affect our mood.
Vesna:So low glucose or glucose disruption mimics anxiety and depression.
Vesna:It can make us irritable.
Vesna:It can rob us of our focus and our productivity because the brain
Vesna:simply doesn't have the fuel.
Vesna:And the biggest one is that it affects our ability to make decisions.
Vesna:There was a study done really prove this, right?
Vesna:They looked at what judges ate for breakfast and how it determined their
Vesna:outcomes or their decisions for people who had the opportunity to go on parole.
Vesna:And they found that after breakfast, they gave a favorable response.
Vesna:So they basically gave a yes to parole to 65 percent of the people.
Vesna:before lunchtime, so on an empty stomach when they were hungry, they
Vesna:actually gave zero percent parole.
Vesna:So they could really see that obviously the best time if you have
Vesna:to go to court is in the morning.
Vesna:But secondly, is that how much our glucose influences decisions that we make.
Vesna:So what are we doing to balance glucose?
Vesna:I've talked about this before, but we want to make sure we don't have
Vesna:the sugary foods or processed foods.
Vesna:And we want to combine protein with each of our meals because it
Vesna:helps to keep the glucose steady.
Vesna:it only has this slight, um, decrease during the day rather than highs and
Vesna:lows, which is really going to create all of those symptoms in the brain.
Vesna:Next we want to include smart proteins.
Vesna:Proteins are our building blocks They're our building blocks to our
Vesna:neuro transmitters These are the chemical messengers inside of our brain.
Vesna:So we're looking at tyrosine, tryptophan, serotonin.
Vesna:It is important that we have proteins in order to make those neuro
Vesna:transmitters So it's pretty simple.
Vesna:If they're not in the diet, we cannot make those neurotransmitters.
Vesna:Okay.
Vesna:So we want to make sure that you're having the right protein
Vesna:requirements throughout the day.
Vesna:So the very, at the very minimum, you need to have one gram of
Vesna:protein per kilo of body weight.
Vesna:So this is for someone who's not really active.
Vesna:So at a bare minimum, if you weigh 70 kilos, you need to
Vesna:have 70 grams of protein.
Vesna:Okay.
Vesna:during the day, spread out through the day.
Vesna:If you're exercising and quite active, that goes up, But if you're looking at
Vesna:just 70 grams, what you need to look at is that a protein portion like chicken,
Vesna:meat, fish is your main animal sources of protein, which gives you the complete
Vesna:building blocks that you need for these neuro transmitters a piece of chicken.
Vesna:Say a hundred grams of chicken will give you 25 grams of protein.
Vesna:So it's not as if a hundred grams of chicken gives you
Vesna:a hundred grams of protein.
Vesna:if you need to reach 70 grams of protein a day, you need to spread
Vesna:that out throughout the day.
Vesna:fourth thing is essential fats for the brain again, Omega threes,
Vesna:which is your essential fats.
Vesna:They are found in sardines.
Vesna:Salmon, walnuts, flaxseeds, so these are a rich source of brain food.
Vesna:So one of the most researched nutrients for mental health and mental well
Vesna:being, uh, for anxiety, depression, and mood, is omega 3, right?
Vesna:So you can take it in a supplement.
Vesna:My recommendation is to get it through your diet because such a, so
Vesna:much more bioavailability of omega 3 if you get it through the diet.
Vesna:So if you're not a sardine lover, which is a great way to get the
Vesna:omega 3, you can look at salmon and your walnuts and your flaxseeds.
Vesna:Thanks.
Vesna:As well as increasing omega 3, you want to make sure you reduce trans fats so this
Vesna:is your fried foods, Uber Eats, right?
Vesna:They're going to have trans fats, which impacts your brain's
Vesna:ability to communicate, right?
Vesna:So really impacting, your brain function.
Vesna:The second part is the mental game.
Vesna:So yes, our nutritional psychology or our nutrition affects our brain health
Vesna:and our mood and our emotional wellbeing.
Vesna:But then we also have the inner game.
Vesna:So what's actually going on in our head, because a lot of people I
Vesna:see who are stuck in this kind of emotional rollercoaster, unable to,
Vesna:balance their emotions or deal with their emotions in a, in a healthy way.
Vesna:That they really get stuck in these, thought traps where they
Vesna:catastrophize their problems, they get
Vesna:stuck in a loop
Vesna:overthinking they can't let it go, it's always on their mind,
Vesna:they're worried, they're anxious, they're tense, it's a problem, right?
Vesna:So that kind of thinking really keeps us stuck in that stressful place.
Vesna:It really makes our emotions high and low.
Vesna:Now there are two types of thinking.
Vesna:That thinking you may recognize, okay, being stuck in that loop and
Vesna:overthinking and the mind never shuts up and that mental load, right?
Vesna:So that's the noisy, busy, overthinking type of thinking.
Vesna:There is another kind of thinking which comes from a
Vesna:clear and calm mind
Vesna:that's kind of this intelligent, intuitive thinking that helps us to
Vesna:navigate our life and our challenges.
Vesna:Now, when we get stuck in a lot of that noisy thinking, it's very
Vesna:hard to have a clear mind and have clarity in order for that more
Vesna:intelligent thinking to come through.
Vesna:So just to kind of give you an example, I have read in the past that Einstein,
Vesna:when he was stuck on solving a problem, His mind was stuck in that problem.
Vesna:He knew that he couldn't resolve it from that place from that level of thinking
Vesna:He knew that he couldn't resolve it.
Vesna:So what he would do he would leave it all alone.
Vesna:He'd drop his books He'd walk away He either go have a nap or the other
Vesna:thing that he really did was play the violin and he knew that by playing
Vesna:the violin Eventually the solution to the problem would come to him and
Vesna:that was his method when he got caught up in that Noisy thinking he had to
Vesna:move away from it and something that would be totally different in order
Vesna:for him to gain Clarity to problem solve and we are no different, right?
Vesna:I don't think we make any good decisions in a busy nervous tense worried panicked
Vesna:mind But we really do when we have clarity we can really see things from a higher
Vesna:perspective And make the best decisions that we need So the way that we kind
Vesna:of shift that focus away from the noisy thinking and allowing more of this clarity
Vesna:to come through is to, you know, number one, really value the clarity of mind
Vesna:and seeing that from that place, you will find the best solutions to move forward.
Vesna:From the busy mind, you will stay stuck in that place for a long time.
Vesna:And this is something, the busy mind is something that we are so used to and
Vesna:accustomed to being in, but we really need to place more value on clarity.
Vesna:and so that might mean slowing down, pulling back, giving yourself
Vesna:some headspace, putting less in the calendar, creating more spaces.
Vesna:So you have that clarity of mind so you can perform at your best.
Vesna:And one of the most powerful habits for emotional well being is what I call
Vesna:the power of 8 before 10
Vesna:this is getting to bed by 10 PM or before and getting eight hours of sleep.
Vesna:When we sleep, our brain detoxifies, but it processes our emotions.
Vesna:So when we wake up in the morning, we see our problems in a different light.
Vesna:Okay.
Vesna:So if we're not getting that sleep time, we're not getting
Vesna:those functions happening.
Vesna:Okay.
Vesna:When we were asleep, we're also getting the correct hormones being produced to
Vesna:help our body to recover and to heal.
Vesna:And again, if we're going to bed too late, say you're getting eight hours,
Vesna:but you're going to bed at midnight, you're missing the deep sleep time.
Vesna:And it's in that window, up till midnight that we get deep sleep, get our body goes
Vesna:through so much of this restorative work.