Managing Stress For Personal And Professional Growth
Published 3/2025
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 3.93 GB | Duration: 2h 18m
Published 3/2025
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 3.93 GB | Duration: 2h 18m
Learn how to manage your emotions for both health and productivity in workplace
What you'll learn
Able to apply Emotional Intelligence theory to your personal and professional experiences
Able to determine how you use your emotions to make decisions, solve problems, test what’s real and what’s not and control your impulses
Learn ways to manage your emotions more effectively and reduce the toxicity of unhealthy emotions
Learn the consequence of unhealthy emotions and how it can affect your health
Learn that unhealthy emotions resulting in burnout and unproductive workers are costing businesses billion of dollars
Learn some practical ways to manage your emotions
Requirements
No prerequisites required
Description
Managing emotional reactions means choosing how and when to express the emotions we feel. People who do a good job of managing emotions know that it's healthy to express their feelings and are more productive at their workplace.There are healthy and unhealthy emotions. Unhealthy or toxic emotions lead to burnout, anxieties, depression, and a whole load of physical illnesses.Studies show that high stress levels are costing businesses more than $300 Billion in the US alone. High blood pressure, fatigue, scattered thinking, anger and sleeplessness are some of the side effects to high stress.Understanding how emotions work gives you the key to managing your emotional response. Your emotional responses don’t necessarily have much to do with the current situation, or to reason, but you can overcome them with reason and by being aware of your reactions.Emotion is a form of stress because it activates the body’s physiological and psychological responses, similar to how stress functions. Emotions, whether positive (joy, excitement) or negative (fear, anger), trigger biochemical changes in the brain and body. When emotions like fear, anger, or sadness are prolonged or unmanaged, they can contribute to chronic stress.Not all stress is harmful though. Positive emotions can create a type of stress called eustress, which helps with motivation, focus, and performance. Feelings like excitement before an event trigger stress responses that improve cognitive function and resilience.Since emotions are deeply tied to stress responses in the body, whether they trigger distress or motivation depends on how they are processed and managed. Recognizing emotions as a form of stress allows us to develop better emotional regulation strategies for improved mental and physical health.You can change how you feel. The key is to be aware of your emotional response and understand what might be behind it.
Overview
Section 1: Introduction
Lecture 1 Introduction and Welcome
Section 2: Session 2
Lecture 2 An Overview of the Course
Section 3: Session 3
Lecture 3 What a Stressful World
Section 4: Session 4
Lecture 4 The Science of Stress
Section 5: Session 5
Lecture 5 Our Body Stress Response
Section 6: Session 6
Lecture 6 Emotional Stress in Workplace
Section 7: Session 7
Lecture 7 Emotions Turned Toxic
Section 8: Session 8
Lecture 8 Root Causes and Triggers
Section 9: Session 9
Lecture 9 Understanding Emotional Intelligence
Section 10: Session 10
Lecture 10 Practical Steps to Overcome Stress
For those who want to understand and manage their emotions for personal and professional growth