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The Power of Full Engagement: Managing Energy, Not Time, is the Key to High Performance and Personal Renewal

The Power of Full Engagement: Managing Energy, Not Time, is the Key to High Performance and Personal Renewal

byJim Loehr
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
O. Halabieh
4.0 out of 5 starsSustaining High Performance Through Renewal and Recovery!
Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2013
Below are key excerpts from the book that I found particularly insightful:

1- "We live in a world that celebrates work and activity, ignores renewal and recovery, and fails to recognize that both are necessary for sustained high performance."

2- "-Our most fundamental need as human beings is to spend and recover energy. We call this oscillation. -The opposite of oscillation is linearity: too much energy expenditure without recovery or too much recovery without sufficient energy expenditure. - Balancing stress and recovery is critical to high performance both individually and organizationally. -We must sustain healthy oscillatory rhythms at all four levels of what we term the "performance pyramid": physical, emotional, mental and spiritual. -We build emotional, mental and spiritual capacity in precisely the same way that we build physical capacity. We must systematically expose ourselves to stress beyond our normal limits, followed by adequate recovery. -Expanding capacity requires a willingness to endure short-term discomfort in the service of long-term reward."

3- "-Physical energy is the fundamental source of fuel in life. -Physical energy is derived from the interaction between oxygen and glucose. -The two most important regulators of physical energy are breathing and eating. -Eating five to six low-calorie, highly nutritious meals a day ensures a steady resupply of glucose and essential nutrients. -Drinking sixty-four ounces of water daily is a key factor in the effective management of physical energy. -Most human beings require seven to eight hours of sleep per night to function optimally. -Going to bed early and waking up early help to optimize performance. -Interval training is more effective than steady-state exercise in building physical capacity and in teaching people how to recover more efficiently. -To sustain full engagement, we must take a recovery break every every 90 to 120 minutes. "

4- "-In order to perform at our best, we must access pleasant and positive emotions: the experience of enjoyment, challenge, adventure and opportunity. -The key muscles fueling positive emotional energy are selfconfidence, self-control, interpersonal effectiveness and empathy. -Negative emotions serve survival but they are very costly and energy inefficient in the context of performance. -The ability to summon positive emotions during periods of intense stress lies at the heart of effective leadership. -Access to the emotional muscles that serve performance depends on creating a balance between exercising them regularly and intermittently seeking recovery. -Any activity that is enjoyable, fulfilling and affirming serves as a source of emotional renewal and recovery. -Emotional muscles such as patience, empathy and confidence can be strengthened in the same way that we strengthen a bicep or a tricep: pushing past our current limits followed by recovery."

5- "-Mental capacity is what we use to organize our lives and focus our attention. -The mental energy that best serves full engagement is realistic optimism—seeing the world as it is, but always working positively towards a desired outcome or solution. -The key supportive mental muscles include mental preparation, visualization, positive self-talk, effective time management and creativity. -Changing channels mentally permits different parts of the brain to be activated and facilitates creativity. -Physical exercise stimulates cognitive capacity. -Maximum mental capacity is derived from a balance between expending and recovering mental energy. -when we lack the mental muscles we need to perform at our best, we must systematically build capacity by pushing past our comfort zone and then recovering. -Continuing to challenge the brain serves as a protection against age-related mental decline."

6- "The more preoccupied we are with our own fears and concerns, the less energy we have available to take positive action."

7- "-spiritual energy provides the force for action in all dimensions of our lives. It fuels passion, perseverance and commitment. -spiritual energy is derived from a connection to deeply held values and a purpose beyond our self-interest. -Character-the courage and conviction to live by our deepest values—is the key muscle that serves spiritual energy. -The key supportive spiritual muscles are passion, commitment. integrity and honesty. -spiritual energy expenditure and energy renewal are deeply interconnected. -Spiritual energy is sustained by balancing a commitment to a purpose beyond ourselves with adequate self-care. -Spiritual work can be demanding and renewing at the same time. -Expanding spiritual capacity involves pushing past our comfort zone in precisely the same way that expanding physical capacity does. -The energy of the human spirit can override even severe limitations of physical energy."

