Archive for the ‘News Item’ Category

People Don’t Like Givers

Monday, August 30th, 2010

In some recent studies, researchers have found the people don’t like to work with others who are selfish. No surprise. But they also don’t like to work with people who are unselfish.

The control group, normal people, judge givers through their own filters and believe the altruistic ones have an ulterior motive. That somehow, the givers are doing so for some gain. Or that they broke the rules of everyone claiming the same reward, even if giving it up benefited the group.

The biggest complaint, however, were the unselfish people made them look bad. Their reputation somehow suffered because of the selflessness.

So it wasn’t so much about the unselfish ones, but was about how it affected the control group. They saw themselves as lacking in generosity, recognized how it made them look, and took it out on the people who were giving. Instead of using it as a model, they rejected the person who could make a true difference.

It’s a lesson that many creative, generous, compassionate people have learned all too well. We have to conform and hide our gifts or people will condemn and spurn us.

So we crater to survive, conform to what the average person does and avoid rocking the boat. Unfortunately, this means we won’t live up to our potential. It just bolsters the attitudes of the average person. We give them our power, and it means that the status quo thrives.

It’s interesting that in a society that teaches unselfishness, that very virtue is reviled. Our society may value it in theory, but in reality, it’s considered a vice. As children, we receive conflicting information about this issue. Is it any wonder that our culture is screwed up?

If we want to change our society, culture, or business, we can’t just cave into the people who are more invested in their egos than they are in progress or prosperity. “All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.”

It takes courage to stand up to them and realize that their discomfort and accusations simply arise out of their own inadequacies. To fulfill our potential, we have to let our light shine and be authentic.

As more and more people have done this, it’s become more accepted and appreciated. The idea of practicing random acts of kindness has swelled in recent years. So, although the average person may shun the generous one, kindness has become popular.

To read about the studies, visit WSU Study Finds People Really Don’t Like Working with Unselfish Colleagues and Too good to live: People hate generosity as much as they hate mean-spiritedness.

And check out Random Acts of Kindness to see how it’s gained in popularity.

Copyright 2010 Linda Ann Stewart
All Rights Reserved

New study finds positive connection between yoga and mood

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

ScienceDaily (2010-08-23) — Researchers have found that yoga may be superior to other forms of exercise, including walking, in its positive effect on mood and anxiety. The findings are the first to demonstrate an association between yoga postures, increased GABA levels and decreased anxiety. Low GABA levels are associated with depression and other widespread anxiety disorders.

Read full story at Yoga Study.

Train Your Brain To Reduce Cravings

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

As a hypnotherapist, I’ve helped people quit smoking for over twenty years. One client had quit with the patch a couple of days before his first session, and he was having a terrible time with it. On our second session, he said it was like night and day. It was so much easier after his first session of hypnosis.

Hypnosis won’t make you quit smoking, but it does help make the process of quitting easier. Mainly, hypnosis imprints new information into your mind and focus on different thoughts about smoking. You focus on the advantages of not smoking and different strategies to get you through the cravings.

Over the years, people have argued with me about whether changing your thinking about smoking can make quitting easier. Finally, scientific evidence confirms this very premise. A new study by Yale School of Medicine researchers, using an MRI, found that focusing on the long-term negative consequences of smoking actually switched off the part of the brain that controlled cravings.

Apparently, this concept also worked with cravings for various foods, as well. When you consider the long-range consequences, you change your focus, and it turns off the craving. Eventually, you’re able to train your brain to switch off the cravings. With hypnosis, you’re able to make those changes quicker.

I wonder what else they’ll discover that you can train your brain to do that hypnotherapists have been doing for years?

Copyright 2010 Linda-Ann Stewart
All Rights Reserved

, , , , (more…)

Managing Pain With Meditation and Self-Hypnosis

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

A study has shown that meditation increases pain tolerance. Apparently, it’s not just because of meditation being distracting (when you’re paying attention to one thing, it fills up your mind buffer and you won’t feel pain as much), but reduces emotional response to pain.

