Gratitude & the Art of Slowing Down
Gratitude - Why Executives Need It
We have a lot to be thankful for, frankly. As a CEO I get a lot of freedom (and a lot of responsibility too) but freedom is why I choose to have my own business and not work for someone else. I love helping people build their bigger futures.
At the heart of all of this is serious gratitude for the abilities I've been given to do what I do. The first step in slowing down your world is expressing gratitude to the universe (or your higher being) for the blessings you have in your world...health, family, friends, resources, etc. whatever it is. Give thanks each day for those things and express gratitude to others who go out of their way in large or small ways to help you.
Louis Schwartzberg (award winning cinematographer) was interviewed by Marie Forleo recently about gratitude and slowing down. I just finished watching this YouTube video. Take 15 minutes and watch it, you'll be thankful you did. It reminds me to unplug and sit in gratitude for the beauty that really does surround us.
Slowing down - The Clarity breakTM
So how do you help slow down your world as an executive - beyond meditation and gratitude? We call it a Clarity BreakTM, and you need to be taking them frequently. The term "Clarity Break" was created by Gino Wickman, founder of EOS Worldwide. Defining a Clarity Break is simple. It's a set period of time, away from the office, that you set aside to think and work "on" your business, not "in" it. Some people need 30 minutes a day, others need a few hours a week, or a half day each month - do whatever works for you. But the purpose of the Clarity Break is to set aside time AWAY from the office to think. This may be journaling, brain dumping your ideas on paper, drawing, etc. Here is how you do it.
1. Set a time on your calendar and protect that time. Do not schedule over it, move it, or otherwise adjust it. Set it in stone as sacred time for you.
2. Get out of the office and away from distractions. Find a great spot - a coffee shop, library, a park bench, etc. Some place you enjoy.
3. This is NOT the time to play catch-up on things you've been putting on the back burner.
4. Sit with a blank pad of paper and a pen and let things flow. Let ideas come to you. Let your creative self come forward.
Your brain will do amazing things when you give it the freedom to cut loose from agendas, tasks, appointments, and assignments.
During great weather seasons I take mine at a picnic table at a park on the Potomac River. I have a sketchpad and colored pencils and I literally let my brain loose to think about ideas and concepts or simply draw mandalas. I don't go with an agenda, I let my mind wander. When I return to my "work" I am refreshed, relaxed, and process things in a clearer way. I feel like things shake loose and I gain better perspective on what we need to be focused on.
Want to read more about Clarity Breaks? Here are a few of my favorite blog posts from my fellow EOS Implementors at EOS Worldwide:
Have You Taken a Clarity Break Lately? by Gino Wickman
As always, we are here to help!