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How to Stay Respected Through Your Next Meltdown While entrepreneurs may make the world go around, it isn't always easy running the show. Here are a few ways to avoid breaking the camel's back.

By Melanie Spring Edited by Dan Bova

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Self-respecting entrepreneurs are the backbone of this country. They know who they are, what they're doing and where they're going. But entrepreneurs are human too.

For almost five years, I've had my nose to the ground working a ton of hours to grow my branding company Sisarina. Everyone told me that I had to take care of myself, so I wouldn't hit a wall. I finally gave in and set up 2014 as my year of self-care. Therapy, acupuncture, yoga, along with a self-discovery retreat. All of this happening at once. Go big or go home, right? It's what we entrepreneurs do. Perhaps it was too little too late.

Over the course of a few days recently, I ended up focusing on all the times my team complained about each other, their awful ride on the metro, dealing with traffic, frustrations with spouses and the ridiculous requests of our clients. Then my developer launched our new website well before it was finished. Camel, meet straw. I couldn't take it anymore. I flipped out. Then I sat on my couch in silence, breathing deep with tears in my eyes. I wanted to close down my company and run away.

Related: How to Snap Back After You Blow Up at Your Staff

As soon as it happened, I knew it shouldn't have. I had been working too hard for too long without any time to breathe. A meltdown was bound to happen, and boy, did it. I felt crazy, out of line, and nothing like the great boss my team had come to know. The old saying "Your slip is showing" popped into my head. No self-respecting woman would allow you to see her undergarments. Ever.

Don't let this happen to you. Here are four ways to keep your slip from showing.

1. Join the fight club of entrepreneurship. The first rule of the entrepreneur's psychological meltdown is don't talk about the psychological meltdown. It never happened, nor will it ever happen. Your employees and clients never need to know, so follow the next few steps to keep their great impression of you untarnished.

2. Secure a sponsor. Similar to an AA sponsor talking you out of drinking, you have to have someone you can call when you're weak and need a talking to. Find someone you can call as soon as you feel like you're losing it. It can't be your spouse, your best friend, your mom or one of your coworkers. Choose another entrepreneur, preferably someone who has been in business longer than you. They will understand what you're going through better than anyone else. Put them at the top of your favorites in your phone, and if you're about to lose it, call them. If they know you're only going to call in case of emergency, they'll be ready for you.

Related: How Leaders Can Find Their Mojo

3. Do a brain dump. Holding all of your anxiety inside can make you feel like you're going to explode. Go to the cute little coffee shop around the corner with your notebook and a pen (leave your laptop and smartphone at the office) and write it out. Anything that comes to mind -- even if your handwriting sucks -- should be jotted down. It's not for anyone to read, it's for you to get out. I keep a 5 year journal with 6 lines for each day. It helps me to read back through what I wrote a year or two ago to see how far I've come and how much those little things don't bother me anymore.

4. Stop dreaming of quitting. You're not a quitter. You're an entrepreneur. You have one of the hardest jobs on the planet because you have to not only take care of yourself, but your employees and their livelihoods. Toast yourself with the bottle of booze you keep hidden under your desk (you Don Draper, you) and realize that you're doing a damn good job under all that stress. If it weren't for you, America's economy would suck way worse than it does. Now, go get that massage you've been promising yourself.

This post originally appeared on Sisarina

Related: Be a Better Leader Today

Melanie Spring

Chief Inspiration Officer of Sisarina

As the Chief Inspiration Officer of Sisarina, a D.C.-based branding firm, Spring built her business with a strong content marketing strategy. With an innate sense for social media, connecting with her customers, and building a culture around her brand, she teaches businesses and non-profits how to rock their brand. She also recently toured the U.S. on the Live Your Brand Tour collecting stories from businesses living their brand.

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