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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Developing Teamwork and Managing Conflicts



Everywhere I look, the word team has been incorporated into the way that we do business. More and more, companies are assigning teams to do the work that used to be done by individuals. Why? It’s simple, teams produce the best results. All of us have had some sort of team experience whether it is through school, work, sports, or volunteering in hospitals. From a young age, we have always been taught, “there’s no I in team.” Well, I’m here to tell you that there is—only with a slight catch. Now, I’m not suggesting that the team is all about you, but there are some things you can do as a team member to ensure success for yourself, and for the group.

One of the big issues that plague teams is conflict. Many people have a fear of conflict and will try to avoid it at all costs. Too often, people will sit through a meeting and agree with every solution that is suggested because they are afraid to voice a different idea or point of view. This problem is evident when a strategy session that should last all day lasts only an hour. We all need to remember that it is our duty as team members to make sure everyone’s opinions are heard, and each issue is addressed in full. Conflict gives us the opportunity to take a close look at the issues and ask questions that help us develop quality solutions.

I truly believe that listening to people, in the majority of conflict situations helps to de-escalate things considerably; we all want to have confirmation that we have been understood.  We can help guide an interaction in various ways.  Many of us, because we are already tapped out from our busy lives, often choose the easy, and I’ll go ahead and say it, the LAZY route with people, even if the “resolution” is not the ideal.  Sometimes we want to wrap things up as quickly as possible, and that is not always the most advantageous route, especially if we’re dealing with angry patients or co-workers wherein this situation is very common to us nurses.  Just as active listening is important, so is effective speaking.  How many times have you gotten in an argument and spewed out hateful words, only for those words to come back and haunt you later?  It truly takes a humble man or woman to accept a tirade calmly and redirect it down a path towards collaboration.  It’s not an easy task, and those who are effective in conflict/confrontational management are creating art when they smooth things out.  Some people seem to have an innate ability, or fantastic social intelligence and display adeptness at diplomacy in pre-school.  Nevertheless, it is something we can all learn, practice and improve upon!

I believe that choosing the right words in a situation can make all the difference.  Granted, most of what you say is non-verbal, but a careless word can still incite rage and cause grief forever.  I suggest that when we are trying to resolve an issue, state the problem carefully without focusing too much on the fact that there is a problem.  Everyone is painfully aware there is an elephant in the room, which is why the conflict arose in the first place.  We should show respect to the other party and speak for ourselves.   We can try using open statements that encourage dialogue, as closed statements, or very definitive statements tend to shut things down quickly.

If you think back on the compromises you’ve made you’ll realize that most of the time no one got what they actually wanted. When we compromise, each person forgoes his or her own needs or opinions for the sake of the group. It’s like a couple who argues over which comedy movie to watch, and ends up suffering through a horror movie because it’s the only one they could agree on. Now how does this relate to teamwork? The next time you are faced with a difficult decision at work, take a minute to analyze the situation. Try to collaborate with the group you are working with so that you can incorporate each person’s needs and ideas into the solution. You will find that this method of conflict management will greatly enhance your team’s cohesion, and lead to more effective solutions. This may take a little bit more time and effort than a compromise, but the long-term benefits will be well worth it.

And of course, someone is not going to pop out from behind your desk, and grab you if you aren’t a good team member. However, your co-workers and superiors will definitely notice if you start to become a distraction for the team. The easiest way to deflect negative attention is to separate work from your personal life. Obviously, we all conduct our job with our personal emotions in mind, but we must draw the line on issues such as religion, politics, race, gender, and sexual preference. While these topics are okay to discuss at home, they should never enter the team environment. It only takes one comment, and other group members will shut down for the rest of the remaining stay of yours with the team. The best team members I’ve worked with are people who can self-monitor themselves, and leave their personal feelings and opinions out when works start. They made me feel comfortable about asserting myself, and they were the first people to notice if boundaries were crossed. I suggest that we all master this skill and you will find yourself admired by your colleagues, and in more team leadership roles.


I read a great little rule of thumb for effective speaking:

Say what you are going to say, say it, and say what you said.

This should help get your point across.  If not, it’s time to shift gears, of course.  De-escalation takes sensitivity and finesse, and inside you may feel like initiating the all-out beat-down.  Nevertheless, cleverness can get you out of tight spots in managing conflict and aggressive behavior, and any time you can do that instead of fighting, it is usually the most desirable choice.

Conflict can be your friend, don’t avoid it. Work to satisfy everyone’s needs, don’t just compromise. Monitor your personal emotions, and focus on the task.