In my hypnotherapy practice, I’ve worked with chronic pain sufferers. The first stage of hypnosis, relaxation, can reduce pain significantly. What to you do when you first feel pain? Tense up. When you relax, it’s a natural calming agent to the nerves.

In the next phase of a session, I’ll usually help them use visualization and imagery to change the perception of the pain somehow. Once you show them that they can reduce it, even a little, it gives them confidence and reassurance that they have some control over it.

When you’re in hypnosis, you’re in the same brain wave level as when you’ve in meditation. So it’s no surprise that even a short meditation exercise can also influence the perception and quality of pain.

For the full article, read Brief Meditation Training Brings Pain Relief.

Copyright 2010 Linda Ann Stewart
All Rights Reserved

Mindfulness Meditation Treats Depression

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Depression tends to be accompanied, if not triggered, by negative thinking. Dwelling on those negative thoughts can create a mood that spirals downward. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy can help sufferers to change those negative thoughts and improve the way they feel.

However, most of the time, CBT therapists see depression sufferers between episodes, not during them. Now there’s another strategy for those already in the grips of depression.

Studies are now showing that mindfulness meditation is effective in treating depression and the possibility of relapsing. It’s been effective to reduce relapsing back into depression by 50%.

Patients are taught to take their focus off their negative emotions and put their attention on one thing, such as their breathing, a mantra, affirmation, or an object like a candle or stone. Growing evidence shows that brain patterns change from this kind of meditation.

Not only is the evidence increasing concerning meditation helping mental health, but physical health as well. Stress, heart disease, strokes, high blood pressure, asthma, inflammation and pain are being reduced from practicing this simple technique.

Read the entire article Why Buddhists Don’t Get The Blues at the Express.co.uk - Home of the Daily and Sunday Express.

Free Metaphysical and Law Of Attraction Books Online

Friday, January 15th, 2010

I was introduced to this website that offers free online books on metaphysics, mind power, law of attraction, abundance, prosperity, success, manifestation, dream interpretation, self-mastery, joy, visualization and many more. The authors are legendary: Emile Coue, Thomas Troward, Henry Thomas Hamblin, Charles F. Haanel, Napoleon Hill, Wallace Wattles and others. There are even courses and videos available. I have many of these books in physical form and some in electronic form. These are the books that have inspired current best-selling authors. If you want to go to the source of where today’s writers have gotten their foundation, use this wonderful resource at PsiTek.com.

, , , , , ,

“How You Tell the Story of Your Life”

Monday, June 8th, 2009

by Senia Maymin at Positive Psychology News Daily, NY - May 25, 2007
Senia Maymin, MBA, MAPP is an Executive Coach, and presents workshops to corporations about Positive Psychology.  Senia is the Editor of Positive Psychology News Daily, and posts her latest ideas about positive psychology, business, and coaching at Senia.com.

Jennifer Aniston will be starring in a movie about Positive Psychology. The movie is expected to be called “Counter Clockwise,” and Aniston will play Harvard Professor Ellen Langer studying how to turn back the clock on aging.  In 1979, Ellen Langer undertook a study in which she put elderly men into a setting that made them think that the year was 1959.  According to the Harvard Crimson, “The magazines, newspapers, hand music the men saw and heard were all 20 years old and the men themselves were told to behave and talk as if it were 1959. … Over the course of a week, signs of aging appeared to reverse and the men looked visibly younger. The subjects’ joints became more flexible, their posture straightened, and the lengths of their fingers, which typically shorten with age, actually increased.”

What were the stories that the men were telling themselves?  How did their physiology become so changed by their thoughts?

Ellen Langer Makes the Old Young Again and Makes the Unexercising Fit

In the February, 2007 issue of Psychological Science, Langer and colleague Alia Crum reported that they took 84 hotel workers and told one group that “the work they do (cleaning hotel rooms) is good exercise and satisfies the Surgeon General’s recommendations for an active lifestyle. Examples of how their work was exercise were provided.”  Langer and Crum told the control group nothing.  Four weeks later, Langer and Crum returned to find some measurements of both groups: the control group hadn’t changed physically, but the test group had decreased all of the following: weight, blood pressure, body fat, waist-to-hip ratio, and body mass index.

