Tag Archive 'happiness'

Aug 17 2007

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Mary Lennox

Enhance Your Life By Having A Sense Of Purpose

Filed under Life

Researchers believe that developing A SENSE OF PURPOSE is a strategy which can ENHANCE HEALTHY LIVING. The basis for their theory comes from studies carried out on 135 women in the age group 61-91. This group’s EMOTIONAL and PHYSICAL WELL BEING were evaluated by rating two types of indicators.

HAPPINESS evoked by POSITIVE experiences and A SENSE OF PURPOSE and a high SELF ESTEEM and REWARDING RELATIONSHIPS.

Results indicated that those who had A SENSE OF PURPOSE also displayed better PHYSICAL FUNCTIONING ABILITY. They had a tendency to weigh less, had a lower level of inflammatory cytokines which increase the risk of arthritis, displayed evidence of better SLEEP PATTERNS, lower blood sugar levels and HDL levels (good cholesterol) was more apparent. In the group which only displayed HAPPINESS the benefit was only that of a lowered cholesterol level.

What is A SENSE OF PURPOSE? There are many definitions.

Having an influence over others in work, in your community, within a family setting, or on a wider basis. (OXFAM, HELP THE CHILDREN, AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL.)

Being recognized and VALUED for your contribution. This also implies being VALUED by yourself!

Being RESPECTED by others.

Having A SENSE OF IDENTITY.

Recognising a sense of ACHIEVEMENT from what you do.

Having A PURPOSE helps to build CONFIDENCE and SELF ESTEEM.People who lack PURPOSE are often unhappy and lonely.
Examples of this could be the person who has retired from work. He may well have lots of time on his hands and be involved in a range of recreational activities but remain unfulfilled as there is no SENSE OF PURPOSE. Involvement in these pursuits simply helps to put in his day.

How often have you thought about what you would buy or the problems that may be solved by a lottery win? Yes, we have all dreamt about this and there is nothing wrong with having DREAMS .They can open up our minds to possibilities and sometimes lead us to pursuing GOALS and a course of ACTION in their pursuit.

Yet, how often do we hear about people who have had this stroke of luck and discoverthat their lives are not necessarily enhanced in any meaningful way by this, or are even worse of because of it. Headlines in local press have told us about the families who have broken up after winning money. People who have packed in their jobs and gone on shopping sprees and drinking binges. Men and women who long for the company of others who are not solely interested in them for what they get. The world in our eyes may be their oyster but what they may find diminished is a sense of CHALLENGE…

There is some truth in the saying that if you have to work hard for something you will appreciate it more.Sometimes the achievement itself is not the most rewarding aspect, but the process involved in its acquisition.

What provides someone with A SENSE OF PURPOSE will vary from person to person. For some it may simply be taking care of another close to them. Others may choose to travel, get involved in regular EXERCISE/HEALTHY EATING, doing college courses. The options are limitless. Which ever you choose, your commitment to this will also benefit you by keeping your MIND ACTIVE.

The chances are that he/she will also be more OPTIMISTIC and HOPEFUL as a person .Having something important to aim for encourages people to be less likely to give up when things go wrong and to look for any learning opportunity instead.

Having A SENSE OF PURPOSE tends to make people more involved in taking care of themselves. They will pay attention to their health. Involvement with other people means that they are less LONELY and that they also have other people around for support. Peers can also be useful for giving you feedback and helping you see things about yourself which may otherwise go unnoticed.

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Aug 11 2007

Profile Image of Gary Keehner
Gary Keehner

Positive Thinking Is A Bunch Of Pooh - And Pooh Makes Great Fertilizer

Filed under Positive Thinking

At some point in your life, you’ve probably heard about the power of positive thinking. Basically, this is a theory that contends if you believe good things will happen to you, there will be some sort of cataclysmic shift in the energies surrounding you which will actually cause good things to happen to you. For as many people who believe in the power of positive thinking, there are many more who believe it’s all a bunch of New Age pop psychology drivel or sugar-coated Peter Pan platitudes.

Here’s the kicker: they’re all right.

