3 Ways to Maintain Your Mental Health During Quarantine

Published May 19, 2020

TOPICS IN THIS ARTICLE

Leading YourselfProductivityWellness

To state the obvious, we are all learning to adjust to a new way of living. 

Humans are not wired to live in long, sustained periods of isolation or social distancing, and we are having to adapt to new ways of working together, being creative, and living our lives. With all of these new dynamics, its important to be open about mental health and the struggles that accompany long periods of uncertainty.  

There are a few key principles and practices that I believe can help us all during these times: 

 

1. Progress Over Perfection 

 It is important to break big ambitions into smaller, measurable wins, especially when we dont have access to all of the resources we normally lean on. In her book The Progress Principle, Teresa Amibile wrote,Our research inside companies revealed that the best way to motivate people, day in and day out, is by facilitating progress—even small wins.”  

Psychologically, small wins are a huge boost to overall motivation and a sense of purpose and direction in life and work. 

 In a recent interview for my podcast, Jen Gotch told me that she believes realness is so much more interesting than perfection, and I agree. 

 How will you measure progress this week? What small wins will you choose to mark success? 

 

2. Unnecessary Creating is Deep Therapy 

 In The Accidental Creative, I shared a practice that I call unnecessary creating. It means to engage routinely in making things that no one is paying you for, and that are not a part of your job. It can range from launching a podcast (which is how my business began!) to learning a new skill to painting to writing music. Its a way to allow yourself the freedom to take risks, to develop skills and to find creative expression in a very low-risk environment because the work is just for you, not for others. Right now, Im working on an unnecessary creating project in my spare time, and its very life-giving to have something Im doing thats not directly tied to my on-demand work. 

 What unnecessary creating will you do this week? Choose a project such as writing a short story, making a piece of art or experimenting with a new skill. 

 

3.Release the Pressure Valve 

One ray of light over the past months has been getting to see normally polished, produced people learning to do what they do in a more accessible and authentic way. Whether its Jimmy Fallon doing The Tonight Show from his home (with his kids crawling all over him!) or news anchors doing their segments from their living room, we are discovering the beauty and power of authenticity. We all need to release the pressure valve a bit and realize that there is a new kind of more genuine expression possible because of what were all experiencing together. 

 Also, we do need to reconsider the expectations that we have of ourselves. This is no time to be in constant sprint mode, holding yourself to the same kind of accountability that you did before all of this began. Be wise in how you set your weekly expectations and focus more on desired outcomes than quantity-based measures of productivity. 

 Our biggest source of stress is often found in missed expectations, especially those we have for ourselves. Is there any way in which you need to adjust your personal expectations? Release the pressure valve. 

 

Take care of yourselves this week, friends.  

 Be especially mindful of your mental health. Be prolific, brilliant and healthy. 

About the Author
Todd Henry is a 2019 Global Leadership Summit Speaker.

Todd Henry

Founder, Accidental Creative; Author; Leadership Consultant

Todd Henry teaches leaders and organizations how to establish practices that lead to everyday brilliance. As host of The Accidental Creative podcast—with millions of downloads—Henry delivers weekly tips and ideas for staying prolific, brilliant and healthy. He is the author of five books, including Die Empty which was named by Amazon as one of the best books of 2013. Henry’s latest book, The Motivation Code: Discover The Hidden Forces That Drive Your Best Work, reveals the forces that drive deep engagement and unleash motivation for people and teams.

Years at GLS 2019