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On a dark November morning, the day begins in the sales team. Q4 targets need to be met, customer calls are piling up, and internal coordination demands more time than usual. One colleague is unusually quiet, another reacts more sharply than they normally would, and managers try to maintain an overview despite limited staffing resources.
Scenes like this are familiar across many departments in autumn: psychological pressure rises while energy declines.
A Sensitive Time with Its Own Dynamics
As daylight decreases, the balance between serotonin and melatonin shifts. Inner stability becomes more fragile, fatigue sets in earlier, and emotional responses come to the surface more quickly. These changes are subtle, but they shape how we perceive situations and how much internal strength we can mobilize.
At the same time, many workflows become more complex. Customer service sees a spike in requests, IT is flooded with last-minute project demands, and HR navigates annual reviews and higher rates of sick leave. It isn’t the amount of work that is unusual — it is the combination of organizational pressure and reduced inner resilience.
This blend creates a period in which familiar situations feel heavier, and everyday actions require more emotional energy.
Why the Same Task Feels Harder Now
Stress research provides a clear explanation: strain doesn’t stem from the task itself, but from how we evaluate it. That evaluation is heavily influenced by our internal state. When someone is more tired, irritable, or emotionally sensitive, the same situation feels more overwhelming.
A brief glance into IT shows this well:
A small mistake in a support ticket — something hardly worth noting in summer — now triggers annoyed follow-up questions. Not because people are less patient, but because their mental tolerance is smaller.
Or in customer service:
A neutral sentence suddenly sounds like criticism, simply because emotional tension is higher.
The tasks stay the same.
Our reactions shift.
Emotional Flexibility: The Capacity That Makes the Difference
Emotional flexibility refers to the ability to notice and interpret internal states without automatically letting them dictate our behavior. This concept from ACT research (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy) is widely considered the foundation of modern resilience.
It doesn’t mean suppressing emotions or framing everything positively.
It means understanding one’s experience clearly — and then deciding how to act.
In autumn, this ability becomes particularly important.
- It creates a brief moment of distance in which we can recognize whether stress is caused by the situation itself — or by the season’s emotional pull.
- It eases decision-making.
- It prevents unnecessary conflicts.
- It protects us from impulsive reactions.
Emotional flexibility isn’t a grand gesture.
It is a quiet form of self-guidance that becomes especially valuable during autumn.
Cognitive Load: Why Misunderstandings Increase
As energy decreases, cognitive flexibility also declines — the ability to shift perspectives or process multiple channels of information at once.
Research shows that under seasonal fatigue, people:
• think less flexibly
• make slower decisions
• interpret social cues less accurately
• gravitate toward black-and-white thinking
A brief example from HR illustrates this:
A simple clarification question during an annual review suddenly feels like a personal attack, even though it was meant neutrally. The emotional reactivity of the season changes how words are interpreted.
Or in project management:
A routine coordination process drags on because the mental buffer for complexity has shrunk.
These effects aren’t signs of incompetence — they are signs of seasonal strain.
Why Autumn Strain Often Goes Unnoticed
In hybrid and digital work environments, much of the emotional load of autumn remains invisible. Cameras stay off more often, people talk less even though they are more tired, and exhaustion appears as silence rather than expression.
A colleague sounds calm while internally switching off.
Another seems disengaged when they are actually overwhelmed.
Autumn makes strain quiet — and because it is quiet, it is easy to miss.
Why Emotional Flexibility Is the Central Factor Now
- Emotional flexibility helps us understand our internal reactions before they turn into behavior.
- It shows whether a moment of stress comes from the task — or from our current state.
- It allows us to take a pause instead of escalating.
- It makes it easier to disconnect at the end of the day instead of mentally continuing to work.
It is not just a technique, but an attitude:
a willingness to observe oneself precisely before acting.
What Autumn Really Reveals
When early November brings late mornings and early evenings, many people enter a quieter, more sensitive internal season as well. Teams experience it together, even when no one says it aloud. Conversations grow shorter, reactions a bit sharper, decisions more tiring.
But this period is not a weakness — it is a signal.
- It shows how closely our inner experience is tied to the environment around us.
- It reminds us that resilience is not a measure of strength, but of precision.
- It reveals that emotional flexibility is a form of clarity, not control.
And perhaps this is the most important insight of this season:
Autumn doesn’t demand more strength — it demands more sensitivity toward ourselves.
Sources
- Bonanno, G. A. (2004). Loss, trauma, and human resilience. American Psychologist
- Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K., & Wilson, K. (2012). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
- Lazarus, R. S., & Folkman, S. (1984). Stress, Appraisal, and Coping
- Kalisch, R., Müller, M., & Tüscher, O. (2015). Neurobiology of resilience
- Southwick, S. M., & Charney, D. S. (2018). Resilience: The Science of Mastering Life’s Greatest Challenges
- Hölzel, B. et al. (2011). Mindfulness practice and brain structure
- Tugade, M. M., & Fredrickson, B. (2004). Positive emotions and resilience



