You’re used to dealing with uncertain outcomes for your patients. Here’s how you can use those superpowers for yourself.
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Am I Stressed, Overwhelmed… or Burning Out?
Mentioned in this episode:
The Overwhelm SOS Toolkit
Stop the overwhelm and get back on track, without dropping balls or quitting.
Have you ever had a day recently where you felt really tense and wound up?
Speaker:Well, I've had several of those recently.
Speaker:We've had A level results.
Speaker:We've moved house.
Speaker:I had to get flight to the airport going around the M25, that was stressful.
Speaker:Was there gonna be a traffic jam or not?
Speaker:And I'm sure you know how that feels.
Speaker:And what about the even more difficult stuff?
Speaker:Waiting to hear if you've got a job or not.
Speaker:Funding applications, outcomes of patient complaints.
Speaker:Maybe you've given feedback to a colleague and you're not quite sure how it's landed,
Speaker:or if you're a parent, maybe one of your children is having a difficult time at
Speaker:school and every day when they come home, you are not sure how it will have gone.
Speaker:Now, nothing's actually happened yet, but your shoulders are up by
Speaker:your ears and your stomach's just in knots and you can't think straight.
Speaker:While I was away on holiday this year, I read an amazing
Speaker:book called The Awakened Brain.
Speaker:It's by Lisa Miller.
Speaker:She's a psychologist who was looking at spirituality in the brain.
Speaker:Now, one of the chapters really caught me because she was talking about when they
Speaker:put people through an MRI scanner to see which bits of their brain particularly
Speaker:lit up when it came to stress.
Speaker:Because they had found that there were certain bits of the brain which were
Speaker:activated when somebody was really worried or anxious or even depressed, and they
Speaker:seemed to be counteracted by the bits of the brain that lit up when there
Speaker:was some sort of spiritual connection.
Speaker:That was fascinating in itself, but the bit that really fascinated me was
Speaker:the way that they got people to feel stressed and anxious in the MRI scanner
Speaker:was they asked them to tell their stress story, so they, they wanted them to
Speaker:tell the stories about experiences that made them feel really, really stressed.
Speaker:And the thing that she noticed about these stress stories were that the
Speaker:vast majority involved uncertainty.
Speaker:They involved a decision or something that had happened to them where they had to
Speaker:wait, where they did not know the outcome, and that for them seemed to be much,
Speaker:much more stressful then a bad thing that had happened to them where they knew the
Speaker:outcome, they knew what had happened, and they could just get on and cope with it.
Speaker:Because when we are uncertain about something, where when it could be a
Speaker:good outcome or a bad outcome, nothing's actually happened, but you're telling
Speaker:yourself so many stories about what might happen about who might be angry,
Speaker:what dreadful outcome will there be.
Speaker:And if we're those frogs sitting in our pan of water, it's a bit
Speaker:like swimming around in cloudy water in your pan or in your pond.
Speaker:You don't know what's on the bottom.
Speaker:So we tell ourselves it's uncertainty that's stressful.
Speaker:But it's not the cloudy water that's hurting us, it's the fact
Speaker:that we can't see through it.
Speaker:This is a You Are Not a Frog quick dip, a tiny taster of the kinds of things we
Speaker:talk about on our full podcast episodes.
Speaker:I've chosen today's topic to give you a helpful boost in the time it
Speaker:takes to have a cup of tea so you can return to whatever else you're
Speaker:up to feeling energized and inspired.
Speaker:For more tools, tips, and insights to help you thrive at work, don't
Speaker:forget to subscribe to You Are Not a Frog wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker:When I was on holiday a few years ago in Portugal, I was having a lovely time
Speaker:in the waves and surfing until I saw a fin and I thought it was a shark.
Speaker:And at that point I was completely unable to go into the water.
Speaker:What I'd once seemed amazing now seemed totally perilous, even though I had
Speaker:no idea if there was a shark or not.
Speaker:So it's the way that we respond, the way that we really thrash around and cause
Speaker:extra problems for ourselves, which is on top of the situation that's already
Speaker:happening, because our brains, they find it very difficult not knowing the outcome.
Speaker:So what they do, they fill in the blanks with the worst case scenarios.
Speaker:And before we realize it, we're not just living in the moment.
Speaker:We are pre reliving disasters.
