As an NDIS provider, it's important to prioritise self-care and wellness to effectively help those living with disabilities. Burnout is a common issue in the fields of disability work, social work, community work and nursing. Recognising the signs of burnout is crucial in preventing it, particularly as a busy entrepreneur. Symptoms such as exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced effectiveness can impact both your personal life and your ability to provide quality care to your clients.
To proactively invest in your wellbeing, it's important to make time for self-care activities such as exercise, meditation, and peer supervision. Additionally, attending events such as the Whole Warrior Network Retreat can provide valuable resources and support for NDIS providers. The retreat, taking place from August 24th-27th in the Sunshine Coast Queensland, offers professional development opportunities and a chance to connect with like-minded individuals in the disability field.
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Self-care is an essential aspect of overall wellness, especially for those who participate in the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). It includes various activities and routines that aim to reduce physical and mental tension. According to the World Health Organisation, self-care is crucial enough to dedicate a whole month to it, culminating in International Self-Care Day on July 24th. Prioritising self-care means taking an active role in your own health, and the benefits extend beyond stress relief and mood improvement to disease prevention and longevity.
It is essential to note that some of the most effective ways to embody self-care are intentional and proactive. Here are four inspirations for unwinding this month and participating in a worldwide movement of health-conscious enjoyment. 1. Spend time outdoors Reconnecting with nature is a profound experience that touches on so many different aspects of overall wellness. Spending time outdoors comes with positive results such as improved heart health, soothed muscle tension, and reduction in levels of cortisol (often called the “stress hormone”). Outdoor time could mean anything from exploring a new walk in a lakeside park or getting a vigorous workout with Kayak-Cardio. 2. Pick up a mindful hobby Engaging in any activity that pulls your focus from the internal toward something external can be a healthy pursuit of mindfulness. For example, joining a group who do free tai chi in the park or practicing yoga and meditation weekly. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental health condition that is triggered by a traumatic event. Symptoms of PTSD may include flashbacks, nightmares, severe anxiety, and uncontrollable thoughts about the event. People with PTSD may also experience difficulty sleeping, depression, difficulty concentrating, and increased feelings of stress or fear. Treatment for PTSD often involves cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), medication, or other NDIS supports and support from family and friends.
Living with PTSD can be a difficult and isolating experience, but there is hope. Recovery is possible with the right support, understanding and resources. At Whole Warrior Solutions, we understand that managing recovery can be overwhelming, which is why we provide comprehensive counselling services to help you through challenging times. The journey of a childless woman presents many twists and turns. Those childless by choice may revel in the control of their decision to live a childfree life. Those childless by circumstance, may however experience inequality and varying socio-economic status across the lifespan. The journey of infertility often negatively impacts relationships, health, social status, and wellbeing.
Famous childless women such as Oprah, Cameron Diaz, Dame Helen Mirren, Condoleezza Rice have worked for causes they believe in, overcame the inequity of stigma and the gender pay gap. Yet many childless women experience invisible heartache, social discrimination, relationship pressures and situational decline in mental health (Graham, 2015). Causes of infertility may comprise 50% endometriosis (La Rosa etal, 2020), and varying percentages of PCOS, pelvic inflammatory disease, fibroids and other issues. Sometimes it is also the man who is infertile. The length of time and number of medical interventions attempted prior to and after diagnosis may also negatively impact earning potential, mental health and finances. Come with me to a little Greek island called Ikaria. A blue zone where the people forgot to die they live so long! Living with a disability it may be likened to a labyrinth like the one in Ikaria for some. A maze of entrapment. Others may put on their wax wings, fly out of the maze keeping a straight course between the sun and the water, whilst ensuring not to go too close to either so the wings don't melt.
Whether or not you subscribe to Greek mythology, NDIS providers have a great responsibility inspire hope, mentor lifestyle habits such as good nutrition, exercise, fresh air, sunlight, water and connection. In her book Food as Medicine, dietitian, Dr Sue Radd says what we put in our mouths will either slow down or speed up chronic disease. Some people living with a disability are able to make positive choices about nutrition and lifestyle, other's are completely dependent on their providers to improve and maintain their wellness. One of my roles, in addition to counselling and casework, is coordinating the NDIS network. It is a community of nearly 500 NDIS providers who brainstorm together to offer the most relevant services and products for people living with a disability. All types of businesses and professions are represented. Many are health allied professionals who are well informed about the benefits of a mediterranean diet, like the Ikarian's, that contributes to longevity and wellness. If you are an NDIS provider consider what lifestyle habits you are role modelling today? Are you eating a healthy lunch in front of your participants, living a balanced lifestyle, turning up to work ready for the day after a good sleep, drinking enough water throughout the day, inviting participants to get out in the fresh air and sunshine when possible, offering healthy activities for them? When we take control of our self-care it will improve mood, self image, and increase health literacy. There is much we can learn about bluezones like the tiny Aegean Greek Island, Ikaria. Ikarus, son of Daedalus who created the labyrinth, became complacent and flew too close to the sun causing his wax wings to melt leading to his demise. Hence the saying 'Don't fly too close to the sun!' Are we flying close to the sun? Complacent about our nutrition...and has it caused a demise in our health? Why do the Ikarians have less chronic diseases like dementia and heart disease? Whilst we are grounded from flying during the pandemic, I'm going to research a more about the secrets that contribute to them living longer and healthier lives. I want my waxed wings to withstand the elements of wind and sun, and carry me into old age with dignity and grace. When I put my hand to my mouth I'm also going to try to remember that food is medicine..my body is a temple! Love & light Tania Start networking in our NDIS provider network to make a difference here! For Mediterranean cullinary inspo follow inspired Dr Sue Radd who won "Best Health & Nutrition Book," World Cookbook Awards, 2017 on Instagram @culinary_medicine After itching to get back out there so long how do you re-enter society after months of isolation? As the long weekend is upon us some will run at the opportunity, some will ease back into it, and others may need a leg up to get off the couch! Working from home, home schooling and reduced socialisation has been the reality for many due to the pandemic. I find myself forgetting to plan outings as our restrictions start to lift in Australia. Crazy huh after itching to get back out there so long and connect!
