Saturday, May 30, 2020

Change Your Life, Manage Your Inner Chimp

Change Your Life, Manage Your Inner Chimp First of all, allow me to introduce you to Marje. She is my inner chimp. She tends to  become dominant when I have had too much coffee, not enough sleep, have a  situation that I feel is out of control or when my kids refuse to do as I ask for the 9th  time.  She drives me mad. She isn’t wanted a lot of the time, and  yet without Marje, I fear I  would have little passion and energy when all else fails me. Are you aware that you too have an inner chimp? I came across the concept of the inner chimp having read the globally renowned,  groundbreaking mind management book, “The Chimp Paradox: The mind  management programme for confidence, success and happiness” by Prof Steve Peters.  I was recommended reading  it by the head teacher at  my girls’ primary school and it was in  relation to the burgeoning feistiness my daughters were starting to develop through  their junior years. So I spent a week reading this book and without sounding  dramatic… It totally changed my life from that moment onwards The book is all about learning to understand and manage your emotions and thoughts, so you can be the person youd really like to be and remove anxiety. I actually read it whilst on holiday and I made loads of scrawlings in the book (I  know, really bad behaviour but it was Marje’s fault, not mine, honest…) I called out  to my husband really interesting anecdotes or tips and before we knew what we were  doing, we sat reading it together realising this was a eureka moment as a family.  No more losing our cool when the kids start to bicker, and anyone with kids will  know that this is a daily occurrence and usually when you are desperate to get out of  the house/finish an email/return an urgent call etc.  We took some great lessons  from the book as a family and in fact, the most poignant  was an exercise which asks you to imagine you are 100 yrs old on your death bed and  your great great nephew asks you what he should  do with life. We wrote down  various insightful wisdoms and fr om that list, we devised our family mottos of “Be  Charitable” and “Be Kind”. Manage your chimp at home and  work Even 2 years later, if my daughters (who are 11 and 9) start to lose their tempers, you  often overhear the other one saying, “manage your chimp!”…. it is contagious once  people can see the benefits.  Within a work context, “The Chimp Paradox” has been invaluable. The ‘Dear John’  texts or emails from rare candidates who fail to be brave enough to pick up the phone  to withdraw from a process and prior to this mindset, I would have gone off my  rocker (abstractedly as I have never shouted at a customer ever). whereas now  I take  a very calm approach. Marje may doodle something nasty on my page but genuinely  other than a frown, I react very calmly and pragmatically now. Cool, calm collected Following a satnav to a client meeting that sends me around the bend literally when  you are already running late for a new client: now Marje stays firmly in her box and I  simply take the view that by calling ahead to my client to explain I may be a few  minutes late, I no longer get stressed out by these marginal events that otherwise can  cumulate into a really horrid feeling.  Managing junior people is something I no longer do (my choice and I am happy for  it!) but those I have  shared the  â€œmanaging your inner chimp” mindset with, who have management responsibility, have taken my advice and read the book  greedily, realising the potential of how this mindset allows them to take a much  calmer approach to the unpredictable and varied issues that they may have to deal  with on a regular basis. Back in the box I refer earlier to the fact that Marje is still needed. Of course she is, very much so. The  expression “flight or fight” refers to us relying totally on our inner chimps when we  face danger.  But I am happy to say that Marje has a box in which I put her most of the time.  Within the parody, I visualise this as a box of safety for her- it is not a punishment; it  is where she feels safe and comfortable until I need her.  I am not a psychologist (although I would love to explore a degree in the future as the  subject fascinates me and I think with 18 yrs in recruitment I could utilise a lot of  experience gained to illustrate how people think, certainly in a work context) however  I recently did a very unscientific post on LinkedIn asking people which management  book they would recommend to others (predominantly recruitment professionals) and  although a few others were mentioned casually, the unanimous winner was “The  Chimp Paradox” with some, like myself, commenting that it had also changed their  lives. Read for yourself Last October, I held a private party to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Qui  Recruitment and during my ‘Thank you’ address to the guests (who were all hiring  decision makers and business owners), I talked about this book and how it had to be  the ‘eureka’ moment for me; the nemesis of those seeking a different way to think and  work.  I am not perfect and Marje still has certain moments which are unpredictable (she is  the moody me) but I hope those who have read the book agree with my synopsis and  those who have not yet read “The Chimp Paradox” will do so.  Thank you for reading this blog and as ever, I look forward to reading your comments and genuinely appreciate the shares. Image: Shutterstock

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