Your Health & Lifestyle Wellbeing Magazine

At Your Limit: How to Expand Your Emotional Bandwidth

It’s now October… Do you remember in May when I told you this summer was going to be a cauldron of transformation

How is this wave of change moving through your world? 

How are YOU doing? 

If it feels a little rough or you find yourself short with people or frustrated often, it’s a signal that you’re at the limit of your emotional bandwidth. This means that you may be at your capacity to deal with and process the emotional content of your current life situation. 

In moments like this, you have two options: 

  1. Decrease your emotional load
  2. Increase your bandwidth capacity

To thrive in our current environment of intense change you really need to engage in both strategies. 

Decreasing your emotional load 

This means it’s time to take a break, slow down and REST for real. Allow your nervous system to decompress and process the large volume of life, energy and emotion that you’re experiencing on a daily basis. 

If you recently experienced a major life change or are still in the middle of a major life change — which currently applies to the vast majority of humans — then you probably need to take things more slowly and allow your system the time and rest it needs to process these life events. 

This is really just part of being a healthy, vibrant, present human, but it often gets overlooked in the business of day-to-day life.

Increasing your emotional bandwidth 

This means actively engaging in practices that increase your capacity to process emotions, energy and life experiences. Usually this involves resolving emotional triggers, removing limiting belief structures and frameworks, and cultivating deep self acceptance so that you can expand your capacity to be present and experience all that life has to offer you without suppressing or controlling it. 

Without a doubt, breathwork is the most powerful tool I’ve found in increasing emotional bandwidth. I’ve seen my clients move through a vast array of changes this summer as life continues to unfold in quite dramatic ways. It’s been amazing to witness and support them as they learn to manage their emotional capacity both by decreasing their emotional load and increasing their emotional capacity.

One example was a client who used breathworth when she experienced a fire in her building at work. As a leader in the workplace, because of her breathwork practice, she was able to stay present and available for her employees during the event and through the recovery. 

It’s important to remember that we’re ALL going through change and transformation in different ways at different levels. Right now, I see that most people are at the limit of their emotional bandwidth and that they’re doing the best they can with an overwhelming, life-altering change.

If you don’t feel like the people around you are operating at their best (they aren’t doing their job, they’re doing their job poorly or they’re asking you to do their job for them) it’s  probably true. and they’re  probably beyond their emotional bandwidth. But that doesn’t mean they aren’t doing their best. 

We have all different capacities, different tool sets and different circumstances. We also all have the ability to take a moment, to slow down, and begin our work on decreasing our emotional loads and increasing our emotional bandwidths.

Take a deep breath.

There is time to breathe.

There is  space to process and decompress.

Seek it! 

Find it!

Take it!

Breathe and allow life to unfold in all its messiness.

You are going to be OKAY! And it’s highly likely that things will turn out better than you expected them to be.

Author

  • Dana Shamas

    I help ambitious professionals and high performers find their voice and access their authentic leadership style. For the longest time, I used to think that my intuitive gifts made me…well…a little bit of an oddball. It seemed like anytime I met someone—even a total stranger—I’d hear the words “wow…I’ve never told anyone that before!” For a while, I even thought that guiding people back home to themselves was my superpower. But growing up, I was told I was too sensitive, too emotional, and I was better off trying to “toughen up” so I could make it in the real world. It wasn’t safe for me to feel the feels.Eventually, I realized that my purpose in life wasn’t to lean into what the rest of the world was doing. My purpose was to help other people tap into their highest selves, so they can create a deeper connection to their true worth and identity, as well as their dreams and goals, so they can impact the world. I work with C-Suite executives, new people and team managers, non-profit and social impact leaders, entrepreneurs, founders, and many other working professionals.