You see, positive thinking is a system of beliefs. So if you believe it doesn’t work- then, of course, it won’t work. And if you believe it does work…well, you get the idea. For non-believers, using positive thinking is like trying to get a job after high school. You need experience to get a job, but you need a job to get the experience. It can be difficult to know where you’re supposed to start. But just like any other process, the key to making positive thinking work for you is to start small. Plant seeds, if you will, and then learn how to tend and cultivate those seeds until you have a mental garden that bears a phenomenal crop, year after year. Anything is possible with positive thinking…even if you do believe it’s all a bunch of crap.

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Norman Vincent Peale, the father of positive thinking, once said: “If you have zest and enthusiasm you attract zest and enthusiasm. Life does give back in kind.” This is the essence of positive thinking. It’s not so much a theory as it is a contagious disease. Just as anger and negativity spread quickly from person to person, so do humor and happiness- only good feelings spread far faster. Think about it: have you ever noticed that the quickest way to ease a tense situation is to make a joke? The instant someone laughs or smiles, a sense of relief spreads through everyone in the vicinity. Even if the angered parties don’t feel better, they are at least able to discuss the problem in a detached and objective way, and get on with their lives instead of dwelling on negativity. For that same reason, solo drivers who get cut off in traffic tend to remain angry for at least the rest of the drive- because there is no one else near them to send out good vibrations and break the tension. Makes sense, doesn’t it?

If you’ve read this far, the seeds of belief are already there. Your next step is to clear your mind’s garden of doubt and get ready to plant. You’ll learn how to take all that negativity and mulch it down into fertilizer that will let your possibilities grow.

Now grab your shovel, and let’s head in to the garden.

PLANTING YOUR SEEDS

To tune in to the power of positive thinking, you should probably start small- particularly if you don’t believe it will work. It’s one thing to tell yourself, “Tomorrow, when I wake up in the morning I won’t hit snooze a dozen times and feel drowsy for the rest of the day,” and quite another to tell yourself, “Tomorrow, when I wake up in the morning I’ll be living independently wealthy and living in a mansion.” (Unless, of course, you are in fact independently wealthy and living in a mansion at the moment; in which case you might try to think your way into ownership of a small country.)

The process of making positive thinking work for you begins with destruction, or at least a mild shift in your thought structure. In order to make room for new methods and ideas, you must first tear out all the old negativity patterns you’ve been building throughout your life. For some, this can be a gradual process: as you witness positive thinking work for you, one small step at a time, you will slowly clear out those good-things-only-happen-to-other-people thoughts, and be able to cultivate the seeds of change.

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So now you know a little bit about positive thinking. Even if you don’t know everything, you’ve done something worthwhile: you’ve expanded your knowledge. Be sure to check back often to read future installments on the subject of positive thinking.

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May 31 2007

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Other Authors

How to be happy: happiness is an inside job. Here are ten ways to claim your joy

Filed under Happiness

Many times in my life I’ve been sad, down in the dumps and in a funky mood for days. But never have I been as profoundly unhappy as I was when I was in college. The pity party began freshman year, when the cute senior I was seeing mysteriously stopped speaking to me. My self-esteem did a nosedive and remained in the dungeon for the next several years. I dreaded my college town’s long, freezing winters, and was angered by the racism that left most Black students isolated from the mainstream of college life. My bitterness only intensified when I was one of the few Black women on campus not invited to be on the Omega Psi Phi Bunny Court. My grudges were endless. By the time I was a senior I was counting the days until I was out of there.

The best thing I gained from that college experience was a determination to work at being happy. I still work hard at it. I’m prone to worry and sometimes forget that happiness is largely my responsibility. But I’ve come a long way since my college years. Consider the lessons I’ve learned:

The Sedona Method free tape offerMake It Your ChoiceHappy people know that to get the party started you have to intend to be happy. That means committing yourself to making happiness your choice. In their book How We Choose to Be Happy, authors Rick Foster and Greg Hicks call intention the force behind all happiness, and the “mind-set that propels us toward living as happily as we can, predisposing us to make each day as joyful as it can be.” Happy intentions can’t ward off those times when the world seems to be conspiring against us. But if we aren’t deliberately choosing to be happy, we’re subconsciously choosing something else. “Without setting our intention,” they say, “even fleeting happiness is haphazard. But once we have our intention firmly in place, happiness is purposeful–something we are creating all day long.”Quiet Your Mind

“The mind is like a drunk monkey,” says my buddy Jackie Lewis, who runs a holistic spa and retreat in Jamaica. “It’s always flitting around, constantly chattering, spreading lies, stirring up fears, insecurities and mess from the past, and distorting our perceptions of ourselves, other people, our world.”