8- "The search for meaning is among the most powerful and enduring themes in every culture since the origin of recorded history. -The "hero's journey" is grounded in mobilizing, nurturing and regularly renewing our most precious resource—energy—in the service of what matters most. -when we lack a strong sense of purpose we are easily buffeted by life's inevitable storms. -Purpose becomes a more powerful and enduring source of energy when its source moves from negative to positive, external to internal and self to others. - A negative source of purpose is defensive and deficit-based. -Intrinsic motivation grows out of the desire to engage in an activity because we value it for the inherent satisfaction it provides. -Values fuel the energy on which purpose is built. They hold us to a different standard for managing our energy. -A virtue is a value in action. -A vision statement, grounded in values that are meaningful and compelling, creates a blueprint for how to invest our energy."

9-"-Facing the truth frees up energy and is the second stage, after defining purpose, in becoming more fully engaged. -Avoiding the truth consumes great effort and energy. -At the most basic level, we deceive ourselves in order to protect our self-esteem. -Some truths are too unbearable to be absorbed all at once. Emotions such as grief are best metabolized in waves. -Truth without compassion is cruelty—to others and to our selves. -What we fail to acknowledge about ourselves we often continue to act out unconsciously. -A common form of self-deception is assuming that our view represents the truth, when it is really just a lens through which we choose to view the world. -Facing the truth requires that we retain an ongoing openness to the possibility that we may not be seeing ourselves—or others— accurately. -» It is both a danger and a delusion when we become too identified with any singular view of ourselves. We are all a blend of light and shadow, virtues and vices. -Accepting our limitations reduces our defensiveness and increases the amount of positive energy available to us."

10- "Our dual challenge is to hold fast to our rituals when the pressures in our lives threaten to throw us off track, and to periodically revisit and change them so that they remain fresh."

11- "-Rituals serve as tools through which we effectively manage energy in the service of whatever mission we are on. -Rituals create a means by which to translate our values and priorities into action in all dimensions of our life. -All great performers rely on positive rituals to manage their energy and regulate their behavior. -The limitations of conscious will and discipline are rooted in t^he fact that every demand on our self-control draws on the same limited resource. -We can offset our limited will and discipline by building rituals that become automatic as quickly as possible, fueled by our deepest values. -The most important role of rituals is to insure effective balance between energy expenditure and energy renewal in the service of full engagement. -The more exacting the challenge and the greater the pressure. the more rigorous our rituals need to be. -Precision and specificity are critical dimensions of building rituals during the thirty- to sixty-day acquisition period. -Trying not to do something rapidly depletes our limited stores of will and discipline. -» To make lasting change, we must build serial rituals, focusing on one significant change at a time."
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105 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
Steve Rogers
3.0 out of 5 starsgood ideas spoilt by focus and sloppiness
Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2010
This book provides an interesting and powerful model to improve your performance. It focuses on energy rather then time and explains how different types of energy contribute to performance. The energies are divided into physical, mental, emotional and spiritual. I don't know if energy is the best term here for the different facets (modes?) or life he looks at. Nevertheless the authors builds a powerful model to help you get on and improve many aspects of your life. It is like a simplified version of the 7 habits (Stephen Covey's seminal work in this field) but easier to grasp and relate to.

Another positive aspect of this book is its explanation and examples of "rituals" - small changes in behaviour one at a time to make bigger changes happen rather then making noble resolutions that then don't get fulfilled.

If I like it so much why only 3 stars? Because of the books many flaws. Here are some of the flaws that really stand out;

1) It makes several claims about the relationship between negative or stressfull behaviours and diseases that are completely unfounded. It is almost as if the authors see illness as a biblical punishment for not following their methods. For example we are told of a newspaper executive (she is actually named!) who did not know how to separate work from pleasure - she is quoted as taking a dicta-phone to the swimming pool so as not to forget if she has a good idea. 10 years later she is dead from cancer! There are other samples of nonsense such as this drawing connections according to the authors belief system but with no valid statistical basis.

2) The authors direct you to their site to take a questionnaire to help you with the book. The questionnaire is 26 questions and free. The site offers a "full" version for $45! For a book which talks about ethical values this is a bit of a con...