Speaker:That may never happen.
Speaker:One of my favorite quotes, it's a quote from Mark Twain.
Speaker:He said, I'm an old man.
Speaker:I've known many troubles.
Speaker:Most of them haven't happened.
Speaker:So in today's quick tip, we're gonna dive into this cloudy water and think
Speaker:about just why uncertainty fries our brains, why doctors, people in
Speaker:high stress, high stakes jobs like healthcare feel it so keenly, and how
Speaker:to deal with it, how to get the water clear enough to see your next step.
Speaker:Because in healthcare we live in a world that just worships certainty, doesn't it?
Speaker:And certainly as a GP, I was trained to diagnose the problem, be really
Speaker:certain about it, predict what might happen, and then fix it.
Speaker:And more to the point I had to be right, or when I wasn't, I felt
Speaker:very embarrassed and stupid, really.
Speaker:So when we are in that cloudy water, it doesn't just feel uncomfortable, it feels
Speaker:wrong, and we feel that we are at fault.
Speaker:And as doctors, as senior healthcare professionals, we have these amazing
Speaker:traits that help us practice well.
Speaker:But when it comes to uncertainty, they can make it feel a lot worse.
Speaker:And I always talk about these traits, which are our Kryptonite to us.
Speaker:Firstly, we have over responsibility.
Speaker:We think, well, if I don't fix this, who's going to?
Speaker:But actually, what is it I need to fix?
Speaker:So we can't fix it, that makes us feel dreadful.
Speaker:We are quite perfectionistic.
Speaker:We think, well, if I get it wrong, someone's gonna get hurt.
Speaker:But we don't know how to get it right because nobody knows how to get it right.
Speaker:It's uncertain.
Speaker:How can I get it right when I don't know what's gonna happen?
Speaker:We have this idea that we are superheroes, that everyone's relying
Speaker:on me, and yet I don't know what to do.
Speaker:We are terrified of making mistakes, aren't we?
Speaker:We want to be right, and so we think that, well, if I'm unsure about what to do
Speaker:next, then I must be failing in some way.
Speaker:even if nobody else knows what to do.
Speaker:And yes, we are brilliant at problem solving, but when it's a problem that
Speaker:nobody can solve, we blame ourselves.
Speaker:We say, well, if I don't know this, I'm probably incompetent.
Speaker:And these are great traits for saving lives in an emergency where the next step
Speaker:is really, really clear, but it's really toxic when there are no nice guidelines
Speaker:for what's going on right in front of you.
Speaker:And of course, the system that we work in, it just doesn't help in high stake jobs,
Speaker:you are often held responsible for things that are completely outside your zone of
Speaker:power, they're outside of your control.
Speaker:Things like staffing, waiting times, funding, policy.
Speaker:And so when uncertainty hits, it can feel dangerous, not just uncomfortable
Speaker:because you're telling yourself, if this goes wrong, I'm gonna be
Speaker:blamed, I'm going to be for it,
Speaker:And that is the reality for many, many people.
Speaker:They are often held responsible for things they're not in control of.
Speaker:And that shouldn't be the case.
Speaker:But you can argue with reality, but a hundred percent of the
Speaker:time, reality is gonna win.
Speaker:So even if someone else says you should be responsible for it, if you're
Speaker:not in control of it, you can't be.
Speaker:So pausing and waiting in uncertainty just feels like you're drowning,
Speaker:'cause it feels really personal.
Speaker:And we don't just experience it as uncertainty.
Speaker:We internalize the system problems, we turn them into self blame.
Speaker:So it's this thing about taking that double arrow.
Speaker:There's the situation that's going on, and also the stuff that
Speaker:we are layering on top of it.
Speaker:You know, why don't I know what to do?
Speaker:I must be in the wrong for being in this position of uncertainty.
Speaker:Everyone else is gonna blame me.
Speaker:No wonder we get stressed in uncertainty.
Speaker:But here's what's going on.
Speaker:The amygdala, which is your threat detector, that ancient emotional bit
Speaker:of your brain that sounds the alarm, that was built to detect lions,
Speaker:not to detect difficult emails.
Speaker:Our brains have not adapted very well.
Speaker:And the amygdala wants to keep you safe but not happy, so it decides to
Speaker:see everything as a potential threat.
