Wednesday, January 31, 2018

The 5 most important behaviours for a happy relationship

Happiness is not a solo-sport.

Happiness is about connectedness and relationships.

If you’d like to enjoy better relationships and more happiness then check out this great article…

via Inc.com by Jessica Stillman

When the biggest happiness study of all time tracked more than 200 men for 75 years, what did it determine was the biggest driver of well-being and life satisfaction? In the pithy and poignant words of the study’s original director: “Happiness is love. Full stop.”

No wonder then that scientists have spend decades digging in to how to make romantic partnerships work. (If you’re a more mercenary sort, I could also note that a strong partnership is also closely tied to career success.) All of this research has generated a library’s worth of papers, reports, and articles.

The abundance of tips and recommendations is itself a challenge. In this sea of advice, which techniques and behaviors really have the most impact? Helpfully, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor Brian Ogolsky has waded through more than 1,000 studies from 50 years of research on the subject, so you don’t have to.

His efforts generated a massive 17 tips, which you can read all about in this Time article. But 17 is a lot to take on. Which tips are the best of the best? Further research done by Ogolsky and highlighted by PsyBlog has boiled it down to just five essential behaviors.

1. Openness

It probably won’t come as much of a surprise to happy, long-term couples that reams of research suggest talking about your feelings and insisting your partner does the same is one of the keys of relationship success…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

4 common mistakes people make trying to manage anxiety: and how to beat them!

It’s hard to be happy if you’re worrying all the time.

Stress and anxiety can eat away at positive emotions, such as happiness, and although those suffering often try their best to cope they also often make a number of common mistakes.

So if you have a tendency toward anxiety, but you’d like to enjoy more calm and happiness, then keep reading…

via Business Insider by Alice Boyes

  • Small, everyday mistakes tend to worsen the emotional effects of anxiety. 
  • These patterns are common and simple to fix, and by changing them the negative impact of anxiety can be lessened.
  • Overlooking the value of self-care is a frequent oversight, and may prevent you from taking control of your anxiety. 

I recently wrote an article about five mistakes people with depression make. That post was well-received, so I decided to write a version about anxiety.

Here are well-intentioned ways people respond to or think about their anxiety,  that actually cause unnecessary suffering or get in the way of doing more fulfilling/enjoyable things.

If you’ve made these mistakes, there’s no need to be self-critical. These are common, understandable, and easily fixable patterns.

1. Spending too much time and effort attempting to lower your anxiety

Less is more when it comes to anxiety management. I’ve been anxiety-prone since I was a child, and even with all the strategies I know for lowering anxiety, my usual modus operandi for dealing the anxiety is to do something productive while I wait for my anxious thoughts and physical overarousal to pass on their own.

Think of it like when you take a pot of boiling liquid off a stove. When you remove the heat, it keeps boiling awhile and then gradually cools.  Many of the ways people respond to anxiety backfire and are like keeping the pot on the stove, or even inadvertently turning the temperature up.

If I don’t feel like doing something productive when I’m feeling anxious, I’ll do a quiet, enjoyable activity (like watch Netflix or listen to an audiobook).

If I need to reduce anxiety in situations like leading up to an interview, I just do slow breathing.  Calming physiological arousal naturally calms thoughts.

It’s a good idea to spend a few months learning and practicing anxiety strategies so that you have some favorites at your disposal when needed, and feel comfortable using them. However, most of the time you won’t need to do anything to spot-treat your anxiety, beyond getting out of your own way.

However, if you’re more of an extrovert than I am, you might prefer a more social strategy…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

5 Effective Ways to Keep the Energy and Optimism Up During the Dark and Cold Winter

“In the depths of winter I finally learned there was in me an invincible summer.”
Albert Camus

“If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant: if we did not sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity would not be so welcome.”
Anne Bradstreet 

Up here in Sweden the winter is dark, cold and often comes with a mix of rain and snow. And spring is still far away.

It is not easy to keep the energy and optimism up like in the bright and warm summer days.

So today I’d like to share 5 habits I use that make it a lot easier to stay positive even throughout this dark and often grey season.