3) They are a bit confused on ethics when dealing with spiritual energy. For them "A value in action is a virtue" and their list of values include Happiness (!), Loyalty, and Perseverance (there are others you pick the ones that apply to you). So a torturer enjoying his work, following orders and persevering in his torture until he gets results or his victim dies is behaving virtuously.

Bottom line is you can take a lot from this book despite its flaws - but its flaws are too serious to ignore or shrug off.
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From the United States

O. Halabieh
4.0 out of 5 stars Sustaining High Performance Through Renewal and Recovery!
Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2013
Verified Purchase
Below are key excerpts from the book that I found particularly insightful:

1- "We live in a world that celebrates work and activity, ignores renewal and recovery, and fails to recognize that both are necessary for sustained high performance."

2- "-Our most fundamental need as human beings is to spend and recover energy. We call this oscillation. -The opposite of oscillation is linearity: too much energy expenditure without recovery or too much recovery without sufficient energy expenditure. - Balancing stress and recovery is critical to high performance both individually and organizationally. -We must sustain healthy oscillatory rhythms at all four levels of what we term the "performance pyramid": physical, emotional, mental and spiritual. -We build emotional, mental and spiritual capacity in precisely the same way that we build physical capacity. We must systematically expose ourselves to stress beyond our normal limits, followed by adequate recovery. -Expanding capacity requires a willingness to endure short-term discomfort in the service of long-term reward."

3- "-Physical energy is the fundamental source of fuel in life. -Physical energy is derived from the interaction between oxygen and glucose. -The two most important regulators of physical energy are breathing and eating. -Eating five to six low-calorie, highly nutritious meals a day ensures a steady resupply of glucose and essential nutrients. -Drinking sixty-four ounces of water daily is a key factor in the effective management of physical energy. -Most human beings require seven to eight hours of sleep per night to function optimally. -Going to bed early and waking up early help to optimize performance. -Interval training is more effective than steady-state exercise in building physical capacity and in teaching people how to recover more efficiently. -To sustain full engagement, we must take a recovery break every every 90 to 120 minutes. "

4- "-In order to perform at our best, we must access pleasant and positive emotions: the experience of enjoyment, challenge, adventure and opportunity. -The key muscles fueling positive emotional energy are selfconfidence, self-control, interpersonal effectiveness and empathy. -Negative emotions serve survival but they are very costly and energy inefficient in the context of performance. -The ability to summon positive emotions during periods of intense stress lies at the heart of effective leadership. -Access to the emotional muscles that serve performance depends on creating a balance between exercising them regularly and intermittently seeking recovery. -Any activity that is enjoyable, fulfilling and affirming serves as a source of emotional renewal and recovery. -Emotional muscles such as patience, empathy and confidence can be strengthened in the same way that we strengthen a bicep or a tricep: pushing past our current limits followed by recovery."

5- "-Mental capacity is what we use to organize our lives and focus our attention. -The mental energy that best serves full engagement is realistic optimism—seeing the world as it is, but always working positively towards a desired outcome or solution. -The key supportive mental muscles include mental preparation, visualization, positive self-talk, effective time management and creativity. -Changing channels mentally permits different parts of the brain to be activated and facilitates creativity. -Physical exercise stimulates cognitive capacity. -Maximum mental capacity is derived from a balance between expending and recovering mental energy. -when we lack the mental muscles we need to perform at our best, we must systematically build capacity by pushing past our comfort zone and then recovering. -Continuing to challenge the brain serves as a protection against age-related mental decline."

6- "The more preoccupied we are with our own fears and concerns, the less energy we have available to take positive action."

7- "-spiritual energy provides the force for action in all dimensions of our lives. It fuels passion, perseverance and commitment. -spiritual energy is derived from a connection to deeply held values and a purpose beyond our self-interest. -Character-the courage and conviction to live by our deepest values—is the key muscle that serves spiritual energy. -The key supportive spiritual muscles are passion, commitment. integrity and honesty. -spiritual energy expenditure and energy renewal are deeply interconnected. -Spiritual energy is sustained by balancing a commitment to a purpose beyond ourselves with adequate self-care. -Spiritual work can be demanding and renewing at the same time. -Expanding spiritual capacity involves pushing past our comfort zone in precisely the same way that expanding physical capacity does. -The energy of the human spirit can override even severe limitations of physical energy."