Speaker:It will always tell you the negative story, so it will always tell you
Speaker:that the outcome from that complaint is gonna be really awful, that
Speaker:if someone's late home from work, they've been in a dreadful accident,
Speaker:that the worst is going to happen.
Speaker:So your amygdala will panic and it will tell you that there
Speaker:are monsters under the surface.
Speaker:There are really bad things just waiting to happen.
Speaker:In fact, I experienced this recently.
Speaker:I've just done a house move.
Speaker:I've had some time off work, and there was this little nagging feeling the whole
Speaker:time that perhaps something was gonna go wrong, that because I wasn't checking my
Speaker:emails all the time, that there was gonna be this massive disaster about to happen.
Speaker:I was constantly scanning for threats.
Speaker:And of course nothing did go wrong.
Speaker:It was all totally fine, but it was my amygdala instead of doing its job.
Speaker:And if it doesn't find anything to latch onto, it will find something else.
Speaker:I'm sure you've experienced that.
Speaker:I remember when I was an SHO being away on holiday and just before I went,
Speaker:I received a complaint about the way I had spoken to a GP on the phone.
Speaker:And I'd been really sleep deprived.
Speaker:I think I'd argued with them about where this patient should go, and
Speaker:this GP had written a really stinky complaint about me to the consultant.
Speaker:Now in actual fact, there'd been no harm to the patient.
Speaker:Everything had been fine, but the whole of that holiday, I worried.
Speaker:I pre-live stuff that hadn't even happened.
Speaker:I absolutely fixated on what was gonna happen to me when I got back to work.
Speaker:In actual fact, I got back to work.
Speaker:The consultant had a quick word with me and said, Hey, next
Speaker:time just be a bit less bolshy.
Speaker:That was it.
Speaker:He'd actually totally sorted out while I was away.
Speaker:But when our amygdala makes us tell ourselves stories, we can't actually
Speaker:separate what's real from the stories that we're telling ourselves.
Speaker:And then that puts us into our sympathetic nervous zones.
Speaker:We pump out adrenaline and we're convinced that catastrophe is coming.
Speaker:So no wonder we can't sleep.
Speaker:And when we finally do find out what's happening, it's very rarely as bad as
Speaker:a story we've been telling ourselves.
Speaker:Now side note, the Morris rule of worrying, I tell my friends this all the
Speaker:time, is there's no point worrying because the stuff you worry about never happens.
Speaker:The stuff you don't worry about, that does often happen, but you
Speaker:can't change that by worrying.
Speaker:So let's just try and stop worrying.
Speaker:It's really important to recognize that when you are telling yourself
Speaker:these scary stories, that is normal.
Speaker:Amygdala loves a scary story and that has kept us safe all our lives.
Speaker:But if you name it, you can start to step away from those thoughts.
Speaker:You can start to see that they are just thoughts.
Speaker:They are not the truth.
Speaker:You could say to yourself, this is uncertainty.
Speaker:It's not danger.
Speaker:You know, it can be a bit of a warning.
Speaker:You could say, I need to be careful, the water's getting a bit cloudy, but it's
Speaker:very unlikely that there are sharks.
Speaker:And the thing about all this pre reliving of stuff is that
Speaker:actually right now I'm safe.
Speaker:Right now I have a job.
Speaker:Right now, in this moment, nothing is going wrong.
Speaker:I'm warm, I'm dry.
Speaker:I've had enough food.
Speaker:I'm okay.
Speaker:I'm sitting.
Speaker:I'm breathing.
Speaker:There is no line.
Speaker:There's no physical threat.
Speaker:I'm not literally standing in front of a judge.
Speaker:I don't have a redundancy letter in front of me.
Speaker:So in the present, I am safe.
Speaker:And you can try a grounding exercise.
Speaker:Just put your feet on the floor, take some deep breaths and
Speaker:just be in the present moment.
Speaker:One helpful thing would be to notice five things that you can see, two that
Speaker:you can hear, one that you can feel.
Speaker:Just exhaling longer than you inhale, can move you back into your parasympathetic.
Speaker:So you need to manage yourself and then manage what happens next.
Speaker:So yes, there is uncertainty, but it's over there.
Speaker:You are in reality right now, and there will be something that you can do.
Speaker:You can ask yourself, what do I know?
Speaker:What am I in control of right now?