Langer and Crum describe this study as supporting the theory that exercise affects health at least partly due to the placebo effect.  Furthermore, we can ask, what are the stories that these hotel workers are telling themselves? Why do the hotel workers suddenly believe that they actively affect their exercise regiment?

Martin Seligman and Explanatory Style

Martin Seligman has long studied that explanatory style is the intermediate variable in whether a person has an optimistic or pessimistic outlook on life.  In his book Learned Optimism, Seligman outlines that HOW a person tells a story can be an indicator of physical health and mental health.  The “nun study” outlined on the first page of Seligman’s book Authentic Happiness describes how different nuns of a sample of 180 told their life stories: those that described the world in optimistic terms and using positive emotions tended to live longer.  Furthermore, in Learned Optimism, Seligman describes that he and colleague Christopher Peterson had access to a large body of data about men from a young age to an older age (the Grant Study of George Vaillant). Seligman and Peterson looked at the words that the men used at age twenty-five and determined how optimistic or pessimistic the men sounded.  Seligman and Peterson found that the degree of optimism at age twenty-five predicted health at age sixty!

What are the stories the men in the study must have been telling themselves?

“I overcame the black dog”

This week, the New York Times reports on how people tell the stories of their lives in “This Is Your Life (and How You Tell It).” At Northwestern University, Jonathan Adler, a doctoral candidate and Dan McAdams, a professor, study how people describe their problems in therapy (whether a fear of flying or depression or relationship issues).  Adler describes that some people tell a story of “victorious battle: ‘I ended therapy because I could overcome this on my own.’”  McAdams sees the relevance of stories in all parts of a person’s life: “We find that when it comes to the big choices people make — should I marry this person? should I take this job? should I move across the country? — they draw on these stories implicitly, whether they know they are working from them or not.”

One key to overcoming a problem, explains Adler, may be seeing the issue as an outside enemy, often even giving it a name like “the black dog.”  Another key to leaving an issue behind, states the article, may be whether a person recounts a story in the first person (”I, me”) or in the third person (”her, Senia”).

“SHE overcame the black dog”

In an entirely different study, college students were asked to recall one of their most embarrassing moments in high school.  Half the students were asked to recall the story in the first-person and half were told to imagine it in the third-person.  Those who recalled it in the third-person then rated themselves as having become less socially awkward since high school.  Furthermore, both sets of students then had to wait in a room with a researcher posed as a waiting student, but the researcher was really taking notes on the sociability of the research students.  The result?  The third-person imaginers started up a conversation much more frequently than the first-person imaginers.

This study by Lisa Libby of Ohio University, Richard Eibach of Yale University, and Thomas Gilovich of Cornell University reflects how people see change.  Lisa Libby says of the research, “People who are looking for change in themselves don’t sense that they’ve made as much progress when they look back in first-person, and that could be discouraging. … Using the third-person is a good technique to see the positive changes you’ve made in your life, and that is likely to lead to greater satisfaction with your efforts. That, in turn, should make it easier to continue with your efforts to reach your goals.”

From the New York Times article:

Seeing oneself as acting in a movie or a play is not merely fantasy or indulgence; it is fundamental to how people work out who it is they are, and may become.

An Exercise: Claude Steiner and the Mythology of Your Story

Claude Steiner, author of Scripts People Live, suggests that there are simple ways to find out what stories people make up for themselves.  Even for a child, you can ask specific questions to learn about identification with a character:

  • What is your favorite fairy tale?
  • Who is your favorite cartoon character?
  • What movie most represents your life?
  • Who is your favorite person?
  • Whom would you be like if you could be like anyone?

Could there be a useful positive psychology exercise to work out from this research?  Could there be an exercise along the lines of the following: “Imagine a difficult time in your childhood.  See the little boy or girl who was you, and forgive that little person.  See all the details and all the injustices.  And then let them all go.  And think about how you have changed from that person.”  This sounds remarkably similar to an exercise I was once asked to do in a health psychology class.