8- "The search for meaning is among the most powerful and enduring themes in every culture since the origin of recorded history. -The "hero's journey" is grounded in mobilizing, nurturing and regularly renewing our most precious resource—energy—in the service of what matters most. -when we lack a strong sense of purpose we are easily buffeted by life's inevitable storms. -Purpose becomes a more powerful and enduring source of energy when its source moves from negative to positive, external to internal and self to others. - A negative source of purpose is defensive and deficit-based. -Intrinsic motivation grows out of the desire to engage in an activity because we value it for the inherent satisfaction it provides. -Values fuel the energy on which purpose is built. They hold us to a different standard for managing our energy. -A virtue is a value in action. -A vision statement, grounded in values that are meaningful and compelling, creates a blueprint for how to invest our energy."

9-"-Facing the truth frees up energy and is the second stage, after defining purpose, in becoming more fully engaged. -Avoiding the truth consumes great effort and energy. -At the most basic level, we deceive ourselves in order to protect our self-esteem. -Some truths are too unbearable to be absorbed all at once. Emotions such as grief are best metabolized in waves. -Truth without compassion is cruelty—to others and to our selves. -What we fail to acknowledge about ourselves we often continue to act out unconsciously. -A common form of self-deception is assuming that our view represents the truth, when it is really just a lens through which we choose to view the world. -Facing the truth requires that we retain an ongoing openness to the possibility that we may not be seeing ourselves—or others— accurately. -» It is both a danger and a delusion when we become too identified with any singular view of ourselves. We are all a blend of light and shadow, virtues and vices. -Accepting our limitations reduces our defensiveness and increases the amount of positive energy available to us."

10- "Our dual challenge is to hold fast to our rituals when the pressures in our lives threaten to throw us off track, and to periodically revisit and change them so that they remain fresh."

11- "-Rituals serve as tools through which we effectively manage energy in the service of whatever mission we are on. -Rituals create a means by which to translate our values and priorities into action in all dimensions of our life. -All great performers rely on positive rituals to manage their energy and regulate their behavior. -The limitations of conscious will and discipline are rooted in t^he fact that every demand on our self-control draws on the same limited resource. -We can offset our limited will and discipline by building rituals that become automatic as quickly as possible, fueled by our deepest values. -The most important role of rituals is to insure effective balance between energy expenditure and energy renewal in the service of full engagement. -The more exacting the challenge and the greater the pressure. the more rigorous our rituals need to be. -Precision and specificity are critical dimensions of building rituals during the thirty- to sixty-day acquisition period. -Trying not to do something rapidly depletes our limited stores of will and discipline. -» To make lasting change, we must build serial rituals, focusing on one significant change at a time."
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Rasih Bensan
4.0 out of 5 stars Develop positive habits through rituals, increase your endurance and energy using a stress - recovery method.
Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2009
Verified Purchase
The most important messages in this book / audio CD are those about using positive rituals to break bad habits and develop positive ones and about increasing our energy and physical / emotional endurance by using a stress - recovery method.

In contrast to many self help books that tell us what to do and not to do to organize our lives better and succeed, this book titled the Power of Full Engagement introduces among others the concept of changing behavior for good through the power of positive rituals. There are lots of good ideas in many self help books but we usually are dissapointed after a few attempts to apply them and give up concluding that the advice in the self help books don't work. Many people make new year's resolutions every year, the most common are to quit smoking, lose weight and to start exercise. Most people try hard in vain during the first few days of the new year, fail to change their behaviors and give up until the next new year's eve when they make new year's resolutions again which will most probably have the same fate. The reason according to the authors is that will power and self control are inefficient ways to eliminate unwanted negative behavior and to develop new positive habits. Because trying to change behavior through concious self control and will power requires energy that is quickly depleted. Habits on the other hand, whether good or bad require no thinking, they are automatic and therefore require no concious effort nor energy. The way to develop good habits is through positive rituals, not by fighting old behavior. Let us say a person wants to start exercising, that is a new habit for him. If he / she makes an excessively ambitious program it is very unlikely that he will be able to apply it. Alternatively he can make a ritual to start lightly and increase it incrementally. A positive ritual has four characteristics : 1 ) it is done at a specific time and place ( eg : on Wednesdays at 19 :00 in a gym 2 ) it is connected to the person's deep values about life 3 ) it is introduced gradually and increased incrementally.4 ) performance against plans must be checked regularly. If the person tries to give up smoking, start a diet, start exrecise, contact old friends, and many other goals at the same time he is likely to be overwhelmed and crash, the fate of most new year resolutionists. By contrast the method of introducing gradual and incremental positive rituals makes possible the development of good habits or to quit bad habits that we tried but gave up on in the past. I have already made such a positive rituals plan since the beginning of 2009 and so far by mid February it seems to work fine.