Speaker:What is certain?
Speaker:What is in my gift to do right now?
Speaker:What's the next best step?
Speaker:And so even one tiny action, one tiny hop, replying to one email, getting
Speaker:yourself in the right state of mind before the meeting, that just helps
Speaker:them with the cloudiness settle
Speaker:here's the thing about uncertainty, certainty does not equal competence.
Speaker:And the real mark of maturity in mastery is the ability
Speaker:to calm even in uncertainty.
Speaker:I remember when I was a very new GP, I really wanted some
Speaker:clarity about my patients.
Speaker:I wanted to know exactly what was gonna happen.
Speaker:But as I got more experience, I learned to hold some of those gray areas to
Speaker:watch and wait and see and not be right all the time, and tell patients
Speaker:that I didn't always have the answer.
Speaker:So perhaps our goal needs to be, not to remove the uncertainty, but
Speaker:actually to develop the muscles.
Speaker:Just sit with it without panicking.
Speaker:Because of course we can't eliminate uncertainty.
Speaker:Actually, that would make life really, really boring.
Speaker:But we can change how we deal with it.
Speaker:And actually, your job isn't to get rid of all uncertainty.
Speaker:It's to stay steady enough to make some wise moves while the water clears.
Speaker:And that is leadership.
Speaker:It's not about having all the answers.
Speaker:Often it's about staying calm for other people, they might be flailing
Speaker:around and really panicking.
Speaker:And the good news is that working in healthcare, if you are a senior
Speaker:clinician, you are already an expert at managing uncertainty for patients.
Speaker:So, because every day you probably say, well, we don't know
Speaker:yet, but here's what we'll do.
Speaker:And if this gets worse, we'll do this.
Speaker:If it's gets better, we'll do this.
Speaker:It's called safety netting, isn't it?
Speaker:You set review dates.
Speaker:You don't lie to people and give them false hope, but you also admit
Speaker:that you don't know everything.
Speaker:I remember distinctly a, a patient coming in while I was a medical SHO.
Speaker:He was really young, a couple of weeks before he'd been fitting well, but it
Speaker:looked like he had metastatic lung cancer.
Speaker:The X-ray looked awful, and I distinctly remember my registrar saying.
Speaker:We are not gonna break bad news to him, we're gonna tell him
Speaker:we don't quite know what it is.
Speaker:And I remember saying, well, shouldn't we be sort of saying to him, oh, it really,
Speaker:really doesn't look good and all that?
Speaker:He said, well, we can give him some warning shots, but we still don't know.
Speaker:And actually a day later, I can't remember what the diagnosis was,
Speaker:but it wasn't metastatic cancer.
Speaker:It was something inflammatory, and he got totally better.
Speaker:So as we get more experience, we learn how to live with the fact that yeah,
Speaker:things might go and be awful, but actually they might be okay, and not to
Speaker:go too far down the route of either one.
Speaker:So as doctors we can do that for other people.
Speaker:We do that for our team, but we need to learn to do it for ourselves, don't we?
Speaker:And one thing you can say to yourself is, well, I don't know yet.
Speaker:That patient we didn't know yet, and that wasn't a failure,
Speaker:we just needed more data.
Speaker:A bit like wifi buffering, you know, you're looking something up and the
Speaker:WiFi's buffering, the data's just loading.
Speaker:We don't know yet.
Speaker:It doesn't mean it's bad, it just means we don't have enough data.
Speaker:So why am I talking about this now?
Speaker:Well, recently I did a talk with a bunch of very senior clinical leaders
Speaker:and I asked them what was stopping them giving their best at work right now?
Speaker:Now I've been used to people saying, oh, it's workload.
Speaker:It's workload.
Speaker:We can't recruit people, it's workload.
Speaker:But this time they said, actually, yeah, workload is bad, but it's
Speaker:the fact that the ICB doing a total reorganization, and our teams do
Speaker:not know if they're coming or going.
Speaker:They don't know if they're gonna have a job next month or not.
Speaker:It's almost impossible to operate at the moment.
Speaker:It's so uncertain, and it was causing them a lot of stress
Speaker:in their teams a lot of stress.
Speaker:And many teams are like that at the moment, waiting on funding decisions,
Speaker:reorganization, posting under review.
