It’s
3.00am in the morning and you are even past the desperate
stage. You’re resigned to no sleep. Your mind
freewheels. If you’re officially going to be
awake – you may as well think of something huh?
If this sounds familiar – read on. The flip
side can be just as bad!
Later
that morning….
You
become aware that you’re here again. Alive.
Senses slowly awaking. You heard an alarm somewhere
far in the distance – annoying but essential.
You know you need to heed its call…but it’s
so warm in here! |
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It
looks cold and dark out there and a seductive voice tells
you can afford to take just a short little 10 minutes from
your morning routine. After all, you surely deserve it after
all the work you have been doing lately and 10 little minutes
won’t realllly mat…ter wiilll iittttttttttt?
Hmmm zz zzz zzzz zzzzzzzzzzzzz
Arrgggg!
You sit bolt upright. It’s 9.30 am! You’ve darn-
well overslept by 2 hours. You’re dead meat! You’ve
missed the weekly team meeting, the boss is going to fry
you alive and you’ll have to do a lot of butt kissing
to get another chance to see that important potential new
client. All because of a lousy ‘10 little minutes!’
You
can’t win either way! Can’t sleep when you want
to and can’t wake up when you need to.
Time
to fix this? I think so….
The
solution is quite simple. It’s about how you run your
brain. Let’s take the first scenario. You lie awake…thinking.
You know you need to get to sleep and firmly tell yourself
to ‘go to sleep!!’. Notice the tone of voice
you just used. Was it warm, calming, soft? Did it encourage
a ‘snuggle – up and snooze’ response or
did it make you a little tense? Did that tenseness trigger
a slowing down of your thought processes or did you speed
up a little?
Now
let’s take a look at the visual aspects. When you
demanded that you ‘go to sleep!!’ were the images
in your mind hard to really see clearly, a bit vague, floating
and getting s l o w e r? Or where they a bit edgy, jerky,
moving from issue to issue, speedingupandstartingtomergetogether?
Which
do you figure is conducive to sleep?
OK
– now you’ve worked out what works internally
to get you to sleep – let’s explore what will
wake you up – that’s if you haven’t jumped
ahead of me!
You
wake up. The end of a sleep cycle, someone moving, talking,
cat demanding to be fed, or perhaps the alarm could have
triggered it. Given that we constantly talk to ourselves,
your tone of voice, tempo, and emotional flavour will all
affect how we respond to another day. Is your internal voice
soft, seductive and persuasive (we all know the lies about
‘just another little 10 minutes by now!)? Or does
it have a ring of excitement, anticipation, and energy about
it? A bit of edge, sharpness, ummppph? And the images? Are
they appealing, fast, colourful, big, bold, dramatic, up-tempo?
If
Stephen Spielberg could have access to the immense multi-
dimensional graphics, sounds and past experiences we have
daily access to, he would be in artistic heaven! We can
colour our world whatever shade we choose. Pick from countless
sound tracks and special effects and access any emotional
state we want to play out in our day. We can distort, delete,
add change and play until the cows come home. We can even
encourage our tired bodies to gently, uhhh, s l o wl y r-el-a-x
and taaaaaaaaaake a wel l l l l deserved nap. Hmmm-good
ideaaaaaaa. Zz zzz zzzzzzzzz
About
The Author
Bill
Lee-Emery is an Executive and Life Coach. He has been a
corporate trainer and facilitator for over 20 years. Bill
is author of 'Stop Procrastinating' and 'How to get out
of your own way and play better golf!'
You
can get his newsletter, 'On Track' by visiting his web site
http://www.altitudealliance.com
You
are welcome to reprint this article as long it remains unaltered
and contains full attribution as follows:
©
by Bill Lee-Emery 2004 email:execoach@bigpond.net.au
execoach@bigpond.net.au
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