Coping With Uncertainty In The Months Ahead – Care First Webinar Wednesday 29th Sept 2021

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COVID-19 has severely disrupted many aspects of our usual way of life, creating an air of uncertainty for everyone. With restrictions being changed dynamically across the UK many of us are still left with a cloud of uncertainty effecting various parts of our lives as we know things can change quickly. On the run up to Christmas we are all hoping for the best but we won’t know for sure until closer to the time, this uncertainty around such a special time of year can be difficult.

Anxieties are often linked to lack of control, uncertainty is a key factor as to why many of us are experiencing heightened anxieties and stresses during the pandemic. We all have different tolerances of uncertainty and it affects us all differently but either way, it is important to manage uncertainty to help alleviate associated stresses.

Here are some tips to help below which can help you to reduce your anxiety and stress levels by learning to cope with uncertainty better, improve your tolerance of uncertainty and challenge your need for certainty.

Work on things you CAN control

Focus on things that are within your control rather than worrying about things that are not. We often use worrying as a tool to try and prepare for future scenarios but this is often a waste of your energy and an unnecessary cause of stress.

By focussing on things we can control we become more of a pro-active problem solver rather than being a worrier. For example, COVID-19 is out of your control but you can be proactive and take control of your hygiene, clean surfaces etc. and do various things to protect yourself and others from it. How COVID could affect our lives over the coming winter is out of your control, but you can have a plan A and a plan B so you are prepared for whatever the situation is.

Take charge of what you can and make the most out of whatever happens. This will ease anxieties stemming from uncertainty.

Question your need for certainty overall

Certainty is something that brings us security in life, but when you think about it, how certain are most things? Do we ever have a job for life? Good health for life? Certainty of what tomorrow COVID-19 – Coping with uncertainty in the months ahead may bring? Constantly striving for certainty can only bring us worry and anxiety as nothing will ever really be truly certain.

We often have a habit of assuming the worst in situations of uncertainty, but how often does this worse case scenario actually play out? Rarely if at all? We live day to day with the slim chance of losing a job, having an accident, falling ill so why do we struggle to live with the small chance that the worst case scenario will actually play out in certain situations when the likelihood is just as slim?

Accept the uncertainty. When you feel yourself begin to worry remind yourself of the above and try to let the worry go. Uncertainty is a part of life, it is how people deal with it which affects them the most.

More tips and articles on how to help cope with uncertainty

https://www.ccl.org/articles/leading-effectively-articles/9-tips-for-dealing-with-uncertainty-andanxiety/

https://www.helpguide.org/articles/anxiety/dealing-withuncertainty.htm#:~:text=Allow%20yourself%20to%20feel%20the%20uncertainty.&text=Focus%20on%20the%20present%20moment,you%20anchored%20in%20the%20present.

https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/seven_ways_to_cope_with_uncertainty

https://www.bupa.co.uk/newsroom/ourviews/cope-with-uncertainty

More information

If you would like to view the Webinar on ‘Coping with uncertainty in the months ahead’ this is being delivered live on Wednesday 29th September at 12pm-12.30pm, please use the following link to register for this session –

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6289606051293992971

If you are unable to join the webinar live, a recording of the session can be accessed using the same link above after the webinar has taken place.

If you feel you may need some support, you can contact Care first. Care first is a leading provider of confidential, professional counselling, information and advice services. All employees are eligible to use Care first, our services include; telephone counselling, information services and online support. Call Care first on the Freephone number provided by your organisation and you can speak to a professional in confidence.

Please be aware that Care first is an external provider and the information in their webinars may not fully align with advice from the University on some subjects

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