Speaker:And part of what makes it so stressful is that everybody secretly feels
Speaker:responsible and accountable for outcomes which they can't control.
Speaker:And the leaders were just feeling awful in this team for their teammates,
Speaker:even though it wasn't their fault.
Speaker:And they were also waiting to see if, if their jobs would still exist or they'd
Speaker:be doing the same thing next week.
Speaker:But we feel that we might be blamed for bad news that we didn't cause.
Speaker:And clinicians particularly worried that they're gonna be criticized for
Speaker:delays that they couldn't prevent.
Speaker:And so this waiting actually becomes loaded with shame, thinking, well, I'm
Speaker:not good enough, even though in our heads we know that it's out of our hands.
Speaker:We can't do anything about it, we still feel guilty and we
Speaker:still feel some shame around it.
Speaker:That's why naming the uncertainty out loud matters so much to you and the team.
Speaker:It gives everybody permission to stop pretending that they are in control
Speaker:or that their leader is in control.
Speaker:So if you're a leader, just saying it straight, here's what we know.
Speaker:Here's what we don't know, and we'll next have an update here and even say,
Speaker:well, let's review it at this point, or let's review this in three months.
Speaker:You give the amygdala calendar and you can worry about it then.
Speaker:It's about not rescuing people, but just being solid, being the anchor for them.
Speaker:And remember to listen to people's concerns without trying to fix it, 'cause
Speaker:you can't rescue people in this situation, even though every bone in your body wants
Speaker:to, you'll end up just overpromising making promises that you can't keep.
Speaker:But share your thinking with your colleagues and ask for help.
Speaker:And if it's you feeling the uncertainty yourself, so check reality.
Speaker:Say what is true today.
Speaker:Make sure you stay in your zone of power.
Speaker:What am I in control of?
Speaker:What do I have to accept that's outta my control?
Speaker:And then just park the rest.
Speaker:Say I'll review that next week or in two months time, but stop
Speaker:going over and over it daily.
Speaker:And I like to use this question, which is, what is the next right move?
Speaker:Not every single move, just the next right one.
Speaker:Now, 99% of the time when things are uncertain, we are predicting
Speaker:bad outcomes, but we all know that sometimes things are actually better.
Speaker:That decision that we didn't like, it's actually done a lot of good.
Speaker:That team restructure, well it actually made a lot of sense and things
Speaker:are working out a lot better now.
Speaker:So sometimes this uncertainty leads to much, much better things.
Speaker:You know, there's times where I didn't get a job but actually freed me up to do
Speaker:something else, or a colleague has gone but actually got somebody even better.
Speaker:And there's so many times in my life when I was really upset about
Speaker:something and I didn't get into the particular university that I wanted
Speaker:to go to, but thank goodness for that.
Speaker:I met my husband and all my friends at at Nottingham where I went.
Speaker:And as Daniel Pink talks about in his fantastic book, The Power of Regret, there
Speaker:aren't many things that he would actually remove from your life without having to
Speaker:remove everything else that's happened.
Speaker:I'm not talking about absolute dreadful things that happen to people, but quite
Speaker:often things that we see as very negative in the long run turn out to be okay.
Speaker:So uncertainty isn't necessarily the villain.
Speaker:It might just be the sort of transition between two different things.
Speaker:And you've survived everything so far.
Speaker:You don't need complete certainty to move.
Speaker:You just need to know which direction to go in and getting more certain,
Speaker:well, that comes from actually taking action, not from waiting.
Speaker:So often we put off decisions because we are uncertain and we're unclear.
Speaker:And absolutely there are times where it would be absolutely daft to go
Speaker:ahead with that decision, particularly when it's got huge consequences.
Speaker:Now, those of you that have seen the Indiana Jones films, there's.
Speaker:Very, very famous bit where he takes the step of faith.
Speaker:He basically steps out into this massive chasm, and as he
Speaker:steps, the path reveals itself.
Speaker:Now, I think that's completely daft, because the consequences of him
Speaker:getting that wrong certain death.
Speaker:But actually all the leadership thinking nowadays is that leaders
Speaker:need to make quick decisions, but make decisions that you can fail at fast.
Speaker:So these quick decisions need to be small decisions that can be reversed.
Speaker:Choose something where there'll be a small consequence where it's not
Speaker:life or death, you can reverse it.
