{"id":12867,"date":"2021-05-27T14:18:57","date_gmt":"2021-05-27T03:48:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/amergin.net.au\/?p=12867"},"modified":"2021-05-27T14:31:03","modified_gmt":"2021-05-27T04:01:03","slug":"team-building-activities-setting-intentions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/amergin.net.au\/team-building-activities-setting-intentions\/","title":{"rendered":"Team Building Activities – Setting Intentions With Your Team"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Welcome back to Part 3 of our Mindfulness May series, where we discuss mindfulness practices you can implement within your team to support the mental health of your staff members.<\/h6>\n<\/div>\n

\"A<\/p>\n

Team building activities are an important step to building an inclusive and productive team culture. At the beginning of every week, Amergin’s team get together and we each discuss our week’s workload, our goals for the day and the week, and our intention for the week.<\/p>\n

So what’s the difference between setting goals and setting intentions?<\/h4>\n

Setting a goal helps us to see the future, understand what we want, create a plan, and stay on track to get it done.<\/p>\n

Setting intentions differ because they are not something you have to do. An intention is intangible, something that is felt. Often, intentions align with the goals we have set, but they connect us to the truth of who we are as we interact in each moment.<\/p>\n

Encouraging your staff to adopt this practice of setting weekly goals and intentions is not only good business practice, but is also a simple way you can check in on how your staff are going. For example, your staff may have a long list of goals to achieve for the week but if their intention is to “find the balance” and they seem tired, stressed or generally not their usual self; this should be a prompt for you to check in, see how they are going and if there is any support you can offer to them.<\/p>\n

Setting and living your intentions allows you to:<\/h5>\n