The other important point of increasing one's endurance and energy by stressing ourselves beyond our comfort zone ( without forcing too much ) and then allowing rest for recovery is a concept developed originally in sports. The authors in fact say they have applied this with success on many famous sports people and believe that the same principle applies to emotions and the mind. One major reason why many people are depleted by daily chores is that they do not recharge their batteries by allowing rest ( recovery ) during their hectic days and nights. Like an athlete who strengthens his / her muscles by stressing them first and then lets them rest for 48 hours during when the muscles recover and get stronger we can do the same thing mentally and spiritually. The authors give a lot of interesting vignettes for this but I think the method to apply stress and recovery emotionally and spiritually should have been explained more clearly. An action plan would have been helpful, it is lacking. Instead the reader is supposed to derive what to do from the many vignettes. This is quite difficult and risks misunderstanding by the readers because a step by step action plan is not given.

The advice to eat well, sleep well, exercise, make a mission statement, find a purpose in life etc. are not new and are based to a large extent on the books " Man's Search for a meaning " by Victor Frankl and " The 7 habits of highly effective people " by Stephen Covey. In fact the author of the present book quotes them several times. Those are also excellent books that must be read, they explain those concepts much better than this book.

The authors say they increased the performance of many famous tennis players through the stress - recovery principle. As a tennis player myself I wonder what is there for these consultants to do with professional tennis players ? Explaining the stress - recovery method takes just a few minutes so what is there to work on for many weeks ?
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WJ Tronoski
4.0 out of 5 stars Well-written book on a big idea that could change how you organize your life
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2011
Verified Purchase
The fundamental premise of The Power of Full Engagement is that your performance, health, and happiness are based on how you manage your energy, not how you manage your time.

That idea motivated me to buy the book. I have never been good at managing my time, and I've always felt unfulfilled when I attempted to use a "time management" system such as a day planner or to-do list.

The Power of Full Engagement makes a convincing argument to support its fundamental premise. It's well-researched, well-written and loaded with examples that made the concepts easier to understand.

The Power of Full Engagement is organized in two major sections:
- Part One: The Dynamics of Full Engagement. Discusses the major premise and supporting concepts.
- Part Two: The Training System. Presents a three-step process for improving the way you manage your energy.

I recommend The Power of Full Engagement to anyone who wants a new perspective on how to achieve their most important goals or simply get the most out of each day.

The messages in the book complement two other personal development models that I've seen:
- Covey: The Power of Full Engagement asserts that there are four dimensions to energy: physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual. These dimensions match Covey's, and there is good consistency between the two models.

- Change Anything Labs (
Change Anything: The New Science of Personal Success ): The Power of Full Engagement suggests developing a set of rituals to help manage your energy levels. These rituals resemble the "vital behaviors" described in Change Anything.

I did have one issue with the book. I did not see a good connection between the first part and the second part - the concepts seemed to be lost in moving from theory to action. This was especially true of the spiritual, mental, and emotional dimensions. For example, the first part of the book spent a whole chapter on emotional energy, but the second part didn't offer many ideas on how to renew your emotional energy. I actually went back to my Covey books for ideas on renewing my emotional energy.

