Archive for the ‘Positive Thinking’ Category

Laughter is the Best Medicine

Monday, March 15th, 2010

By Pete Genot

I’m sure you’ve heard the old saying…

“Laughter is the best medicine.”

Well, it turns out there is a lot of truth to that statment. The benefits of laughter are well documented, including:

  • Reduces tension and stress
  • Boosts immunity
  • Decreases pain
  • Prevents heart disease
  • Improves mood
  • Reduces anxiety and fear
  • And much more…

I’ve been experimenting with different ways to change my thought patterns during times of stress, when I’m having negative thoughts, or when I feel angry or upset.  One of my favorites is watching funny videos on YouTube. I don’t know if it’s because I have 5 children or what, but I always like the videos with laughing babies.

Check out this one below and see if you makes you laugh too. Be sure to leave me an comment and let me know.

About the Author:  Health Advocate Pete Genot is the Founder and Editor of The Healthy Minute.  He is a former college athlete with nearly 25 years of health and fitness experience.  He emphasizes maintaining optimal health through a balance of nutrition, exercise and personal growth…and LOTS of laughter of course!  Click HERE to subscribe to The Healthy Minute.  If you’re on Facebook, you can also become Pete’s Facebook Friend.

Required Legal Disclaimer: Some of the links mentioned within this post or posts they lead to are my affiliate links and I get compensated for recommending those products. However, I NEVER recommend something I don’t believe in and welcome your questions and feedback.

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Why Some People Quit And Some NEVER Give Up

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
Never Give Upwww.BurnTheFat.com

Throughout my 18 years in the fitness industry as a trainer, nutrition consultant and motivational coach, I have noticed that some people who start a nutrition and exercise program give up very easily after hitting the first obstacle they encounter. If they feel the slightest bit of discouragement or frustration, they will abandon even their biggest goals and dreams.

On the other hand, I noticed that some people simply NEVER give up. They have ferocious persistence and they never let go of their goals. These people are like the bulldog that refuses to release its teeth-hold on a bone. The harder you try to pull the bone out of his mouth, the harder the dog chomps down with a vice-like grip.

What’s the difference between these two types of people? Psychologists say there is an answer.

An extremely important guideline for achieving fitness success is the concept that,

“There is no failure; only feedback. You don’t “fail”, you only get results.”

This is a foundational principle from the field of Neuro Linguistic Programming  (NLP), and the first time I ever heard it was from peak performance expert Anthony Robbins back in the late 1980’s. It’s a principle that stuck with me ever since, because it’s a very, very powerful shift in mindset.

A lot of people will second-guess themselves and they’ll bail out and quit, just because what they try at first doesn’t work. They consider it a permanent failure, but all they need is a little attitude change, a mindset change, or what we call a “reframe.”

Instead of saying, “This is failure” they can say to themselves, “I produced a result” and “This is only temporary.” This change in perspective is going to change the way that they feel and how they mentally process and explain the experience. It turns into a learning opportunity and valuable feedback for a course correction instead of a failure, and that drives continued action and forward movement.

It’s all about your results and your interpretation of those results.

Dr Martin Seligman, a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, did some incredible research on this subject and wrote about it in his book, Learned Optimism. Dr. Seligman noticed that the difference between people who give up and people who persist and never quit is what he referred to as “explanatory style.” He said that explanatory style is the way we explain or interpret bad events or failures.

People who habitually give up have an explanatory style of permanence. For example, they hit a plateau in their progress and explain it by saying, “diets never work” or “I have bad genetics so I’ll always be fat.” These explanations imply permanence.

Other people hit the same plateaus and encounter the same challenges, but explain them differently. They say things such as, “I ate too many cheat meals this week,” or “I haven’t found the right diet for my body type yet.” These explanations of the results imply being temporary.

People who see negative results as permanent failure are the ones who give up easily and often generalize their “failure” into other areas of their lives and even into their own sense of self. It’s one thing to say, “I ate poorly this past week because I was traveling,” (a belief about temporary behavior and environment), and to say, “I am a fat person because of my genetics” (a belief about identity with a sense of permanence). Remember, body fat is a temporary condition, not a person!

People who see challenges and obstacles as temporary and as valuable learning experiences are the ones who never quit. If you learn from your experiences, not repeating what didn’t work in the past, and if you choose to never quit, your success is inevitable.

About the Author: Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder and author of the #1 best selling e-book, “Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle,” which teaches you how to burn fat without drugs or supplements using the little-known secrets of the world’s best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn fat and turbo-charge your metabolism by visiting: www.BurnTheFat.com.

[Editor’s Comments: I was talking with Tom the other day, and I asked him what was the #1 question he gets asked most often. He immediately said:

"How can I gain muscle and lose fat at the same time?"

The problem is you get all kinds of conflicting answers to this question- even from experts who are supposed to know these things. So Tom spent a lot of time doing scientific research and matching it with his own real world case studies, and he came to the following conclusion:

YES - you can gain muscle and lose fat at the same time!

