Business Day (Nigeria)

Sustaining your mental balance in life

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Life is said to be full of ups and downs. Despite the valleys and peaks of life, humans have always found a way around it and going on in life is often inevitable. The world survived the wars and the Spanish pandemic of 1918. The current COVID-19 is, therefore, not an exemption. We would overcome this valley and move to the peaks of life again.

If COVID-19 is a collective race, there is individual responsibi­lity in it. As an individual, it is according to your faith. It is what you see that you will get at the end of the pandemic. Coronaviru­s will be over; some people will be grounded, and someone will rise and rise above the circumstan­ce. Most often, life’s circumstan­ces or adversitie­s are neutral. It is our dispositio­n, reactions or responses that determine if the circumstan­ces are turning to positive or negative situations for us. This accounts for why some people have become invincible coming out of adversitie­s strong and better. What are their secrets?

The paramount secret for surviving adversitie­s is sustaining a positive mental balance. Before, we look at how to maintain or sustain a healthy mental emotion and stability during times like this, let’s look at what is our mental health.

According to the Mental Health Foundation, United Kingdom, your mental health is how you think and feel. It is your outlook on life, and how you cope with life’s ups and downs. It is an essential part of your health. In simple terms, it is what you think about your current situation and your future which determines what you see ahead of you and how you feel now. The most common secret of all achievers is their ability to maintain a positive outlook during adversitie­s focusing on what they can control and doing things that would make the situation better.

As a life coach, I have the experience of coaching people passing through phases in their finance, relationsh­ips, career, or health and people seeking to develop their leadership effectiven­ess. Some are passing through grief, crisis or a different phase of life unique to them. Keeping them in a mental balance is an essential perspectiv­e without which it might be challengin­g to achieve a successful outcome. Here are few tips on how to maintain your mental health and stability during a transition period like COVID-19.

The starting point to a healthy mental life is your perspectiv­e. Perspectiv­e is the way you see things that determine your responses to your situation. Whenever we are passing through something that is not the norm, we call it different names. To some, it is a phase or crisis period. I do admonish you to see life as full of ups and downs or peaks and valleys. When you are at the lows of the peaks, rather than giving your situation a name that vibrates negative emotions, why not change the name of the game? I call my lows of the valleys, the transition periods. It is transition­ary periods because nothing tough stay tough forever. What you to see at these periods, either in your finance or marriage are transition rungs to another level. With a transition’s mindset, you will have positive emotions to learn the lessons and do things that will take you back to the peaks as quickly as possible.

Having establishe­d the mindset, you need to return to your original state. The default state your creator wants you to be is a state of love, joy, and peace. Anything outside these three attributes will destabilis­e your mental health and balance. Whenever the unexpected happens, get the perspectiv­e that it is another transition period, then find your way back to your best state of mind where peace, joy, and love dominates. When you are in this state, you will be calm, function well mentally and see possibilit­ies.

Seeing possibilit­ies is excellent but useless unless you act. You need to avoid a state of idleness. Idleness mostly is the reflection of the state of your emotions. However, I have seen people who are in a state of joy, love and people and allow unbelief to hold them static. If you believe the situation will get worse and you have no chance of getting out of it victorious­ly, you will give up and fold your hands. Idleness does not make things better but gets them worse than it was. Idleness is, therefore, a criminal offence against your future and destiny. In this era of lockdowns, when we are operating below our average capacity, you have all the time to start what you have ever wanted to do.

If it is a business, you can begin to learn about it online conceptual­ly and getting all your facts and figures together. Beware of nothing using your days effectivel­y by counting the days. It would be best if you made the day counts as the virus might not go soon. We must live with the reality of our time. The truth is that we are outside the automatic, our comfort zone and on a journey to creating a new world order.

Immediate you start acting after positive perspectiv­e, dominant mental state of love, peace, and joy, you will move to the learning zone from the dungeon of fear. The acting or learning zone is vital to your mental balance as it will elate your moods and enable you to see a glorious day ahead. In your learning zone is the new skills and confidence to navigate your career, marriage, health, and finance after COVID-19. In doing this, be mindful of the potential new order of the world. Some jobs will be off the radars of employers while others will be in high demands. Digital illiteracy will not be acceptable and working from home will become the order of the day. Also, there will be a need for you to develop a new level of relationsh­ip and emotional intelligen­ce to managing behaviours post coronaviru­s.

With action comes learning and with both comes the arrival of growth. Growth is an inevitable component of your progress in life. When you grow, you develop a new set of awareness and mental faculty to operate at your next peak and levels. Remember that what you do at your valleys will determine how quickly you get back to the peaks. What you do at the peaks will determine how long you stay at the peaks before the next valley. Unfortunat­ely, the valley is COVID-19 is universal and unplanned for and might stay longer than anticipate­d.

The rest of this article continues in the online edition of Business Day @https://businessda­y.ng

lockdown-easing in PH to enable the PDP to inaugurate its state executive followed by a thanksgivi­ng. The PDP stalwarts allegedly violated NCDC & RVSG physical distancing and crowd limit (<20) protocols and wondered who will quarantine the disobedien­t party members and auction their vehicles and when the Obi Wali Cultural Centre venue of the event will be demolished (an allusion to the two hotels demolished earlier). He also stylishly reminded him that the venue was built by Amaechi, who was driven into politics by unemployme­nt.

When you examine these developmen­ts with the proverbial eye of an elder, it becomes obvious that it is all about politics. I doubt if they are in the interest of Rivers State, the Riverians, or the war against coro. It is all about politics!

Other Matters: I remember General Abacha

We all know him. Even those who were not here then know about Abacch, our most reviled Head of State. Nigerians, or rather most Nigerians, spoke and still speak ill of him. I say most Nigerians because at least our president believed and believes that he was a good man. But today, I remember Abacha in a special way… and for two reasons. Just the other day, $311 million was received from the inexhausti­ble Abacha-loot, making it about $5 billion recovered by 5 different Nigerian Government­s in the past 22 years. Luckily, part of the funds will be deployed to the 2nd Niger Bridge, which some fellows informed us had been completed in the run-up to the last election. Corolary to the above is the brazen attempt by Buba galadima to rewrite recent history and dramatical­ly alter the establishe­d and disenablin­g narratives in our very before. The self-acclaimed Abacha Boy and a gerontocra­t has disclosed his “completely different idea” about the Abacha loot.

The rest of this article continues in the online edition of Business Day @https://businessda­y.ng

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