Have I mentioned? I have this great opportunity multiple times a year. I teach time and stress management to students in the Highway Construction Careers Training Program, or HCCTP, at two different community colleges in the area.
Let me trace it back. Here’s a reminder that we never know how far our ripples will reach. I owe this opportunity to connections that I made in a professional speaker’s group over 10 years ago now.
And I have to laugh, because there’s so many people that I’m still connected with to this day through that speaker’s group, even though the group disbanded a few years ago. Still connections, friends, network partners, whatever you want to call them, that I met in that professional speaking group. Many industries were represented, what brought us together was professional speaking.
There was a nutritionist, an insurance broker who I’m still friends with today and who also has a podcast on the Broadcast Basement network. There was a financial planner who does financial planning presentations, and I’m still connected to him to this day. A friend and network partner who interviewed me on her YouTube channel last Spring, Sabrina Schottenhammel, is a massage therapist and professional speaker and wellness advocate. And a friend and network partner, Alexandra Glumac, is affiliated with South Suburban College and she is why I started teaching this program, long ago and far away!
I teach time and stress management to the HCCTP hosted at South Suburban College, the Oak Forest campus. They have 4 or 5 groups of students through the program every year. And because of my experience at South Suburban College, I also teach for a similar program at Kankakee Community College. I get to teach awesome groups of people about time management and stress management. I started to write today’s episode and article content as I parted ways with Class number 32 last week. I told them I would give them a shout out. So, hey, Class 32! It was great to meet you all!
I started teaching this course around Class number 3 or 4. These groups are in class for 12 weeks, and I speak to them on time management and stress management in their first week of class. That makes a lot of sense, because by being brave and taking on this coursework, they need time and stress management to make their lives work in the midst of this extra busy time.
And I’m going to be completely transparent. The stress management is more stressful for me. I know that’s weird, but it’s the truth. Time management is productivity, and hey – that is where I live. That is my jam. That’s what I do. Productivity. Yep. Sign me up. I could talk to you for hours about productivity. And I probably have, over time.
But the 4 hours of stress management content is newer for this group. I have only done that 3 or 4 times. And I’m still trying to get the best right combination of content. My goal is to not stress people out with a lot of work while making sure my participants have the tools they need to succeed. That is my goal for these groups every time I meet them, to give them tools in their life. And I love that! I have the coolest job. And I meet the coolest people. Class 32 challenged me. When they found out I had a podcast, they wanted an episode dedicated just to them.
And here we are. I can absolutely do that.
We tackled both time management and stress management last week. And here is the secret, right here. This is what guides my practices. I feel that so many of the practices that we use in time management are also useful for stress management.
When we feel out of control, unproductive, out of sorts, you know, maxed out because we’re always late, or we never feel like we have enough time to do what we need to do or what we want to do. We don’t feel like we’re making time for the people in our lives. We don’t feel like we’re making time for ourselves. These are all very stressful situations. And did you hear the words that I said in those statements? Time. Time.
Here’s the premise for today. I will declare that time management is positively and irrevocably entwined with stress management and stress reduction. Making sure that we’re doing right by that is going to help everything else go better.
If we can get clear on what we want to accomplish in the course of our day and then make it happen, yes, it’s a management of time, but that also decreases our stress levels. We can recognize that and we can work with it.
Here is what our agendas looked like. In our time management workshops, we begin talking about routines and how our routines can support the things that we need to, to make sure our needs are met in a consistent and regular way. And I’ve talked about routines in other episodes.
In class, we discuss sleep hygiene. Sleep hygiene is the routine we have around getting good sleep. And we know getting good sleep increases overall health and decreases stress.
We watch a couple cheesy videos from early 2000s on productivity, and talk about priorities and planning and goal setting. We look at Priorities and the Eisenhower box, which I know that I have done an episode before about, I’ve always liked that tool. It’s such a great tool. Because knowing we’re working on what is important decreases stress and increases life satisfaction.
In our time together, because these are students in a highway construction careers training program, we talk about project management. I don’t always talk about project management, it’s a very specific need. These folks are going to be working on projects, though, so we take a first glance at project management to get a feel for how they fit into the bigger picture on a project.
Finally, in time management, we talk through procrastination. Because conquering that delay-for-no-good-reason increases productivity and decreases stress.
The next day, in the stress management component, we talked more about routines. We also talked about Maslow’s hierarchy of needs because we need to be able to identify needs so we can ensure they are consistently met. Because otherwise we get stressed! It is stressful when needs are not met. Physical, safety, psychological, esteem, etc.
This week, I also shared learning styles with this group. Learning styles were the topic of last week’s episode. I like the stress management content that I wrote because it is all about the person. The individual. There were so many really cool aha ah moments.
We were talking about learning styles, and I mentioned that some of us think in pictures, and some of us think in words, and some of us think in commercials or scenes. That some of us read the words in front of us, and some of us actually sound the words out in our head when we read.
Just knowing that there’s a difference is so important. A lot of our stress management was talking about awareness. Self-awareness. Awareness of how we are showing up in the moment. In coaching, awareness is the first goal.
We talked a lot about that in stress management. We talk about physical awareness. Like physical needs, and also, you know, awareness of where our stress is in our body. For example, if I’m stressed, my face flushes and my shoulders get tense. If we know what stress feels like, we can identify it more readily and take steps to decrease it for our own wellness. I really love that, that physical awareness, that physical scanning of ourselves.
Apparently I do it a lot because a couple of my class participants noted “yeah, you do that all the time”. I didn’t realize anybody else noticed that, but that’s okay.
Along the lines of checking in physically for stress management, we also practiced square breathing both days. Because to be honest, square breathing is a tool I use EVERY DAY. If you’re not familiar, it’s a breathing technique where we breathe in for 4 beats, hold the breath for 4 breaths, exhale for 4 breaths and hold the exhale for 4 breaths. That’s it. Don’t push it, don’t rush it, don’t make it unnatural. Just focus on your breathing for 5 – 7 cyles of square breathing. A 90 second vacation. It’s lovely.
So, to recap:
It is great to teach these group, and Class 32, it was lovely to meet you.
Time and stress management are related. If we can get a handle on our time as a limited and valuable resource, if we can do better with our time management, that will absolutely help us with our stress management as well.
When we better manage our routines, priorities, projects, procrastination, goals, bodies and wellness and sleep and breath – stress goes down.
So those are all time management things. But it sounds a lot like stress management to me, too, right? Time management is also stress management.
I’ll never say we can be stress free. And stress isn’t always bad. Some stress helps us to perform better. My concern about teaching Stress Management meant that the night before the class, I made sure to check my bag and make sure that I had everything I needed to teach the group today. It was the elevated stress that helped me to be a better teacher today and to work with my group better. That’s good stress.
But long term stress can cause mental and physical problems. The nagging, long term, you know, heavy weight of stress sometimes that can absolutely cause us trouble. And again, in transparency, I have been in a very stressful season personally and I really need to rev up my self care. So when life gets more stressful, I know it doesn’t make sense, but we actually need to do more to care for ourselves than we normally would because the demands are so much greater on us. And again, I think I need to say that out loud to myself as well.
In stressful times, we need to do more to care for ourselves because the demands are so much greater on our systems, psychological system, physical system, whatever that looks like. Getting good at time management decreases stress. Yes, let’s do that!