Speaker:'Cause often you only know what the right next decision when you make it.
Speaker:Or you'll know that it's the wrong next decision, but it didn't mean
Speaker:that it was wrong to make it 'cause you would never have found out.
Speaker:We have got to get ourselves away from this thing and that we've got to
Speaker:make the perfect decision every time.
Speaker:'cause half the time we do not know.
Speaker:I remember starting a job as a clinical assistant in a E because I
Speaker:thought that's what I wanted to do.
Speaker:And it wasn't until I was doing it that I realized it was
Speaker:totally the wrong job for me.
Speaker:I hated it.
Speaker:But there's no way I could have known that without trying it.
Speaker:Was it the wrong decision?
Speaker:No, it was the right decision, 'cause I then found out what I
Speaker:did like and what I didn't like.
Speaker:Now, just like Indiana Jones falling off that cliff, things could go really,
Speaker:really wrong but the problem is a lot of us just avoid thinking about it.
Speaker:And it almost feels too scared to look into.
Speaker:But one thing about looking at the worst case scenario right in
Speaker:the face is that you can start planning for if that happens.
Speaker:I'm sure that lots of you will be like me and have issues with funding right now.
Speaker:Those of you that working in the NHS, everything is being cut.
Speaker:And for me and the team, funding has been a real issue over the last 6 to 12 months.
Speaker:We do live online and face-to-face training to help doctors and other
Speaker:healthcare professionals beat burnout and work happier, and many of our clients
Speaker:say, we really want you to come do it, but the funding's just been pulled
Speaker:for the new to GP Fellowship program or for this thing that I was running.
Speaker:So it's been tough.
Speaker:And I started to worry about well, could I afford to run my organization if the
Speaker:funding got worse and worse and worse?
Speaker:And there was one point I didn't really want to look into, but I thought, no,
Speaker:I need to face the worst case scenario.
Speaker:And so I did.
Speaker:And we got together with the team and we made a plan, and it actually forced
Speaker:us to make some changes for the good.
Speaker:We've made sure that all of us are working absolutely in our zone
Speaker:of genius and doing the things where we have the biggest impact.
Speaker:We've made some savings.
Speaker:We've also got a plan for if funding in the NHS continues
Speaker:to be really, really difficult.
Speaker:And we've pivoted to make sure that if someone's organization can't fund the
Speaker:training, they can access it themselves.
Speaker:And by the way, side note, if you're a member of FrogXxtra or FrogXxtra
Speaker:Gold, or any of our memberships, thank you because you are helping
Speaker:to fund this podcast, which then continues to be free for everybody.
Speaker:I couldn't keep doing this podcast if we didn't have our memberships and
Speaker:our amazing supporters, so thank you.
Speaker:So face the worst case scenario.
Speaker:Instead of ignoring the numbers or ignoring the complaint or that awkward
Speaker:meeting, just face it and ask yourself, well, what is the realistic worst case?
Speaker:What would I do if it actually happened?
Speaker:Who could help me?
Speaker:And what is still within my control, and this isn't pessimism,
Speaker:is it's scenario planning.
Speaker:GPs call it safety netting.
Speaker:Try it.
Speaker:Facing the facts actually makes a water surf seem much, much less cloudy, much
Speaker:quicker, rather than just pretending that everything is fine, because you just
Speaker:stop guessing what the monsters are and often facing the worst case scenario is
Speaker:better than imagining what might happen once you actually know it's rarely as
Speaker:bad as what your amygdala is telling you.
Speaker:And the great thing is that most times the worst case scenario doesn't happen.
Speaker:So what can you do about this?
Speaker:What can you try this week?
Speaker:Well notice when you start to feel fearful, when the water starts to
Speaker:get a bit cloudy, ask yourself, is there any uncertainty in this?
Speaker:The instant you feel really tight in your stomach or your mind starts
Speaker:telling you stories, pause and then name it, yes, uncertainty.
Speaker:And then try this ritual, ground yourself with some breaths
Speaker:or looking around noticing.
Speaker:Tell yourself I am safe right now.
Speaker:Right now I am safe.
Speaker:Ask what's mine to do right now?
Speaker:What could I do?
Speaker:If you need to talk to a fellow frog, and then take one small hop, do one
Speaker:small action, send one email or write down a review date, or even just write
Speaker:down your worry, and then leave it.