The mind is a prism that shapes and colors our reality, so choosing to be happy starts with choosing to think in a positive way. Happy people know this. They understand the mind’s immense power to cast our perceptions in ways that contribute to our well-being and happiness or to cast them in ways that are negative and only add to our misery. One of the most profoundly transforming lessons I learned in my personal struggle to become happy is that I can alter my perceptions of my circumstances and of the world around me by simply altering my thoughts. But that means reining them in, getting still and getting right with God. Prayer, meditation, rhythmic breathing, affirmations, yoga, vigorous exercise are all tools that we can readily access to help quiet the rumblings of an undisciplined mind. When we replace a negative outlook with a positive one, more often then not we find something to appreciate, reasons to be hopeful, an excuse to be cheered, even in the face of frustration end disappointment.

Push Past Your Pain

Terrible stuff happens. Some of us have endured unspeakable tragedy. But a mind trained to fan the embers of hope is supple and resilient rather than rigid and inflexible. When external circumstances change—and they always do–a flexible mind bends accordingly and sees past the suffering to the ray of sunshine always at the periphery. “When the mind clamps down on some kind of pain, it is so self-focused it seems that the whole world disappears,” explains my friend Sylvia Boorstein, a Buddhist teacher and author. But happy people cultivate a spirit of optimism. They are able to see that this tragedy, which may indeed be awful and unjust and seems to be the center of life, is not all that’s happening. There is always more going on. Spring will come again, the sun will rise; there is something, however small, to smile about. “Your happiness,” says Boorstein, “depends on your ability to be liberated from your small story.”

Deal With Your Issues“If you want to be happy, you have to confront the self-defeating patterns you’ve created,” says the Reverend Renita Wsems, a Spelman College professor and author. It means asking yourself, Why am I always losing friendships or getting fired? Is everyone else always wrong? What kind of energy do I give off? Facing issues you might want to avoid or flat-out deny is not fun. It takes time and courage to revisit the old childhood hurts, abuse and disappointments that are usually at the root of our grown-up problems. But vow to get a handle on your dramas about men, finances, addictions or whatever crazy-making behavior repeatedly crops up. The areas in your life that keep you in constant emotional turmoil or confusion are those crying out for healing.Trash Negativity

You know what it is: sarcasm, cynicism, faultfinding, jealousy, bullying, bandying about gossip, the cruel words you use to belittle others and cut them down to size. Somehow, along the way many of us got the idea that being upbeat, positive and eager to see the good in situations leaves us vulnerable and puts us in harm’s way. So we use our various defense mechanisms to protect ourselves. At the heart of our need to erect walls is the fear that something bad will happen and we won’t get what we want in life. But students of happiness know that negativity is one tape in your drunk-monkey mind that you need to trash. “When you find that your immediate response to almost everything is negative,” says Rev. Weems, “hit the stop button.”

Consider It Your Birthright

As African-Americans, many of us have to work overtime to be happy. In our relationships with other women, men, our coworkers, our classmates, our children, our world, many of us are still reacting in dysfunctional ways to the pain of our slave past. “We’ve suffered major loss,” says Kwabena Brown, a relationship counselor in Washington, D.C. “There’s been a disruption of our cultural values and aesthetics.” Our group suffering is so ancient, our wounds are so intense, that there’s still much mourning and grieving to be done. Every day there are injustices that can spiritually and emotionally overwhelm us, keeping us off balance and blocking our happiness.

It’s no wonder that as Black women we’re so often angry, crabby, irritable, cynical, scowling, sarcastic and mean-spirited toward one another and ourselves. We see optimism, cheerfulness and a sunny attitude as wimpy Pollyanna behavior. It’s an erroneous belief system also rooted in our past. When it comes to working out, making money and advancing in our careers, for many of us the sky’s the limit. Yet when it comes to happiness, too many of us keep our expectations low. Don’t expect much and you won’t be disappointed, is the family motto passed from one generation to the next. “Many of us believe we don’t have a right to be happy,” says Rev. Weems. “We don’t want to get over our rage or unforgiveness. We put our pain and suffering on a pedestal and let it define us. Our pessimism and prickly attitude become the favorite garment we reach for every day.”

