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Eight
Strategies to Beat Afternoon Slumps and Manage Your Energy!
The reality is that
many people experience afternoon slumps. It could be too
many carbs eaten at lunch, low blood sugar, or a variety
of other reasons. Regardless of the cause, the key
is get your blood moving and get your mind and energy motivated.
Here are eight simple tips to overcome the afternoon slump.
1.
Eat smart. For lunch, eat light: enjoy
smoothies, fruit, water, nuts, and proteins instead of heavy
carbs that will take more of your body’s energy to
digest.
2.
Do the hardest project of the day first.
If you eat your "frog"
in the morning, rather than leaving the
most difficult task to do in the afternoon, you will have
other less difficult things to work on.
3.
Create an afternoon routine. For example:
after lunch, do a 5-minute power walk outside, perform
10 jumping jacks, go to the bathroom, put cold
water on your face, and get a big glass of ice water. Then
come into your office, clear your desk, do a brain bump
of all morning to-do's, turn on the lights/music, open a
window, and start working! Routines
help our brains connect with what we want to do. Once you
develop habits, your brain will automatically shift gears
when you do the same activities.
4.
Engage your body.
Do things that get your body moving and that are "easy."
Stand up, sit on a balance ball instead of a chair; do things
that keep your blood and body moving. Stay
engaged with movement and let the momentum of movement keep
you alert.
5.
Give your brain a break.
Save the more mindless and active tasks for the afternoon
(e.g., errands, phone calls, filing, straightening, sorting).
If you are trying to concentrate,
looking at the computer, reading, or listening, you are
working against your energy and have to work harder to think
and focus.
6.
Change the scenery. If you can, move to
a different room. Do things to get extra lighting or air.
Sit in a place that is suitable but not cozy (perhaps
a natural environment to keep you from getting distracted
when your mind is already wandering). Turn on some
upbeat music. Let your environment keep you on your toes.
7.
Play a game.
Give yourself a goal or game to play. For example,
if you get a project done or so many calls made, you can
reward yourself by going home early, or stopping for a treat
on the way home. Introduce some momentum
and urgency to the picture to counteract the slowing force
of your energy.
8.
Lastly, don't fight it. If nothing else
is working, take the 10-minute power nap or a 10-minute
mediation time (set a timer). This will allow you
to rest completely and then focus and re-engage in high
productivity. If you keep fighting it, you will have a longer
period of low productivity.
Track your energy
and look for the patterns of what works and what slows you
down. Find the things that
support you to be the most productive and attentive; try
different things. When you find things that work, make them
habits.
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