1. Find one of your biggest energy sucks.

Ask yourself: What is the biggest energy suck in my life right now?

You may for example find that it is a person in your life that is very negative. Or that the report that you have been meaning to finish for a month now is dragging you down.

Then you follow that up with asking: What is one thing I can do about this?

Maybe you decide that you want stop hanging out with that person. Or at least spend less of the time you have in a week with him or her and more of that time with the people that give you the most energy.

Perhaps you can just set off 5 minutes today to get started again with finishing your report.

For some energy sucks there might not be a simple solution. Or a solution at all, at least at this time. Then you may want to find one of the lesser leaks in your life that you can actually do something about.

Take a few minutes or an hour out of your day to plug just one of these biggest leaks and you’ll have more energy to spend on what truly matters to you.

2. Be grateful for the small things and the things you may sometimes take for granted.

When I’m brushing my teeth in the morning and looking out the window over the dark and rainy landscape it is easy to forget about the things I actually have.

Things like:

  • A roof over my head and a warm home.
  • Clean water.
  • Three steady meals every day.

I have found that zooming out on my perspective like this helps out a lot to snap out of any kind of victim thinking and negativity.

3. Vitamin D supplements.

For the past few winters I’ve been taking Vitamin D supplements each day and I’ve found them to give back a lot of the energy I tend to lose during a long winter.

A few people close to me are also taking them and are reporting similar positive effects in varying degrees.

4. Exercise.

An obvious but a very effective one.

Regular exercise will give you more energy. It will help you to release inner tensions, anxiety and stress.

And so it will be easier to stay relaxed, positive and to think clearly with less overthinking and to act decisively.

5. Take action and move forward.

Few things create so much frustration, worries and anxiety as sitting on your hands and doing nothing.

So even though it might be a little extra tough to get started or to keep going with your dreams and goals during this season remind yourself that if you do you will replace those feelings and thoughts above with optimism and self-confidence.

And remember that you do not have to go forward in big or quick leaps.

The most important thing is simply that you move forward. Even if it is by just taking one small or slow step after another.

Because those steps will quickly add up over the weeks even if they may not look so impressive in themselves.

Monday, January 29, 2018

Use this Japanese philosophy of Kaizen to develop a more positive, daily routine…

via Quartz by Melody Wilding

In the years following World War II, American auto executives visited Toyota manufacturing plants in Japan to examine how the company was able to produce so many vehicles so quickly. They discovered a humanizing philosophy driving the manufacturer’s innovation, one that intrinsically motivated workers to change process, procedures, and themselves for the better.

Instead of punishing employees for errors, Toyota encouraged workers to stop production at any time to fix a problem or provide suggestions to management about how to reduce waste and improve efficiency. As a result, Toyota’s factories experienced fewer costly errors and benefitted from consistent improvement. This philosophy, Kaizen, is one that the American executives took home and has since revolutionized multiple industries, from healthcare to software development.

Put simply, the Kaizen approach is based on the belief that continuous, incremental improvement adds up to substantial change over time. When teams or groups implement Kaizen, they circumvent the upheaval, unrest, and mistakes that often go hand-in-hand with major innovation. It’s fitting that the Japanese word kaizen translates to “good change.”

While Kaizen is typically applied to industrial processes like supply chain and logistics, it’s useful in the context of personal productivity and work habits, too. Think of it as an antidote to every “go big or go home” motivational trope you’ve seen in your newsfeed. Kaizen is less about hustle and working more, and more about thoughtful adjustments, accepting failure, and applying learnings in order to work better

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Uncover real happiness with these 4 simple questions

via the Huffington Post by Elisha Goldstein

It’s no secret, life is full of 10,000 joys and 10,000 sorrows and the brain is wired in a way where the sorrows are stickier than the joys. This wiring has been reinforced so that we can pay quicker and more focused attention to the potential threats that have come our way in the past and survive. After all, we’re wired to survive, not be happy, but that doesn’t mean a more enduring core sense of well-being isn’t possible.