Speaker:It is not dramatic leaps, it's just small steps.
Speaker:And there's a great question that my best mate and I ask each other
Speaker:every time we are just freaking out about one of the children.
Speaker:And that is, if you knew everything was gonna be okay,
Speaker:how would you be acting now?
Speaker:It's a great question.
Speaker:If you ask yourself that, you'll come up with a next step and
Speaker:it'll be a wise next step.
Speaker:It won't be one motivated by fear.
Speaker:Because we have a choice in all this.
Speaker:If nothing changes, if we keep freaking out when things are uncertain,
Speaker:we just keep thrashing around in this cloudy water, we'll be making
Speaker:the stress of what's happening.
Speaker:Even worse, pre reliving disasters, that will never happen.
Speaker:You're literally toning up your own heat in the pan.
Speaker:But if you pause, you breathe and just let the water settle, you might
Speaker:start to see what's really there.
Speaker:You'll realize that these monsters under the surface, well they were figments of
Speaker:your imagination all along, you'll find your next step and then the next one.
Speaker:If you want more tools to keep the water calm, just even maybe the next
Speaker:step, then download our free Burnout Self-assessment Toolkit, or you can
Speaker:join our Beat Stress and Thrive course.
Speaker:They've got loads and loads of practical next steps and ways
Speaker:to stay in your zone of power.
Speaker:And please, if uncertainty is tipping you into constant anxiety,
Speaker:sleeplessness, or you're feeling really despairing, then please speak
Speaker:with your own GP or practitioner health, or a trusted therapist.
Speaker:You need support.
Speaker:You don't need to do this on your own.
Speaker:Because you've already proved that you can hold uncertainty for others, you need
Speaker:to be able to hold it for yourself with the same calm, compassion, and confidence
Speaker:that, that you're giving everybody else.
Speaker:Now just before we finish, I just wanna talk to you about three
Speaker:mistakes I see people making.
Speaker:When we are facing uncertainty.
Speaker:Doctors and people in healthcare are always, always able to give one example
Speaker:of a total disaster that happened.
Speaker:So someone's child came to harm, or a marriage failed, or a patient
Speaker:died, or something like that.
Speaker:Medics have always seen the worst things happening.
Speaker:My daughter had raised glands in her neck the other day.
Speaker:I'm worrying about lymphoma, my friends are just worrying about their
Speaker:kid missing school the next day.
Speaker:Don't let the exception be the rule, and instead of asking,
Speaker:well, what if X happens?
Speaker:Ask, well, what if X doesn't happen?
Speaker:We've seen dreadful things happening to good people, and we
Speaker:have a skewed version of reality.
Speaker:But conversely, don't assume you can always fix it or puzzle it out yourself.
Speaker:If there may be a serious consequence, get help sooner rather than later.
Speaker:It is not a weakness to ask for help.
Speaker:And finally, we often seek reassurance from other people.
Speaker:Yes, it's really, really important to check out the stories in your
Speaker:own head, find a, a friend, a trusted friend who you can say, I'm
Speaker:thinking this, does that sound right?
Speaker:And they can help you know whether that story is totally mad or not.
Speaker:And they can help you get some perspective.
Speaker:But what they can't do is they can't tell you that it's all gonna be okay.
Speaker:And if they do, that's not that helpful either.
Speaker:No one has ever been reassured by someone going, don't worry, it'll
Speaker:all be fine, because you're telling yourself, well, it might not be.
Speaker:So the aim in life is not to live in total certainty all the time.
Speaker:That's really boring anyway.
Speaker:The aim is to know what to do with yourself in the face of uncertainty .When
Speaker:the water gets cloudy, to stop staring up the mud, to let it all settle and
Speaker:trust that the bottom will appear again.
Speaker:You can't stop these things happening.
Speaker:, Can't stop uncertainty, but you can choose whether you are disturbed by it
Speaker:and how long you stayed disturbed by it.
Speaker:Because you are not a frog.
Speaker:You don't need to jump out the pan or the pond as soon as things are uncertain.
Speaker:You're human being.
Speaker:You've got a brilliant brain, you really, really care.
Speaker:And sometimes the water is incredibly cloudy.
Speaker:Uncertainty isn't the enemy.
Speaker:It's just life.