Teamwork should be an enjoyable and beneficial experience for everyone involved. As we begin our next team projects now or in the futures in our own lives, let’s all focus on strengthening our team skills to benefit the institution we are working in, the client, and ourselves.

The Science of Love

This is a repost from an article sent to my email by Doctorshangout.

When do you know if you fancy someone? What does love do to your brain chemicals, and is falling in love just nature's way to keep our species alive?
We call it love. It feels like love. But the most exhilarating of all human emotions is probably nature’s beautiful way of keeping the human species alive and reproducing.
With an irresistible cocktail of chemicals, our brain entices us to fall in love. We believe we’re choosing a partner. But we may merely be the happy victims of nature’s lovely plan.
It’s not what you say...
Psychologists have shown it takes between 90 seconds and 4 minutes to decide if you fancy someone.
Research has shown this has little to do with what is said, rather
• 55% is through body language
• 38% is the tone and speed of their voice
• Only 7% is through what they say
The 3 stages of love 
Helen Fisher of Rutgers University in the States has proposed 3 stages of love – lust, attraction and attachment. Each stage might be driven by different hormones and chemicals.
Stage 1: Lust 
This is the first stage of love and is driven by the sex hormones testosterone and estrogen – in both men and women.
Stage 2: Attraction 
This is the amazing time when you are truly love-struck and can think of little else. Scientists think that three main neurotransmitters are involved in this stage; adrenaline, dopamine and serotonin.
Adrenaline 
The initial stages of falling for someone activates your stress response, increasing your blood levels of adrenalin and cortisol. This has the charming effect that when you unexpectedly bump into your new love, you start to sweat, your heart races and your mouth goes dry.
Dopamine 
Helen Fisher asked newly ‘love struck’ couples to have their brains examined and discovered they have high levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine. This chemical stimulates ‘desire and reward’ by triggering an intense rush of pleasure. It has the same effect on the brain as taking cocaine!
Fisher suggests “couples often show the signs of surging dopamine: increased energy, less need for sleep or food, focused attention and exquisite delight in smallest details of this novel relationship” .
Serotonin 
And finally, serotonin. One of love's most important chemicals that may explain why when you’re falling in love, your new lover keeps popping into your thoughts.
Does love change the way you think?
A landmark experiment in Pisa, Italy showed that early love (the attraction phase) really changes the way you think.
Dr Donatella Marazziti, a psychiatrist at the University of Pisa advertised for twenty couples who'd been madly in love for less than six months. She wanted to see if the brain mechanisms that cause you to constantly think about your lover, were related to the brain mechanisms of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
By analysing blood samples from the lovers, Dr Marazitti discovered that serotonin levels of new lovers were equivalent to the low serotonin levels of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder patients.
Love needs to be blind
Newly smitten lovers often idealise their partner, magnifying their virtues and explaining away their flaws says Ellen Berscheid, a leading researcher on the psychology of love.
New couples also exalt the relationship itself. “It's very common to think they have a relationship that's closer and more special than anyone else's”. Psychologists think we need this rose-tinted view. It makes us want to stay together to enter the next stage of love – attachment.
Stage 3: Attachment 
Attachment is the bond that keeps couples together long enough for them to have and raise children. Scientists think there might be two major hormones involved in this feeling of attachment; oxytocin and vasopressin.
Oxytocin - The cuddle hormone
Oxytocin is a powerful hormone released by men and women during orgasm.
It probably deepens the feelings of attachment and makes couples feel much closer to one another after they have had sex. The theory goes that the more sex a couple has, the deeper their bond becomes.
Oxytocin also seems to help cement the strong bond between mum and baby and is released during childbirth. It is also responsible for a mum’s breast automatically releasing milk at the mere sight or sound of her young baby.
Diane Witt, assistant professor of psychology from New York has showed that if you block the natural release of oxytocin in sheep and rats, they reject their own young.
Conversely, injecting oxytocin into female rats who’ve never had sex, caused them to fawn over another female’s young, nuzzling the pups and protecting them as if they were their own.
Vasopressin
Vasopressin is another important hormone in the long-term commitment stage and is released after sex.
Vasopressin (also called anti-diuretic hormone) works with your kidneys to control thirst. Its potential role in long-term relationships was discovered when scientists looked at the prairie vole.
Prairie voles indulge in far more sex than is strictly necessary for the purposes of reproduction. They also – like humans - form fairly stable pair-bonds.
When male prairie voles were given a drug that suppresses the effect of vasopressin, the bond with their partner deteriorated immediately as they lost their devotion and failed to protect their partner from new suitors.