In summary, if we speak about those events that we want to distance ourselves from in the third-person and in the past and as temporary and narrow (as Doug Turner describes here), and if we speak about ourselves in the mythology that we want to grow towards and using positive role models (as Kathryn Britton describes here), we may start to tell the life story that we want to be telling.

When They Tell the Story of My Life

It is only fitting to close with the farcical lyrics of a song by Susan Werner:

When they make the movie of my life
I hope they get somebody beautiful to play me
Somebody eloquent and beautiful to play me
When they make the movie of my life
And when they make the movie of my life
I hope they get somebody famous to direct it
Somebody famous and a genius to direct it
When they make the movie of my life
And everyone will see
How hard it’s been for me
How much I’ve overcome
To be someone
Deserving of a motion picture  […]

Thanks to NTMarket: New Thought Sales and Marketing for letting me know about this story.

This article is © 2009 PositivePsychologyNews.com. The original article was authored by Senia Maymin on May 25, 2007, and can be seen here. To see the references and join the discussion about this article, click here.

, , , ,

Optimist’s Live Longer

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Last month, at the American Psychosomatic Society’s annual meeting, a research study was presented that showed that optimistic women had a considerably lower risk of death, from any cause, than pessimistic women. The study consisted of almost 100,000 women over 8 years, it was found that those women who had an optimistic viewpoint lowered their risk of death by 14 percent than those women who were pessimistic. Men weren’t studied, so it’s uncertain whether the benefits would be as great for them.

Read the full story at Trust Me-The Glass Is Half Full.

Dr. Terry Cole-Whittaker In Sedona, AZ

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Dr. Terry Cole-WhittakerThe Sedona Church of Religious Science sponsors Dr. Terry Cole-Whittaker March 6-8, 2009 for the weekend seminar: “A Spirit of Opulence.”

Some of Dr. Terry’s students are the Who’s Who of entrepreneurs, teachers, speakers, musicians, and educators. She has authored 5 best-selling books, including: “What You Think Of Me Is None Of My Business” and her newest, “Creating Your Destiny-A remarkable Guide To Making Decisions That Give You Happiness and Prosperity.”

Attend these seminars to:
Be free of worry, fear and stress and live joyfully. Walking in the Spirit. Receive gifts and money through expected and unexpected ways. Know your life’s work and prosper from doing what you love. Gain the home, mate, money, success, prosperity and life you deserve.

Seminar Topics:

“The Ultimate Prosperity Program” - Saturday, March 7, 9am-12pm
“A Spirit of Opulence” (co-facilitated with Dr. Terry and Rev. StanleyOtterstrom, minister of the Sedona Church of Religious Science) -Saturday, March 7, 1:30pm-4pm
“8 Steps to Spiritual and Material Riches” - Sunday, March 8, 1pm-4pm

Friday Sunset Reception with Dr. Terry: $60 in advance
Price for Saturday: $75 in advance, $99 at the door
Price for Sunday: $45 in advance, $55 at the door
Three Seminar Package: $110 in advance
VIP Package (Friday evening sunset reception with Dr. Terry and all seminars): $155 in advance

Held at Sedona Creative Life Center, 333 Schnebly Hill Rd., Sedona, AZ

For more information or to register: visit
www.ASpiritOfOpulence. com or call (928) 282-1446.

Hypnosis Helps Women Undergoing Breast Cancer Surgery

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

In a study published September 2007 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, women who underwent hypnosis before their surgery for breast cancer experienced less pain, fatigue and nausea afterwards. A hypnosis session of only fifteen minutes long resulted in these improvements. Not only that, but the cost of the surgery was less because these women spent less time in the operating room.

From my experience with clients, hypnosis can also significantly decrease healing time. Some clients I’ve worked with have healed much, much faster than expected. Not to mention the reduction of discomfort, pain, anxiety, and fear they feel. Because of all this, I would recommend hypnosis for anyone who plans to undergo surgery.