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Personal
Growth Planet
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Men's
Issues Articles
Emotional Fitness, The Surprising Secrets About the
Healthy Man
By Warren Redman
When I first met Tom, more
than ten years ago, he was a single man of 32, who sold
vending machines for a living. He was successful at
this, one of the best salesmen in the company, despite
being unable to write because of his dyslexia. But he
felt himself to be a failure, and that he had not
achieved anything worthwhile in his life. He is now
fulfilled in his work, making quality furniture. He is
married and a father of two delightful children.
Four years ago, Bernardo was struggling. He was on the
brink of divorce, his business was failing and his
mental health was nearing breakdown. Now he is not only
back on track, he is happier and more successful and
fulfilled than he has ever been.
Tom, Bernardo and hundreds of other men I know,
discovered something that has been a secret for far too
long. Inside every man, there is a powerful, sensitive,
creative, dependable, caring, adventurer. Wow! The sad
fact is that the men who discover that secret have
usually had to hit the wall first. Nowhere is this truer
than in the high-pressure entrepreneurial environment of
Calgary, where success is measured in financial terms
and where achievement is gained by hard work. While
those two demands might satisfy some of the qualities
that men have, they certainly don't satisfy all of them.
The result is a potential loss of inner balance, an
increase in stress and what adds up to a lack of
emotional fitness.
Emotional Fitness; there's a term to conjure with. With
all the emphasis on physical fitness; the gym workout,
healthy eating, the lunchtime jog and all those sporting
activities to fit into a busy life that also includes
being the taxi driver for the kids at their nightly and
weekend events, no wonder most men don't even have time
to think about their emotional health. And that's the
big danger for men in their early to mid forties, when
they are at their most vulnerable to stress.
The one big factor that can improve men's health is the
exact one that they are the most cautious about dealing
with. The really great thing is that it is the simplest
thing in the world to put right. There is a conspiracy
of silence and denial that creates the myth that men are
supposed to handle whatever comes their way without it
affecting them emotionally. Now, we all know that isn't
so. We all understand that men have as much need for
emotional support and expression as women. The dilemma
is that for some bizarre reason, we are not supposed to
say it, or even believe it. There must, we are led to
believe, be something wrong with a man if he acts as
though he is actually sensitive. How can a man be both
powerful and sensitive? How can he be an adventurer and
dependable at the same time, or creative as well as
caring?
The truth is, that for a man to be a real man, he has to
be able to express all of himself, the tenderness as
well as the strength, the softness as well as the
toughness. All too often, men allow themselves to show
only what they fondly view as the masculine attributes
portrayed in the rugged environment of the latest SUV
ads or the stereotypical hard-bitten executive dramas
played out in countless boardroom meetings every day.
Such a narrow view of what a man is diminishes all of
us.
So men, this is for you, a quick course in Emotional
Fitness. First of all, are you listening fully to others
around you, to your colleagues, your
wife/partner/girlfriend? Do you listen to your children,
your parents, to your friends? Most of all, do you take
the chance to listen to yourself? Who are you really--
beyond your roles? When you start to listen, to hear,
understand and accept yourself, you will notice
something begin to change. This first step in your own
emotional fitness seems easy when you read about it. In
fact, it may feel tough at first to do properly, mostly
because our heads get in the way. Men are wired to think
logically (comes from figuring out how to catch that elk
without getting caught by the lion). So our predilection
for solving things can stop us from just hearing what is
going on. Stop figuring things out and try just
listening three times today.
The second thing to try out is to take a little time to
reflect on a significant experience you have had,
recently or years ago. What did the experience mean to
you? What have you learned from it? What did you learn
about yourself? How has it impacted on your current
behaviour? What else do you need to learn? These, and
other questions you can ask yourself, will help you to
change any patterns that don't work for you, and enhance
the ones that do. You will be living your life more
consciously.
The third step in your own emotional fitness is to take
a look at the balance you have in your life between the
things that satisfy you and the things that frustrate
you. This is the balance that determines how happy and
fulfilled you are. I call this the Lifescale, and it is
something that has given thousands of people the
opportunity to take a good look at what makes them tick,
what holds them back, and how they can transform some of
their frustrations into positive, creative energy.
Ask yourself these questions from the Lifescale:
How much pleasure do I feel in my life? How much pain do
I feel I have?
