{"id":1799,"date":"2022-01-11T13:34:05","date_gmt":"2022-01-11T13:34:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mahonywoodpsychotherapies.co.uk\/?p=1799"},"modified":"2022-01-11T13:34:06","modified_gmt":"2022-01-11T13:34:06","slug":"week-4-tips-for-coping-with-isolation-and-working-from-home","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mahonywoodpsychotherapies.co.uk\/week-4-tips-for-coping-with-isolation-and-working-from-home\/","title":{"rendered":"Week 4: Tips for Coping with isolation and working from home."},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Hello fellow colleagues, co-workers and friends welcome to the final and fourth week in our brief series of weekly well-being guides. The thinking behind these guides was to support you by offering some tips around well-being and self-care, but we recognise there is a lot of helpful material out there now so it feels right to pause our guides for now. We also notice that there seems to be an increasing level of overall fatigue with everything right now, a struggle with being in a limbo space, which can feel exhausting on so many levels, and we don\u2019t want to overwhelm you. As we say \u2018goodbye\u2019 we want you to know that we are still very much available for individuals who would like some personal advice on specific issues and situations, and if you would like us to write another guide on a particular topic do get in touch.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

For me, it all still seems somewhat surreal. During this pandemic we had no choice, but to board our own ships and navigate frightening and unchartered seas. As I reflect today, I think of the capacity of the human spirit. It brings to mind of our Thursday clap for our key workers \u2013 of all those the pots and pans banging loudly amongst the cheers. We have had to adjust to very different and necessary ways of living, work out new ways of relating and being connected, and we are doing okay with such immense challenges.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Adjusting and stabilising was perhaps our first task after the storm came, trying to create a sense of routine and stability within our homes and working lives. Attending to our physical well-being as we found ourselves in survival response mode. Once settled, we could begin to think about our emotions and psychological states (though we do also recognise that this is a non-linear process and that we can flow between feeling settled and unsettled). With this in mind in our guides we have tried to help you consider things in a sequenced way that mirrored this process. Now, in our final week we are attempting to contemplate our spiritual well-being. This might sound like we are a tad \u2018bonkers\u2019 and stepping into \u2018Alice in Wonderland,\u2019 given that we are still very much in a global and national crisis, facing ongoing uncertainty, and daily loss; we hope you will stay with us on this topic and take something from our thoughts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Spirituality is a hard to define, but to us (the writers) is about the appreciation, connection and relationship we have to a higher level, or force within and around us. It may, or may not, involve a religious belief and practicing with a community, but equally it might simply be about the relationship we have with the wider world, and\/or ourselves, and how we engage and commune with this. It can encompass broad concepts such as love, beauty, nature, and can be explored though mediums such as art, literature, poetry, dance, and music (to name a few areas). Spirituality also speaks of how we as sentient and creative human beings individually seeking a sense of connection to something larger, and working out our place in the world by simply being who we are.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

For us, two key themes in spirituality are MEANING and PURPOSE. Though there can be much value in knowledge you do not have to know the works of Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Donatello or Raphael (yes my knowledge of famous artists is limited to characters from teenage mutant ninja turtles) it can be as simple as to appreciate the panoramic hues of the sun setting like a canvas in the sky. So, whether it\u2019s listening to the classical works of Bach, Mozart or Beethoven, or melodic birdsong; reading Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, or a simple children\u2019s tale – if it brings you joy and gives you hope, and creates a sense of pleasure in the midst of crisis it is extremely valuable. We can find meaning and purpose through the roles we have in life, through our relationships, through our beliefs, but meaning and purpose can also be found in the small everyday tasks like tending to plants in your garden, looking after your dog, caring for your family, or contributing to a cause, your community, or the wider world. It really doesn\u2019t matter if it is big, or small what matters is how you feel about it personally. When facing collective loss and trauma, as we are right now, finding everyday meaning seems to take on a much greater significance. I, for one, want to speak of the permission I am trying to give myself to feel small moments of joy in amongst the despair, and of how important it is to make room for hope and courage amongst the collective sadness, helplessness and fear.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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SPIRITUAL WELL-BEING.\u00a0<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n