Visit DoctorsHangout.com at: http://www.doctorshangout.com/?xg_source=msg_mes_network for more interesting topics.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

I am "The One That Got Away"

Just reposting an article i read in a website: 



The One That Got Away
(Mark J. Macapagal, The Manila Times)
In your life, you’ll make note of a lot of people. Ones with whom you shared something special and ones who will always mean something. There’s the one you first kissed, the one you first loved, the one you lost your virginity to, the one you put on a pedestal, the one you’re with…and the one that got away.
Who is the one that got away? I guess it’s that person with whom everything was great, everything was perfect, but the timing was just wrong. There was no fault in the person nor flaw in the chemistry, but the cards just didn’t fall the right way, I suppose.
I believe in the fact that ending up with someone, finding a longtime partner that is, does not lie merely in the other person. I can actually argue that an equal part, or maybe even the greater part, has to do with the matter of timing. It has to do with you being ready to settle down and commit to someone in a way that goes beyond the little niceties of giddy romance.
How often have you gone through it without even realizing it? When you’re not ready to commit in that mature manner, it doesn’t matter who you’re with, it just doesn’t work. Small problems become big; inconsequential become deal breakers simply because you’re not ready and it shows. It’s not that you and the person you’re with are no good; it’s just that it’s not yet right, and little things become the flashpoint of that fact.
Then one day you’re ready. You really are. And when this happens you’ll be ready to settle down with someone. He or she may not be the most perfect, they might not be the brightest star of romance to ever have burned in your life, but it’ll work because you’re ready. It’ll work because it’s the right time and you’ll make it work. And it’ll make sense, it really will.
So that day comes when you’re finally making sense of things, and you find yourself to be a different person. Things are different, your approach is different, you finally understand who you are and what you want and you’ve become ready because the time has truly arrived. And mind you, there’s no telling when this day will come. Hopefully, you’re single or be in a long-term relationship, or be married with three kids…it doesn’t matter. All you know is that you have changed. And for some reason, the one that got away, is the first person you think about.
You’ll think about them because you’ll wonder, “What if they were here today?” , “What if we were together now, with me as I am and not as I was?” .The one that got away is– the biggest “What if?” you’ll have in your life.
If you’re married, you’ll just have to accept the fact that the one that got away, got away. Believe me, no matter how fairy tale you think your marriage is, this can happen to the best of us. But hopefully you’re mature enough to realize that you’re already with the one you’re with and this is just another test of your commitment, one which will just strengthen your marriage when you get past it. Sure, you’ll think about him/her every so often, but it’s alright. It’s never nice to live with a “might have been,” but it happens.
Maybe the one that got away is the one who’s already married. In which case it’s the same thing. You just have to accept and know that your memories of that person will probably bring a nice little smile to your lips in the future when you’re old and gray and reminiscing.
But if neither of that is the case, then it’s different. What do you do if it’s not yet too late? Simple –find him or find her. The very existence of a “one that got away” means that you’ll always wonder…what if you got that one? Ask him out to coffee. Ask her out to a movie. It doesn’t matter if you’ve dropped in from out of nowhere. You’d be surprised, you just might be “the one that got away” as well for the person who is your “the one that got away.” You might drop in from out of nowhere and it won’t make a difference. If the timing is finally right, it’ll all just fall into place somehow. It would be a great feeling in the end, to be able to say to someone, “Hey you, you’re the one that almost got away.”
i miss you.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Inspirational Quotes from 'SOUL SURFER"

So I have watched this Soul Surfer movie which is a true story of Bethany Hamilton, played by AnnaSophia Robb.  Hamilton was a teenage surfing champion who lost her left arm in a shark attack but worked her way back to champion status once again.  It is a great movie that I recommend for everyone, especially people dealing with self-doubt or feelings of inadequacy.

Here are the most memorable lines from the movie which really feeds the soul:


  1. “It’s hard to look at things that are too close.” - Those are the words of Hamilton’s Youth Minister Sarah Hill played by Carrie Underwood.  Often we don’t understand why we face the struggles in our life.  We only understand them with perspective that comes with time.  
  2. “A small step in a good direction.”  Bethany was struggling with a decision she made to participate in a competition rather than fulfilling a previous commitment to Hill to go on a Mexican mission trip.  Her mother Cheri, played by the marvelous Helen Hunt, communicates that often our internal struggles point us in positive directions.  If you are currently struggling with a decision in your life, press into that and don’t simply dismiss the struggle. 
  3. "Peace" – What ultimately saved Bethany’s life during the shark attack was staying calm.  If you are feeling attacked in your life, one of the most important things you can do is stay calm.
  4. “I don’t need easy.  I just need possible.” Leaders and champions just want a chance.
  5. “Compassion can drive us to do amazing things and give us perspective.” - The turning point in the movie for Bethany was a relief trip to tsunami-ravaged Thailand with World Vision.  It was there that she received the perspective needed to move forward.  If you are feeling down or hopeless, the best remedy is often serving someone less fortunate than yourself.
  6. “Normal is overrated.” - If you don’t fit in, that is a good thing.  You are uniquely and wonderfully made.
  7. “Love is bigger than any tidal wave or fear.”The Hamiltons are a great example of what a loving and supportive family can do in a child’s life.  Conversely, it also occurred to me that often dysfunctional families are more dangerous than sharks are.
  8. “Why would they want me to compete?” asks Bethany to her father Tom played by Dennis Quaid.  This was asked after a difficult first competition back but also after receiving hundreds of letters from people inspired by her.  “(Because) You tried” he answers.  Effort and a desire to compete in spite of our circumstances honors God and inspires people.
  9. “When you get in the Impact Zone, get back up because you never know what’s over the next wave.”Surfing has a period of time called “The Impact Zone” when things can get very difficult.  Like life, often the difference between a champion surfer and everyone else is when the Impact Zone knocks them down, they simply choose to get back up.  Some of you reading this simply need to get back up!
  10. “I could never have embraced this many people with two arms.” – Jeremiah 29:11 is quoted in the movie and states “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.”  Often what you think is one of your greatest defeats or challenges is something that God is using to give you more blessing and influence than you ever imagined.

I encourage everyone to see this movie.  We all face things that seem impossible either currently or in the future.  It’s inevitable and no one is immune.  The principles contained in this movie will help carry you through that difficult time.

"If you Have Faith, anything is possible -- anything at all!"


-Brian Dodd

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

A “Secret Fear” That Keeps You Fat

Here’s a thought for the day…
“It’s not arrogant for a flower to bloom.”

I wish I came up with that myself, but I actually heard it third hand – a friend of mine got it from a teacher in her yoga class. The teacher was saying that realizing your full potential is something that embarrasses a lot of people…

Think about that for a moment. It may sound strange, but it’s very true. Nobody ever looks at a flower and thinks, “Wow that plant is so arrogant!  What a show off that plant is.”

But most people, especially women, feel like there is something embarrassing about even ADMITTING to the vision of what they want to be… or look like.

It sounds selfish and shallow to want to walk through the world as a beautiful person with a beautiful body. Somehow in our society there is this idea that if you want to be the very best YOU that you can be, it’s a little bit arrogant. As if you should be ashamed about wanting to really blossom into something beautiful and wonderful.

Society, your friends, maybe even your family, reinforce this negative idea. Think about this for a minute… really think about it:

How would your best friend feel if you suddenly started getting really into working on your health and body?

How would she feel if you really TRANSFORMED into somebody who was as beautiful and radiant on the outside as you already knew that you COULD BE?

Sure, your friend would be happy for you…
But also, unless your friend is a VERY special and evolved person, there would probably be some resentment that you’ve changed, that you’ve improved, that you’ve blossomed and realized your full potential… and she has not. It’s not evil, it doesn’t make her a bad friend.  It’s simply human nature.
But it’s very self-defeating.

And yet, as I said, nobody ever thinks a flower is arrogant or a show off when it blooms into radiant color. Why not?

Because for a flower, blooming is simply the natural and right thing to do. Flowers are supposed to bloom.  It’s “God’s plan.”  Nature doesn’t want the flower to be modest.

In reality there is no lack of modesty in the flower realizing its full potential and
opening up to the sunlight to show off all of its dazzling color.
And it’s exactly the same for you.

Look, I realize that this might sound like some new-agey, mumbo-jumbo. It’s not.
If you are totally honest with yourself, you have to admit that part of the reason that you’re not enjoying fully blooming into the person that you COULD BE is that on some level you don’t believe that you DESERVE it.
You feel like suddenly losing weight, getting into shape, taking care of your body, and becoming beautiful would make you shallow or beauty obsessed, or that people would say, “Look at her, all she ever does is show off how HEALTHY she is.”

Are you afraid that you wouldn’t know how to live that life – that it might be hard being beautiful and not having the excuse of being heavy any more?

Maybe you are afraid of being judged unworthy of being beautiful. That is a very destructive (and common) habit that CAN be broken. The truth is, God, or nature, or evolution, or whatever you believe made the rules of the universe… WANTS you to bloom.