Give yourself a score from 0 - 20 for each of those
questions. Do the same for the other four sets of
questions. The first question indicates your
satisfaction area; the second is the frustration
indicator.
How much purpose do I have in my life? How much do
problems weigh me down?
How much do I feel I'm in the right place? How much
prejudice do I feel against me?
How much power do I feel I have? How much poverty do I
feel I have?
Finally, how much peace of mind do I feel? How much
pressure do I feel is on me?
To be emotionally healthy, you would have a score of
around 60 - 80 in total for your satisfaction scores
(the first of each pair of questions) and 20 - 40 for
your frustration scores. Anything outside that, and you
may not be functioning as well as you could. If your
frustration scores are higher than your satisfaction
scores, it's time you took a serious look at what and
how you are doing.
Much more important than the scores you have given,
however, is what you mean by them. You have to start
listening to yourself. It's tough to do that without an
Emotional Fitness Coach - someone trained to help you
make sense of the responses you have made in your Lifescale.
I bumped into Tom again recently. I had not heard from
him in nearly two years. He had been on an Emotional
Fitness course in Calgary nine years ago. We exchanged
stories of our lives since we last saw each other. He
had been living and working in BC for a while and was
now back in Calgary. He seemed content and fulfilled,
showing me photos of his young family.
"I'm working in a small company making quality
furniture," Tom told me. "When I arrived, I found that
the employee turnover rate was really high, and it was
clear that the management style didn't help. They were
always looking over your shoulder, always wanting the impossible, but
not asking for any input. One day, I went to the boss and invited him to
have lunch with me. I gave him my observations and suggested how he
could change some of the communication. I offered to meet with the staff
and listen to their own ideas on how to improve things."
"What happened?" I asked. Tom smiled. "After a couple of
weeks, the boss asked if I would like to manage the company. I told him
no, but I'd be happy to get together with him every month and with the
team too. Now hardly anyone wants to leave anymore. Production has
almost doubled. The quality has improved. We have a new product coming
on line and sales are booming. And everyone is more relaxed and content
with their work. My boss gave me a bonus and asked where I learned my
skills. I told him about the Emotional Fitness training and coaching
that I had."
It seems that Tom has become that powerful, sensitive,
creative, dependable, caring, adventurer that he always
was inside, and was afraid to show.
As for Bernardo, I just had an e-mail from him. He is
working and vacationing with his wife in Brazil. He has
never, he said, felt so at peace. He finished his
message with, "I wish I hadn't waited nearly forty years
to find out who I really am, but anyway, I'm having a
fantastic time being me now."
Recent surveys, according to the Globe and Mail, attempt
to put a dollar value on happiness. It seems that a
single man needs an extra $100,000 to be as happy as a
married one and that having high workplace trust is
equivalent in terms of happiness to having an additional
$118,000. These, and similar figures indicate that an
attitude that more money, and the stuff that goes with
it, equates to greater happiness is merely a fantasy.
Real men in the 21st century are very different from the
ones we honored in the 20th. In corporations and in the
home, men are not only aware of values, ethics and
integrity, but are more willing to see their
vulnerabilities as strengths and their errors as
learning opportunities. When men can demonstrate their
sensitive, empathetic natures as well as their
clear-headed decision-making ones, they are more
rounded, more balanced, more emotionally fit. And, like
Tom and Bernardo, more successful.
The secret to that kind of healthy success for men is
not to keep trying harder to chase the things that
appear always just a little out of reach and that don't,
in the end cause real satisfaction. The secret is to
lower the bar, keep it simple, listen more to what is
going on with others and with yourself, and to be who
you really are.
copyright Warren Redman, 2004
Author's Bio
Warren Redman trained
in the UK as a psychotherapist, facilitator and coach
and has developed his own unique style of Emotional
Fitness Coaching. He is president of the Emotional
Fitness Institute (formally the Centre for Inner
Balancing), writing about, teaching and coaching people
in Emotional Fitness. He is the author of fifteen books,
including the Award-winning The 9 steps to Emotional
Fitness, Achieving Personal Success and Recipes for
Inner Peace. |
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Susie and Otto Collins are Relationship Coaches and
authors of 4 books on relationships and personal growth. To get their
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