When you think of proper hygiene, actions such as brushing your teeth and washing your hands probably come to mind.
However, these practices only focus on physical hygiene. They do nothing to take care of our minds.
In his book "The Time Bandit Solution: Recovering Stolen Time You Never Knew You Had," Edward G. Brown presents the concept of "mental hygiene," which focuses on caring for your mind the same way you do for your body.
Just as physical hygiene keeps your body in top condition to move and function, taking care of your mental hygiene keeps your mind sharp. Brown designed the concept "for the purpose of increasing sustained behavioral peak performance through concentration."
He focuses on strategies for ridding your mind of destructive, negative thoughts and filling it with positive affirmations and self-esteem boosters.
Here are Brown's six techniques for taking care of your mental hygiene to keep your mind ready to tackle a challenge at any time:
1. Transcend the environment.
To transcend your environment, you must mentally overcome any physical factors you can't control, such as when the air conditioning goes out at work during a hot summer. Instead of focusing on the fact that you're sweaty and uncomfortable, distract yourself with pleasant or innocuous thoughts, Brown says. It's like the old adage: mind over matter.2. Cultivate constructive acceptance.
Learn not only to accept the physical things you cannot change, but to accept them graciously, Brown advises. In high school, Brown dreamed of playing center in the NBA, but he was too short to excel at the position. Instead of compromising and playing forward or guard, he gave up on basketball. Years later, Brown realized he should have constructively accepted his handicap and found another way to pursue his NBA dreams instead of dropping them entirely.3. Visualize the ideal self.
Before taking on any task, from tackling a hefty to-do list to giving a company-wide presentation, visualize yourself coming out successful. If you can picture your ideal outcome of a challenge, you can then inhabit that ideal self as you actually go through the challenge, explains Brown. "It means visualizing yourself successful with all the goals you hope to achieve, despite challenges, conflicts, and adversity," he says.This visualizing technique shouldn't be saved just for big events — it should be part of your everyday mental hygiene routine, Brown adds.
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