What does neuroscience learn us, especially when it comes to training our “agile leadership brain”?
The following seven neuro-cognitive activities are taken from The Healthy Mind Platter, published by David Rock in the Neuroleadership Journal, in 2012. Seven activities that will help you to keep your brain fit for the challenges of agile leadership.
1. Take enough time to sleep.
As important as sleep is for the body, evidence suggests that it may be even more critical for the brain. Sleep stimulates critical brain functions, such as memory, creative processing, and emotion regulation. How much sleep should you get? Although there is room for individual variation, on average we need 8 hours sleep per day.
2. Time to play
Playfulness enhances the capacity to innovate, adapt, and master changing circumstances. It is not just an escape. Often, it can show us a way out of our problems. Playing helps us to train our brain for the unexpected.
3. Downtime
With downtime the investigators refer to a very specific type of “activity”: inactivity, or doing absolutely nothing that has a predefined goal. Hanging out, being spontaneous, as you might do on a lazy Sunday morning with no plans stimulates unconscious thought and produces better decisions.
4. Time-in
This is about reflection, attunement, meditation. It is about training the brain towards an intentional self-regulation of attention. Mindfulness is one of the ways to achieve stronger attention and emotion regulation.
5. Connecting time
Social connection is a basic human need, very much like water, food and shelter. Our connections to others provide a source of feeling seen, safe, and secure. The perception that others provide assistance and emotional support, buffers the negative effects of stress on your health.
6. Physical time
Physical activity has a significant positive and global impact on mental functioning. Exercise has the capacity to enhance learning and memory capacity under a variety of conditions. It can help to increase your brain’s health and plasticity throughout life.
7. Focus time
Focus time enables you to avoid the sense of being overwhelmed that so often is the result of trying to multitask. Isolate yourself now and than from the rest of the people and make sure you can concentrate and finish your task. There is a direct relationship between stress, focus and the health of your brain.
If you care for a fit brain, a healthy mind diet is necessary. It will enable you to keep focus and overview, do the right things and enhance engagement of your team members. This will give you great results.