Jodie Rogers

The Hidden Edge


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an increasingly complex and uncertain world, we all need tools to understand and manage our most important asset – our own minds – because it's our minds that act as our brakes and our accelerators. As we face into the new world, we need to consider how we respond to change. Rarely is change actually a problem; the problem is our natural human resistance to it.

      We resist it because change breeds uncertainty, uncertainty brings doubt, which leads to hesitation and increases the risk of death – change and uncertainty generally have not been good for survival. Therefore, humans have been programmed to avoid them. But the world is different; we don't have the predators we used to, we can also navigate uncertainty and change more skilfully if we know how to acknowledge and live beside the anxiety and fear they often bring (knowing they most likely won't lead to death).

      We need to be fine-tuning our minds to be more mentally agile and prepared for the long game. We need to be strengthening our neural pathways like we train our muscles at the gym. We need to be flexing our resiliency and preparing for the road ahead. We need to be getting our people mentally fit and empowering them to create their futures and that of the businesses and brands they represent. That's what this book sets out to support: empowering you and your people to enhance their own inner capabilities to navigate and flourish within a world of change. Because this is where true competitive advantage lives.

      When I talk about mental fitness as a concept, I focus on strengthening and enhancing – as such it can be seen as preventative in approach.

      While the idea of prevention wasn't completely new, it acquired a fresh urgency during this decade. Virginia Berridge notes that:

      There was a realisation that, along with focusing on ridding the world of disease and illness, if society also spent energy and money on educating people to eat well, exercise, take vitamins, stop smoking, etc. they could keep millions out of the healthcare system and save billions, and many people would have a much richer quality of life. I believe passionately that we need to take the same attitude to mental health as we have done for physical health. We shouldn't focus all of our energy on just one side of the spectrum: illness. We should be investing in our own mental fitness and that of our teams – because that is where untapped potential lies (see Figure 1.1).

Schematic illustration of the Mental Fitness Spectrum.

      Figure 1.1 The Mental Fitness Spectrum.

      Even when discussing mental health, people often still think of ill health, and many glaze over, thinking, ‘It doesn't apply to me, I don't have any problems.’ The tendency is to think a mental health session means they're going to be ‘assessed’, or worse, they're going to be encouraged to meditate! The issue with the term ‘mental health’ is that many believe they are fine as long as they are not ‘ill’.

       The absence of illness does not equal health.

      It's true that many companies have wellness or well-being teams, which largely focus on keeping people out of the ‘illness’ phase with some, but limited, focus on encouraging and enhancing ‘fitness’. We can expect preventative approaches in the form of encouraging exercise, healthy eating, sleep, and meditation. All of these are absolutely important, they are foundational – but I believe there's more, much more.

       What's missing is a proactive approach to increasing and enhancing mental fitness that is interesting, engaging, practical, and applicable both in life and in business.

      This book, and my work, aim to make significant strides towards changing our perspective. I want to move away from focusing only on one side of the spectrum – illness (a cure-focused mentality) and wellness – to also putting energy into the other end of the spectrum – fitness (an enhancing, strengthening, and empowering mentality to growth). Just as we go to the gym to exercise, to strengthen our heart and our bodies to get physically fit, we want people to be putting the same effort into their mental fitness, upfront and early. It is this work that creates a resilient workforce, adaptable in the face of change, agile when dealing with uncertainty, and creative when solving challenges and inevitable setbacks.

      I want to help get your people mentally fit, to be prepared to play the long game in business and life. That means not waiting until there are tell-tale signs of fatigue, conflict, or reduced productivity, but working with people when they're ‘okay’ or ‘fine’ and getting them to ‘strong’ and ‘great’ – because this is how we unlock performance.

      We can do this by empowering people with the knowledge and tools to consciously navigate their thinking, regulate their emotions, manage stress, and skilfully handle uncertainty. The work I do focuses on enhancing people's overall emotional and social intelligence by teaching them how the mind works (and plays tricks on us), identifying and observing our default cognitive and emotional states (and the actions and behaviours they influence), and practising the tools and techniques necessary to optimise their inner world and in turn optimise their experience of the outer world.