In Uncovering Happiness: Overcoming Depression with Mindfulness and Self-Compassion, I explore the science and practice behind a host of natural anti-depressants (resiliency factors) that we can release in order to gain a sense of inner confidence and a core deep happiness. We can begin to experience that no matter what comes our way, we can be grateful for the good moments and more graceful during the inevitable difficult moments.

One key to overcoming this negativity bias and uncovering happiness is learning to recognize and get space from the self-critical mind and also encourage the positive beliefs about ourselves that the critical mind has buried.

Four simple questions can open us up to and encourage our positive beliefs in ourselves and also install them in the brain creating positive neuroplasticity. In doing this we can become more confident in ourselves and ultimately more resilient (and definitely happier)…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Sunday, January 28, 2018

Are your beliefs about happiness ruining your happiness?

via Psychology Today by Susan Krauss Whitbourne

You’re having a wonderful day and so far everything seems to be going your way. People are being unduly nice to you, the weather is lovely, and even your bank account seems pleased with you. In the back of your mind, though, is there a small, nagging voice insisting that you knock on wood before your good luck ends? Do you think the other shoe is about to drop and you’ll soon hear some terrible news?

In a new study, Keimyung University’s (South Korea) Mohsen Joshanloo (2018) focused on the “fragility of happiness,” or this belief that your good luck is too good to last. The concept of happiness fragility follows directly from the state in which you fear being happy, which Joshanloo defines as “an aversion to the experience and/or expression of happiness due to the belief that happiness may cause bad things to happen” (p. 115). Fragility, in turn, refers to the view that “happiness is fleeting and may easily turn into less favorable states” (p. 115). Who knew that happiness could actually be aversive?

Not everyone fears happiness, but those who do tend to derive less pleasure from life, as you can imagine. According to Joshanloo, the belief that happiness is fragile is more likely to plague people who fit the definition of “insecurely attached.” These individuals have carried with them a lifelong inability to form close relationships with the confidence that their trust in others will be returned. The insecurely attached may be of the “avoidant” variety, in which they steer clear of relationships altogether, or they may be of the “anxious” variety, in which they cling nervously to partners for fear of being abandoned. Joshanloo’s study was the first to investigate whether people with these long-standing patterns of insecurity would find themselves unable to enjoy moments of happiness without fear.

The 316 undergraduate participants in Joshanloo’s study completed measures of subjective well-being (high life satisfaction and high positive affect), overall life satisfaction, fear of happiness, and the fragility of happiness scale. You can rate yourself on your own beliefs in the fragility of happiness by asking yourself these questions, based on Joshanloo et al.’s earlier work (2015)…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Did you feel more relaxed during your holidays? Here’s how you can bring that chill into your everyday life!

Happiness shouldn’t just be something we enjoy on the weekends and during holidays.

Relaxation shouldn’t just be for the summer break.

What if we could feel happy and chilled EVERY DAY???

If this sounds attractive then keep reading…

via ABC by Tegan Taylor

A few short weeks ago, many of us were hanging out for the end of the year, dreaming of lazy days spent connecting with loved ones and maybe even taking a trip somewhere exciting.

Now, as the reality of the new year lands with a thud, those longed-for holidays can already feel like a distant memory.

Work dramas, lunch-packing, stop-start commutes and an overflowing calendar threaten to swallow up any vestiges of getaway afterglow — but it is possible to bring that sunny holiday attitude into everyday life. All you need is the right approach, says psychologist Christine Bagley-Jones.

Your brain on holidays

We often associate travel with happiness and fulfilment, but Ms Bagley-Jones says it’s not the holiday location that brought you joy. It’s the attitude you had while you were there.

“When we’re on holidays, we have a more upbeat mood, we care less about the trivial things in our life, we focus more on the beauty around us and we’re not so bound to routine,” she says.

“And that, you can duplicate in every situation. You can take that everywhere you go.”

Holidays do us a lot of good at the cognitive level, Ms Bagley-Jones adds. We’re often getting better sleep, we’re eating better and we’re not getting the same prompts towards negative thoughts.

“That freedom from stress is extremely good for your wellbeing.