Like the flower, that’s what you are SUPPOSED to do.

I’m going to tell you an important, life changing secret:

It is not arrogant to bloom.
If you could learn to actually believe this one little thing about yourself, it would DRAMATICALLY change the quality of your life and it would make it much easier for you to achieve your health and body goals (not to mention your financial
and relationship goals as well).

So I’d like you to ask yourself– do YOU think that it’s arrogant to bloom?

Is it shallow or selfish to want to be beautiful, or want to achieve the very best body,
the very best health, the very best of everything you can be? When I lay it out like that, I know that in your heart you probably have some uneasy feelings that maybe it IS a bit selfish to want to be beautiful.
If you believe in something bigger than yourself, do you think that you were created and given a spirit and an AWARENESS of your spirit just so that you could live a life of internal and constant struggle?
If you believe in evolution, do you think that millions of years of trial, error, survival, and reproduction were all so that you could just “get by,” or rather so that you could PROSPER and be the most successful and best human animal that you
could be?

If you believe in karma, physics, mother nature, or ANYTHING else, if you have anything in your life that lets you zoom out and see the big picture of life, then you must see that it is your DESTINY to be the BEST YOU that you can be.

It is what the world needs from you.  If you don’t do it, no one else will do it for you.
Let me say that again…

NO ONE ELSE WILL DO IT FOR YOU.

There has NEVER been a person that is exactly like you.  You are a unique individual with a unique story. Your life cannot be replaced, nor can it be repeated. If you don’t realize your potential, if YOU don’t grow to your fullest, there will never be another opportunity, and it will be lost forever.

Your life is ready and waiting to bloom.  Give yourself permission to reach for the sunlight. If you could talk yourself into this one idea, if you could honestly believe in the depths of your heart that it is not arrogant to bloom, that it is not AT ALL selfish to want health, beauty, success, and happiness on EVERY level…

…If you honestly believed that it would be a VIRTUE to bloom, like the flower, giving your gifts to the world…

…If you could change that one idea in your mind, it would be MUCH easier to achieve and keep ALL your goals in life.  Especially your health, fitness, and weight goals.

I KNOW it works, because I am the proof along with all of the friends and clients of mine who have succeeded by changing their mindset about this one thing.

It’s possible for you too.

Enjoy blooming.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Wacky

Behaving in a silly or random way in order to appear funny.
Posted by Picasa

The Art of Relationships

Every person you meet is a mirror. When we share love, we see love. When we share kindness, we find kindness. When we hold onto anger, we experience anger. When we desire control, we feel controlled.

When we want another to “do it our way” we rob them of their own soul’s dignity. In reality, we don’t know the greater why, how, what, or when the gift of their own awareness, learning, growth or upliftment will bloom.

Who are we to presume we know what another truly needs?

If you could consider everything that bothers you about a person or situation to be a reflection of what you think, believe or judge, you would experience joy beyond measure as you meet and accept the you that you see in others.

This isn’t easy stuff to get the hang of. It hurts, stings, and is a royal pain in the you-know-what when we begin the journey of letting go and opening to the greater truth contained in our loving heart. However, I can tell you that if you hang in there, your life will become much easier and more fulfilling than you ever dreamed possible.

I’m not sure we ever stop wanting to change the “other” in our life until we stop trying to change ourselves. Our ego will always tell us if we change our environment, situation, circumstance, etc. things will be better.

We keep from falling back into our old routines and habits by allowing ourselves to grow naturally.  What is forced doesn’t have a chance to grow roots, what is nurtured grows strong.

If you could recognize that a fight is nothing more than a cry for love,

“see me, hear me, love me” then compassion is born. Fighting fairly is to allow yourself vulnerability without taking what the other person is saying or doing personally – it is taking care of yourself and then learning how to take care of others.

Sometimes the best way to fight fairly is to just walk away for a while and calm down.  Even a shower sometimes does the trick.  Take a deep breath and choose to come from your loving heart. This sometimes means putting yourself in their shoes.

It doesn’t serve you well to “pretend” things don’t bother you. Nor does it serve you well to blame another for your upset response. The upset, theirs or yours, is real.

Instead take a look at it this way:

I’m angry, I’m sad, I’m upset, and the host of other feelings, both positive and negative, are all accurate expressions of feelings… when we say “I’m upset because…” It’s the ‘because’ that creates separation. This is the mind’s interpretation of “why” the upset, sadness or anger occurred.

Be patient, compassionate, and gentle with yourself. You will find the art of relationships becomes the art of loving everyone – especially yourself.