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Wellbeing Tip 4: Strengthen Emotional Wellbeing

Article

Winter can affect mood, motivation, and resilience.

Winter can affect mood, motivation, and resilience.

Shorter days, colder weather, increased illness, and reduced social interaction can all contribute to fatigue, stress, or a lower sense of wellbeing. This makes emotional wellbeing an important part of workplace health and safety.

One practical place to start is with self-talk.

The way we speak to ourselves shapes how we respond to challenges. Negative internal dialogue can increase stress and self-doubt. More constructive self-talk can support confidence, perspective, and resilience.

This does not mean ignoring difficulty or pretending everything is fine. It means noticing unhelpful thinking and choosing a more balanced, useful response.

For example:

“I can’t do this” can become “I can take this one step at a time.”

“This is a failure” can become “This is feedback I can learn from.”

Leaders have an important role in shaping this culture. When leaders model calm, constructive, solution-focused thinking, they help create workplaces where people feel supported rather than judged.

Emotional wellbeing grows through small, repeated practices: reflection, rest, supportive conversations, and the confidence to ask for help when it is needed.

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