Overall, though, The Power of Full Engagement was well worth the price. I've started to focus on managing my energy by implementing the suggestions in the book. It's still early, but I'm feeling pretty good so far.
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Max More
4.0 out of 5 stars I was fully engaged by this book
Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2005
Verified Purchase
Are you proud of the long hours you put in at work? Do you praise employees who sit at their desks and work for hours at a time without a break? Do you measure engagement in work by how long a person persists at a task without stopping? If so, Jim Loehr and Tony Schwartz would tell you to change your ways. The authors are founders of and executives at LGE Performance Systems, an executive training program based on athletic coaching programs. Their full engagement training system embodies the methods of interval or periodical training used by elite athletes to maximize performance capacity. The authors urge us to approach our work activities like a sprinter, not a marathoner, balancing stress and recovery.

Loehr and Schwartz state the essence of their system in this passage: "Balancing stress and recovery is critical not just in competitive sports, but also in managing energy in all facets of our lives. Emotional depth and resilience depend on active engagement with others and with our own feelings." A recent Gallup poll has confirmed suspicions that the majority of workers are not deeply engaged in their work. At the same time, we keep hearing about the intense pressures on executives and resulting problems of burnout. Pushing ourselves and others to do more for longer won't work. We will reach full engagement, say Loehr and Schwartz when we skillfully manage energy in all dimensions: physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual.

Full engagement comes when we are physically energized, mentally focused, emotionally connected, and spiritually aligned. The authors explain what each of these requires and say that the most fundamental source of energy is physical, while the most significant is spiritual. Unfortunately, most of us are undertrained physically and spiritually and overtrained mentally and emotionally.

To build ourselves up to a level of full engagement requires realizing that fully engaged energy rather than time is our most precious resource, and that energy capacity is diminished by both overuse-chronic stress without recovery-and underuse-chronic recovery without stress. Therefore, we must learn to balance energy expenditure with intermittent energy renewal. To build capacity we must push beyond our normal limits while managing energy carefully. Positive energy rituals can help us do this.

The book's resources include a summary of the full engagement training system, a list of the most important physical energy management strategies, glycemic index examples, and the full engagement personal development plan worksheet. Loehr and Schwartz do a good job of explaining the principles of the system, but the training program itself could be better defined. However, executives should be in their element developing and customizing the program.
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DW
4.0 out of 5 stars A holistic approach to success
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2014
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The main lesson I am taking away from The power of full engagement is that working harder, longer, & faster will only produce limited results for a limited time before you get “injured” or breakdown either physically, emotionally, spiritually or mentally. Adequate recovery in the areas that are being stressed has to occur in order for the stress experienced to create an adaptation that will leave you “stronger”.
As a strength and conditioning coach this is a practice I have been using for a number of years when it comes to physical training but I have never applied or thought about applying this theory to the other dimensions of performance and life, although which now seem blindingly obvious! Using the workout out and then recovery of physical training metaphor for the other areas in life applies just as much or even more
The book talks about managing energy not time but I read into that you need to do both at the same time and is based around the theory of productivity. You have to apply the most amount or smartest amount of effort in the time allotted to complete a task by setting an objective or purpose for it. Setting a goal for each task in every realm is essential in staying focused on the job at hand and being cognoscente of not putting too much energy into one realm and ignoring the others. By applying the most effort at the task in hand, work, relationships and recovery become a series of sprints rather than a drawn out endurance event. .
Being the best person you can be while doing the task, focusing on what and how are you going to do something is the most important factor if achieving the goal in a balanced way is to be accomplished, you can’t just go through the motions. Successful people have the balance and make sure their recovery is a productive as possible.
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Tommaso Coniglio
4.0 out of 5 stars Debunks the myth that you have to be a workaholik to be successful! A well-balanced life is the key for happiness & performance
Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2014
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The message is clear: optimal performance comes from living a balanced life, not from working 12-15 hours straight. What will get us results is not the number of hours we put in, but the quality of those hours, which is affected not only by the specific skills we bring to our job, but by what we do outside the workplace in the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual spheres. What Schwartz is saying may be counter-intuitive: how logical does it sound to say that if you work less you get more done?! And yet, it's true! Many people spend way too much time at work without allowing for adequate time for the essential recovery process to unfold.

Our work culture is built on the assumption that we function like computers, in a linear fashion. It just so happens that we are humans, and we function rhythmically, in an oscillatory fashion. Sleep, good nutrition, regular exercise, a healthy emotional life and a strong sense of purpose are essential factors for our performance and general well-being. When they are lacking we are underperforming, no matter how good our technical skills are (and we are leading a dangerously unidimensional life...).

