Guy Winch: How to turn off work thoughts during your free time
Guy Winch asks us to take our emotional health as seriously as we take our physical health -- and explores how to heal from common heartaches. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
since I was a teenager,
as soon as I was licensed.
at a hospital or a clinic,
my practice was doing quite well
than I ever made before.
student my entire life.
than I ever made before.
came on a Friday night in July.
who was a doctor in the ER.
and stalled between floors.
with emergencies for a living
and banging on the door, saying,
this is my nightmare!"
"And this is my nightmare."
and that confused me.
pursuing the wrong career?
I still loved psychology.
I did in my office.
ruminating about work
to my office every night,
about work stress.
much of it at work.
in our spare time,
we face in that regard is ruminating.
our stress response.
to how cows digest their food.
with the joys of cow digestion,
and chew it again.
are the upsetting things,
that are entirely unproductive.
obsessing about tasks we didn't complete
with a colleague,
on how we think about work
over and over again,
to recover and recharge in the off hours.
when we're home,
to experience sleep disturbances,
of cardiovascular disease
our executive functioning,
to do our jobs well.
on our relationships and family lives,
we're checked out and preoccupied.
about work when we're home
or problem-solving ways does not.
do not elicit emotional distress
they're in our control.
to respond to an email
about work projects that excite us.
when we don't want them to.
we don't want to be upset.
when we are trying to switch off.
our unfinished tasks feels urgent.
feels compelling.
like we're doing something important,
something harmful.
I spent ruminating.
when I was trying to fall asleep.
to and from my office --
at a colleague's house.
a friend's "talent show"
it was almost 14 hours.
increased my stress.
that I still loved my work.
my personal life, too.
ruminating each time,
to make the new habits stick.
how you can win yours.
when you switch off every night,
was that I was done at 8pm.
a single email after 8pm?
we didn't have smartphones.
that was cool and hip.
"I get my emails wherever I am."
wherever I am."
was hard enough
at our phone after hours,
decide on when to do it,
technology is empowering rumination,
an even bigger fight coming.
115 percent over the past decade.
even more dramatically going forward.
are losing our physical boundary
from anywhere in our home.
between work and home,
times and spaces.
work zone in your home,
should be associated
when you're working.
to shift the atmosphere
I'm no longer at work.
our mind is really stupid.
all the time, right?
began drooling at the sound of a bell.
at the sight of a red circle.
like problem-solving.
the promotion of a lifetime,
to pick up her daughter
Sally left work early,
bathed her and put her to bed.
of her quality time with her daughter
work she had to do.
our most precious moments.
"I have so much work to do,"
when we're at work, getting stuff done.
or do things that we find meaningful,
into a productive one,
as a problem to be solved.
of "I have so much work to do"
the tasks that are troubling me?"
to make room for this more urgent thing?"
to go over my schedule?"
from work to home,
to convert ruminations
truly enhanced my personal life,
I get from my work.
a healthy work-life balance
and improve your quality of life,
your hours or your job.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Guy Winch - Psychologist, authorGuy Winch asks us to take our emotional health as seriously as we take our physical health -- and explores how to heal from common heartaches.
Why you should listen
Guy Winch is a licensed psychologist who works with individuals, couples and families. As an advocate for psychological health, he has spent the last two decades adapting the findings of scientific studies into tools his patients, readers and audience members can use to enhance and maintain their mental health. As an identical twin with a keen eye for any signs of favoritism, he believes we need to practice emotional hygiene with the same diligence with which we practice personal and dental hygiene.
His recent book, Emotional First Aid: Healing Rejection, Guilt, Failure, and Other Everyday Hurts, has been translated in 24 languages. He writes the popular "Squeaky Wheel Blog" on PsychologyToday.com, and he is the author of The Squeaky Wheel: Complaining the Right Way to Get Results, Improve Your Relationships and Enhance Self-Esteem. His new book, How to Fix a Broken Heart, was published by TED Books/Simon & Schuster in 2017. He has also dabbled in stand-up comedy.
Guy Winch | Speaker | TED.com