Given the trauma of our past, many of us may not find our way to happiness on our own. We have to have the courage to seek help from a spiritual teacher or a therapist or through some sort of positive intervention that can help us along the path. And don’t be discouraged by setbacks. Happiness can take a lifetime of living and growing and learning.

Shakti GawainKnow Your WorthAmerican culture dupes us into believing that to be happy, we must be richer, prettier, thinner, live in a bigger house, own a bigger SUV, increase our bust size, have more orgasms. We’re not good enough where we are right now, and no matter what we accomplish, we’ll never really arrive. “A consumer society is always teaching you lack,” says the Reverend Phyllis Crichlow, a minister at the Montclair Unity Church in New Jersey. “There is always the pull to get more stuff and then to use this stuff to define your being.” The good news: It’s all lies. Material goods, your dream job, your dream man, a second helping of chocolate ice cream–all of it may bring you a temporary high, momentary pleasure and feelings of joy and even ecstasy. But lasting happiness–the sense of inner peace, serenity and the hopefulness that helps you walk tall in the face of obstacles–isn’t something you can order from a Neiman Marcus catalog or pick up at a club. In fact you don’t have to find anyone or acquire or achieve anything. All you really have to do is show up and follow your heart. This makes happiness deeply personal. “For me, happiness is being in balance in body, mind, emotion and spirit,” says Brenda Wade, Ph.D., a family therapist in San Francisco. “I am happiest when I am not overloaded in any way.” To realize, once and for all, that you determine your own happiness is at least half the battle. It puts you–not your boss, your boyfriend, your parents, the weather–at the control panel. Now the real work can begin.Nurture Your Spirit

At age 30, Phyllis Crichlow was ready to die. She was being evicted from her house. She couldn’t take care of her kids. Her boyfriend had moved on to someone else. “I felt I had failed at everything,” she recalls. She remembers being in the bathroom crying uncontrollably. “If you exist, you need to come into my life and you need to come into it now,” she entreated God. A few days later, she says she was in the process of deciding how to kill herself when she walked into a Unity Church for the first time. Her personal transformation began that day. “It was time to die and I did,” says Crichlow, who has since become a pastor. “It wasn’t until the old me died that the me of future possibilities opened up.”

Happy people value a rich spiritual life and are willing to try out different faiths and spiritual teachings to find a practice that positively supports their growth. This is more than simply finding the right church. Sisters are avid churchgoers. But even church doesn’t necessarily make us happier. “I encounter women who are always quoting the Scriptures, but they are as sarcastic and at pessimistic as women without a God,” observes Rev. Weems. “Many church women don’t believe they can have a happy future.” But Rev. Crichlow chose a different perspective. In finding a faith that works for her, she has become so involved in the business of living that she’s rarely angry or unhappy. “Now that I am aligned with the rhythm of the universe,” she says, “life unfolds without effort.”

Do It Now

As hard as it may seem, you always have a choice. You can either enshrine your disappointment, anger and frustration and do nothing. Or you can let it inspire you to take action. You don’t have to settle for unhappiness. Write a book, organize a protest, run for office, shift your energies into positive change. Get busy. Become so engaged in living that you won’t find time to feel bad. You will be happy.

Get The Edge With Tony Robbins!Give Thanks“Life is a gift, and happy people look for what can be appeared now,” say Rick Foster and Greg Hicks. In their book How We Choose to Be Happy Foster and Hicks suggest this simple three-part exercise to help you practice the art of appreciation:1. Set a timer on five minutes and speed-write a list of everything you appreciate–from the mundane to silly things to big items such as life, loved ones special pleasures. Try to record as much you can. Who the five minutes are up, become aware of any feelings or emotions you have.

2. Next review your list and make a note beside each them. Write the name of someone you need to appreciate, people who have influenced your life, God or some higher power. Don’t forget to include your own name.

3. Finally, try to deepen your awareness of the present and write down what there is to appreciate in this moment. Retreat the entire exercise every couple of weeks.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Essence Communications, Inc.

by Diane Weathers is editor-in-chief of Essence Magazine

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