In order to correct our dysfunctional habits, we need to diagnose them and then establish positive rituals which, in time (30 to 60 days), should engrain new, healthy and more productive habits. For me, I found that I needed more sleep, more exercise and more time to do non work-related activities, such as reading, writing and watching movies/documentaries. To unlearn old habits is not easy, and it takes a lot of willpower! But the results - in terms of performance and quality of life - should be well worth it...
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Michael G Kurilla
4.0 out of 5 stars Mind all your various energy levels
Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2016
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The Power of Full Engagement by Jim Loehr & Toy Schwartz is a self help book for a more productive work / life balance. Their focus is on managing energy, rather than the more traditional mode of more efficient time management. With an eye towards balance, they identify four sources of energy, mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual (not religious in the strictest sense, but that can align). The central premise is that without attention to each aspect, an imbalance results that makes maintaining and sustaining energy for life's activities more difficult. For each component, they outline its purpose, its criticality, and then focus on specific actions to manage each one. Essentially, the message is to attend to each one rather than overdoing any one when problems or issues arise. In this manner, things never get out of hand and become overwhelming such that one problem dominates and then cascades into everything.

There are plenty of valuable and realistic suggestions that are broadly applicable and cover many situations and contingencies. There's quite a bit of common sense, but everything is laid out in a clear and concise manner with extensive real life examples, including setbacks. Also included are templates to allow for the more obsessive and meticulous to record and document everything. Even without buying the whole concept, there is still plenty of solid advice and useful tidbits. Anyone in a situation where they feel over their head or on the way to burnout will find the book a pleasant and helpful read.
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Jeff Benson
4.0 out of 5 stars Essential "Energy Management" Manifesto
Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2006
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As opposed to simple time management, this book covers the much-neglected dimension of energy management, arguing that it's more effective to focus on structuring your energy to optimize your productivity and your experience. To do this, the four dimensions of energy are covered (physical, mental, emotional, spiritual), and exercises and scorecards are provided to help you gauge yourself in these areas.

One powerful insight I took away from the book was the idea that self-will, discipline, is very hard to maintain for a sustained period of time (which is why indefinite resolutions to "do better" in some area often tank after a few weeks). Instead of making vague self-promises, it's better to design specific rituals that embody the values you desire to be primary in your life. They have examples of specific rituals they've helped design for people whose chief struggles are a) being focused, or b) stressed, and c) etcetera. A ritual is a specific sequence of steps done at a specific time of day, on a regular schedule. The idea is to preplan the rituals so you don't think too hard about them, and they become habits that help you stay on track and reenergize. Good to think about!
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Diane P
4.0 out of 5 stars Solid "how to" method
Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2010
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This book has a solid proven method for getting more engaged in your life from every aspect (physically energize, emotionally connected, mentally focused, spiritually aligned) at work and at play. I never thought about managing my energy; only that no matter how much I tried to manage my time, I felt as though at the end of each day, I'd just collapsed into bed, totally spent, with a lot accomplished, but so much unaccomplished, and as though I let someone down that day -- my 3 yr old son, my husband, my job, my friend or family member --my self.
This book has provided an easy to use frame work that is easy to customize to me and helped me determine my values, and put those values at the forefront of my days, align my actions to those priorities and build easy rituals around those values.

My energy is best when I follow my plan. Yes, I stumble, but the structure makes it ease to realign and get back to my plan to live a more purpose driven life day by day. (I also found the iPhone App, Touch Goal, an excellent tool that works well to track my progress against my rituals.)
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Judy Montel
4.0 out of 5 stars Useful and practical
Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2017
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It's well written and thorough. It's definitely a book to come back to and reread sections if you're going through your own journey of managing your own life and energy.
It uses examples of and is apparently aimed primarily at business people in their late twenties to late 30s - people who have worked long enough to start to burn out, to be battered a bit by life, but who have some solid years of experience behind them. If this is you - fantastic. If it isn't, be prepared to adjust and imagine how these lessons might apply to different types of people in different life situations.
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