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Five ways to recover your feel-good factor

Susan Peacock

Susan Peacock

Susan Peacock is a Chartered Psychologist with extensive experience working with individuals and organisations enhancing performance, resilience, and wellbeing. She brings a rare blend of insight, compassion, and practical know-how to her work.

She’s best known for her ability to translate complex psychological concepts into down-to-earth strategies that genuinely make a difference. Susan has worked with a wide range of clients – from senior leaders in high-pressure corporate settings to NHS professionals on the frontline – supporting them to manage stress, improve focus, and thrive under pressure.

Susan is also a qualified mindfulness trainer and integrates evidence-based approaches into her work. Her calm, engaging style makes her a sought-after coach, speaker, and facilitator.

She should be recognised as an expert not just because of her impressive qualifications and track record, but because of the impact she has on the people she works with – helping them to make meaningful, lasting changes in how they lead, work, and live.

Published on January 5th, 2017|Last updated on June 19th, 2025

There is no doubt about it: we are living through a time of great change. It is hard to see what the future holds politically, economically and socially – and all of this uncertainty is stressful. It can feel challenging but it can also be a source of opportunity.

So how do we remain open and positive in these circumstances? Incorporating recovery strategies into our busy days can make an enormous difference. It is our constant under-recovery that leads to chronic stress, which leads to fatigue and under-performance.

Very often we feel that we don’t have time because we are stressed, rather than the other way around – because we are stressed, we don’t have time.

If we want to be as effective as we know we can be, if we want to feel on top of our tasks, if we want to engage with the people in our lives in a meaningful way, we must support our wellbeing throughout the day. Here is how:

1. Get a sense of your internal weather. The acronym HALT is useful when you are feeling jaded. Ask yourself: am I Hungry, Angry, Lonely or Tired? Then listen to the answer and look after yourself appropriately.

2. Create more space. These days, we are constantly preoccupied by the world around us but have zoned right out of checking in with ourselves. Regular meditation practice – just 10-20 minutes a day – will help you to stay tuned in. But this small investment of time has to be carved out and prioritised – it doesn’t just happen.

3. Become aware of the impact of technology on your day-to-day life. It is so easy to find that we are more connected to those at the end of our gadgets than we are to ourselves or to the people around us.

4. Make time for other people. The more isolated we are, the more stressed we become.

5. Get some physical activity into your day. We are not designed to sit for hours, so make time for a walk during your lunch break, consider arranging walking meetings and think about walking, running or cycling instead of taking a bus, tube or the car to work – these small, everyday activities reap great rewards.

Further reading
Three thought-provoking articles from Harvard Business Review:
Why smart people under perform
The making of a corporate athlete
Manage your energy not your time