In fact, he just published a new ebook on the subject that explains it in detail, called: "The Holy Grail Body Transformation Program: How to Gain Muscle and Lose Fat at the Same Time" AND you can get it FREE at the following link:

Click here =>> Burn the Fat

Here's the deal...

From now until Midnight (PST), March 5th, 2010, you can get a copy of the Holy Grail Body Transformation program ebook absolutely FREE when you purchase the Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle e-book from this web page:

Click here =>> Burn the Fat

I just read Tom's "holy grail" book earlier today...that's one reason I'm publishing this article so late in the day...and he definitely hit a home run again with this one!]

Required Legal Disclaimer: some of the links mentioned within this post or posts they lead to are my affiliate links and I get compensated for recommending those products. However I NEVER recommend something I don’t believe in and welcome your questions and feedback.

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Improve Your Quality of Life in One Easy Step

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

By Dr. Joseph McCaffrey

The quality of life is more important than life itself.” 

 - Alexis Carrel

Let me propose an experiment, one aimed at immediately improving the quality of your life. It’s simple, it will cost you absolutely nothing, and as a bonus it will give you a clearer understanding of our modern world.

Interested?

To begin, let’s cover a little background material. Here’s a bold claim: Our point of mental focus determines our quality of life. That may overstate it some, but consider that claim for a moment.

Mental focus means what you pay attention to. It’s what you look at, think about, remember, imagine, ponder, and dream of. You have a point of focus in every moment, and your experience of life is what you’re looking at.

Here’s an example of mental focus.

Right now chose to remember two events from your past.

First, pick one that was a moment of great joy and success. As you recall that moment and think about it in detail, how do you feel? Your point of focus has affected the way you feel right now.

Now, recall a moment of disappointment and failure. How do you feel as you relive that in your mind? I suspect not as good as a moment ago.

Get off of that subject. Go back to the good memory.

Now what changed as you went from one memory to the other in that little thought experiment? Weren’t all the details of your life – where you live, what you do, who you know, etc – the same? Yet the quality of your experience of life in the present moment (the only moment we have) changed as you shifted your focus from one memory to the other. Your mental focus affected your quality of life. That’s what I mean by our point of focus determining the quality of our life.

So what determines our point of focus?

It’s possible to choose our point of focus, but most of us don’t. Most of the time, most people give their attention to whatever is most noticeable around them. They don’t choose. As a result they give up control of their life’s experience.

With that background, consider the news media.

The media picks stories based on the story’s sensationalism. They are always bad news stories, the more heart-rending the better. They certainly are attention getting. As you focus on them, how do you feel? Why would you choose to focus on something that makes you feel that poorly? You don’t have to. You do have a choice.

And that brings us to the experiment I mentioned at the beginning. The experiment is this: go without reading, watching or listening to any form of news media for two weeks. That means no newspapers, no top-of-hour news summary, no news magazines, no news blogs, no evening news shows – none of any of it.

If you want to go to the next level, fill the time you’d normally use to focus on the media to focus on something that you find fun, that’s uplifting, that’s positive. In short, to focus on things that create the opposite experience of the media’s choices.

When I first read of this experiment years ago, I was a little skeptical. Then, my clock radio went off one morning right in the middle of the pop rock radio station’s hourly news summary. In rapid-fire sequence, they reported on a school bus accident in New Jersey, a local man killed when someone threw a cinder block off an overpass as he was driving by, and a child trapped in an abandoned well in Texas. I had gotten to the “off” button as quickly as I could, and they still managed to get those juicy tid-bits into my brain.

Why in the world did I need to think about any of that? What could I do to change any of it? The only effect any of those stories had on my life was to make me feel bad as I thought of them.

Using just that example, imagine going through your morning routine with thoughts of a school bus accident. Is that really the best way to begin your day? Wouldn’t you rather be listening to uplifting music, thinking of things you’re grateful for, or thinking of… well, whatever you want to think of?

And that’s the point. Your power is your power to choose. Don’t let the media do it for you. Try it for two weeks. It’s only an experiment – you can always go back to listening to all the news you want when the experiment’s over. My bet is you won’t want to.

About the Author:  Joseph F. McCaffrey, MD, FACS is a board-certified surgeon and HeartMath Trainer with extensive experience in both alternative and complementary medical practices. His areas of expertise include mind-body interaction and cognitive restructuring.  Dr. McCaffrey strives to help people attain their optimum level of vitality by stressing wellness rather than disease. To learn more, click HERE

[Editor’s Comments: We never did watch a lot of TV news in our house, and there are times when I’ll go days without reading a paper.

Do I miss it?

Nope…not really. Sure, I enjoy reading the sports section, business section and the comics. But if I don’t read the local, national or international news for a few days, it doesn’t really affect me one way of the other.

I spend most of my time reading about nutrition, fitness and medical breakthroughs (both alternative and traditional) anyway. 

What about you? Do you crave the latest headlines…good or bad? Is your day incomplete without the knowledge that Britney Spears  is back in rehab? Leave a Comment and let us know.]

 

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