Having been so busy as a counsellor and caseworker during the pandemic it’s caused me to get back to basics. I’m so grateful to have a job. But doing the little things like food prep, growing veggies and herbs , drinking enough water, going for a walk in the winter sun, doing a little bit of cleaning each day, ringing a friend. That’s the stuff that keeps the wheels turning. All these little choices help me keep aligned to my values. The values of health, wellbeing, friendship, etc. Some of those little things I’ve let slip during the period of isolation. Not vacuuming enough (really missing the office cleaner), skipping daily walks, eating too many carbs. I’m only human! So this week I started a gut reset, have been eating mainly vegetables and lost a few much needed kilos. It has been a good kick start to help me re-enter society coming into a long weekend. It feels good to be in alignment again, I’ve got some energy back, it has cleared my head. Now I’m ready to face the world again. This time in person! After all it's only by connecting with others that we share love. What little steps are you taking to get back out into the community this long weekend? Are your choices aligning with your values and the person you want to be? You were born to connect, express and give love. If you feel you want a little support to get back out there and connect...I’d love to connect with you. For those living with a disability community access is possible. There are creative ways to connect. Book a counselling session with Tania today! The meaning of life! What is it, how do you find it and when do you arrive at it? The meaning of life is often pondered at times of profound grief. The type of gut wrenching, knock the wind out of you, can't get out of bed for six months grief. Ever been there? Maybe you're there right now. Posturing the circle of life, balancing on the edge of a high place, or laying in the depths of sorrow. To love is often associated with risk of grief.
To love is to become attached to another person or animal. The recent outpouring of sadness for the koalas lost and injured in the Australian bushfires demonstrated Australia's love of our iconic bears. The depth of collective sadness was remarkable. In contrast, what about a parent's private and protracted grief after the loss of an adult child to suicide. Sadly stigma and shame can be a barrier to an outpouring of support for the bereaved. I think about my mother who cared for her husband who lived with the slow progression of vascular dementia for 23 years. At the end of his life she put on his bronze memorial plaque 'My chains are gone!'. It struck me as a remarkable celebration of his freedom and a sign that she had already grieved the loss of the man she loved. The way we grieve is therefore affected by the circumstances. Expressions of grief in some families may not be tolerated in other societies. When my new husband was diagnosed with a terminal illness I'll never forget how I felt. I think I mentioned it earlier...gut wrenching, knock the wind out of you, can't get out of bed for six months type of feeling. Yet he reacted in the opposite way that was foreign to me. Nobody was right or wrong. It's messy, this grief thing. It's intangible and foul smelling if we let it. Complicated grief can happen when it goes on a very very long time. Theorists have debated models of grief for centuries...Freud, Shear, Wagner, Warden to name a few. What seems to affect the way we cope with grief is things like how attached we are to the person, personality, spiritual beliefs, complicating factors like mental health, abuse, culture, social norms and circumstances of death to name a few (Hall, 2011). Grief is a really personal thing. Nurses stepped up a notch when my loved one entered palliative care. The outpouring of empathy, kindness, consideration for the little things was outstanding. It made the whole death thing somehow tolerable. Do doctors crank up the morphine and teeter it to the edge of what some may call euthanasia...so that it is 'a good death'. It spared the patient from the depths of physical pain. Come to think of it I've been present when three loved ones have been in palliative care. The pattern each time was doctors releasing them from suffering. I recall my ethics professor discussing Thompson's famous violinist case...which illustrated when making decisions about life and death always consider is it 'for the greater good'. Quite an ethical dilemma...the euthanasia debate. Which brings me back to the meaning of life. We critically analysed abortion for 13 weeks in my philosophy class...I remember wishing I could do my essay on the ethics of euthanasia because it was more topical for me at the time. In studying ethics, I reflected on the social conditioning and institutionalisation I had been exposed to in my lifetime and how it had impacted my choices. At the end of the circle of life, personally I want to know I have lived a good life? Have I been kind, ethical, responsible, considerate of others in my choices and behaviour. Just being a decent human being, living life for the greater good seems enough for me. Kinda makes me want to start a kindness epidemic with so many doing it tough! Support for grief and loss support is available. #philosophy #circleoflife #bereavement #grief #griefandloss #death #life #meaningoflife #palliativecare #naturaldisasters #bushfires #suffering #euthanasia #resilience #makenewmeaning #loss #griefsupport #griefjourney #griefandloss #love #grieving #mentalhealth #healing #death #lifeafterloss #bereavement #depression #childloss #hope #babyloss #griefawareness #anxiety #miscarriage #support #widow #griefsucks #family #stillbirth #selfcare #griefrecovery #infantloss #pregnancyloss |
AuthorTania Gorry is the founder of Whole Warrior Solutions based on the Central Coast of NSW. Blog Categories
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