And while it’s great to enjoy a work/life balance that our parents and grandparents could only have dreamed of, it does come with pressures of its own.
As we juggle the demands of work and family life – not to mention cost of living pressures – it’s more important than ever to take a step back and be mindful about how we live and work.
Mindfulness is often described as simply another form of meditation. But it’s much more than that. Mindfulness is the simple art of noticing new things. Paying attention. Never assuming.
Social psychologist and Harvard University Professor Ellen Langer has been studying mindfulness for more than 40 years.
Professor Langer says mindfulness is an active state of mind characterised by being:
Her research shows increased mindfulness translates to measurable benefits for our psychological wellbeing, physical health and productivity1.
When 1+1 can equal 3
It’s all too easy to slip into mindlessness—the opposite of mindfulness. Mindlessness is grounded in accepting absolute truths.
Professor Langer says, “When you’re asked a question to which you think you know the answer, there’s probably another way to look at it.”
Does 1+1 always equal 2? In a rigid theoretical mathematical context, yes. In the real world, with all the real world’s variables, not necessarily.
By being mindful, and uncertain, you question everything. And this can lead to meaningful change.
Professor Langer says, “Rather than the illusion of stability, exploit the power in uncertainty.”
With only subtle shifts in our thinking and expectations, we can begin to change the ingrained behaviour that saps health, competence, optimism and vitality from our lives.
Try again. Fail again. Fail better
The fear of making mistakes can be a roadblock to change. And failure in one thing can result in success in another. Professor Langer cites a famous example of a company turning a failed glue that didn’t stick properly into the hugely successful concept of the post-it note.
Mindful optimism can be a more productive mindset than defensive pessimism, where you hope for the best but expect the worst. The alternative is to make a plan, and then get on with living.
Mindfulness can have some startling benefits. Many of Professor Langer’s studies focus on how changing mental perceptions can lead to improved physical outcomes.
Her famous Counterclockwise study showed the mind and body are more attuned than we might think. The researchers changed the external environment for a group of elderly men and turned the clock back 20 years. The participants didn’t simply emerge with a more youthful mindset, they rolled back the years in terms of their physical capabilities and even their appearance.
5 ways to create a more mindful workplace
Mindfulness doesn’t only deliver personal benefits. It can also lead to better business outcomes. In a study of salespeople, participants who were encouraged to deviate from a set script and think about what they were doing ended up selling more magazines.
And mindfulness is contagious. In a collaborative workplace, there can be a knock-on effect. When you see someone else exhibiting mindful characteristics, you tend to increase your own mindfulness.
Here are a few tips from Professor Langer to create a more mindful workplace.
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Accept you don’t always know the answer
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See accidents or mistakes as possibilities
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Recognise everyone has something useful to contribute
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Encourage more from the people around you
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Exploit the power of uncertainty.
A workplace dominated by fixed mindsets can lead to problems as people become afraid a lack of knowledge will be discovered.
A workplace dominated by flexible mindsets can free people up to make meaningful change as they accept they don’t necessarily have the best way of doing everything.
“Lack of expertise is what keeps us interested in what we’re doing, and by extension, keeps us interesting to other people”, Professor Langer says.
“If we increase our mindfulness, we increase our effectiveness, health and wellbeing.”
Current as at Jan 2024