Dennis Ellmaurer's - TEC Blog

Friday, October 22, 2010

Dog Story


Do you know how they train hunting dogs these days? A TEC member told me the story the other day. It involves “technology.”

Well, it also involves humans….and that is where the story gets interesting.

My TEC member is an avid outdoors man and dog trainer. He uses a shock collar to assist him in the training process. A shock collar of this nature is capable, if necessary, of blasting the dog with 20,000 volts of electricity. A police issued stun gun carries 50,000 volts. You get the idea. My member has been trained extensively in training dogs and the proper use of the collar.

My TEC member tells me that some people are untrained or just plain stupid when it comes to the use of the collar. He can tell the dogs that have been mis-trained just by watching them. The dog will walk slower, with its head hung low between its shoulders. Mis-trained dogs can be very aggressive, when given the opportunity. They tend to develop all sorts of exotic diseases. They die prematurely.

My member said his dogs actually like it when he attaches the collar. The well trained dog knows it is going to go outside and hunt…run around, chase birds, have some fun.

My member told me the story because, over the past two years of a business downturn, he had the feeling of a mis-trained hunting dog with a shock collar. He did not know from where the next economic/financial/regulatory shock was coming. But he was pretty sure that the repeated blasts without warning were taking their toll on him mentally and physically. Cumulative stress is a killer.

TEC Resource Specialist James Newton has suggested the following prescription relative to relieving long term, cumulative stress.

- Eat better. Healthy food. No sugar. Simply stated…eat real food.
- Exercise very regularly. Like 6 out of 7 days a week.
- Clean up the “ankle bitters.” Finish that nagging project.
- Recreate. Newton pronounced it “re-create.” Have some fun.
- Take a vacation.
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On October 13th The Wall Street Journal promoted a similar approach to dealing with the effects of long term stress in an article titled “Slumping at Work? What Would Jack Do.” The Jack, in this case, was Nicklaus. Much of the article had to do with relaxation and positive visualization.

Business leaders in today’s environment may not be able to remove the shock collar entirely. There will always be weird things that happen in a highly competitive, increasingly regulated marketplace. Leaders can, however, mitigate the adverse effects of long term stress exposure. Indeed, they owe it to the people they lead. Take action. Relax.