“On a chemical level you’re operating in a far more effective way, which is why you want it to be part of daily living.”

So how do you help your brain replicate the happiness you felt on holidays? Here are Ms Bagley-Jones’ top five tips…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Become more mentally flexible and boost your mental strength

Happiness is not just focusing on the positives all the time.

Happiness is focusing on the positives, but it’s also about dealing with the negatives – and this requires mental flexibility and mental strength (or resilience).

If this is something you think you’d like more of, then check out these 12 simple exercises…

via Business Insider by Gretchen Rubin

Dorothea Brande was an American writer and editor, well known for her books ‘Wake Up and Live‘ and ‘Becoming a Writer‘ (a useful resource for writers, by the way).

In ‘Wake Up and Live‘, she suggests twelve mental exercises to make your mind keener and more flexible. These exercises are meant to pull you out of your usual habits and to put you in situations that will demand resourcefulness and creative problem-solving. Brande argues that only by testing and stretching yourself can you develop mental strength.

Even apart from the goals of creativity and mental flexibility, Brande’s exercises make sense from a happiness perspective. One thing is clear: novelty and challenge bring happiness. People who stray from their routines, try new things, explore, and experiment tend to be happier than those who don’t. Of course, as Brande herself points out, novelty and challenge can also bring frustration, anxiety, confusion, and annoyance along the way; it’s the process of facing those challenges that brings the “atmosphere of growth” so important to happiness. (It’s the First Splendid Truth: to be happy, you must think about feeling good, feeling bad, and feeling right, in an atmosphere of growth.)

I have to confess that I’ve tackled just a few of Brande’s mental exercises — #6 and #10 — and only because they come naturally to me, which is hardly in the spirit of the exercises. I have toyed with the idea of trying the others.

Here are Dorothea Brande’s twelve mental exercises. Note: she wrote these in 1936, so you need to adapt of few of them…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Don’t forget about the GOOD news…

Happiness isn’t just about smiles and laughs.

We all have problems in our lives; and there’s no doubt the world has its problems.

Happiness is about being realistic; facing up to these challenges in a constructive way.

But that being said, it’s all too easy to focus on all the BAD things happening…especially if you watch the nightly news.

In the same way, it’s easy to forget about the good people doing good things.

So for your happiness, I’m happy to share with you these GOOD NEWS stories…

Click HERE to read about how Apple and Malala are helping 100,000 underprivileged girls in to school

And click HERE to read about how suicides are on the decline in Japan

For more GOOD NEWS STORIES … click HERE to check out the GOOD NEWS website

Sunday, January 21, 2018

Stop these 10 things right now and enjoy more happiness

via Inc.com by Matthew Jones

Be honest with yourself.

You are the problem–the one creating your own suffering. You–the voice in your head reading this, thinking about past experiences, and dreaming of the future–are the only one responsible for your pain, discomfort, and limitations.

It’s a difficult truth to stomach. Because from your point of view, you’re both the person in control and the victim to life’s unfair circumstances. It all depends on the situation.

When things are going well, you’re the captain of your ship. Avoiding obstacles and navigating your way through uncharted terrain. But when things aren’t going well, you are the victim to a cruel and unrelenting ocean.

You can’t have it both ways.

You can’t rightfully take responsibility when things are going well and then evade it when difficult circumstances occur. That’s called immaturity–an affliction from which we all suffer.

As a coach working with executives and entrepreneurs, one of my most important functions is pointing out when clients are avoiding taking responsibility for themselves. To highlight when they are dismissing thoughts and feelings that they need to experience. And to teach them how to let go of thoughts, feelings, and actions that are no longer serving their best interest.

The faster we stop doing things that prevent our growth, the faster we improve. It is that simple.

To help accelerate your growth, I’ve identified 10 things that you must stop doing. Read the list below to discover 10 ways to stop being your own worst enemy.

1. Stop pretending that you are a powerless victim to which bad things happen.

As long as you are conscious, have the ability to understand decisions, and can communicate your decision, you have the ability to make important decisions about your life. Start appreciating the power of your decisions. And make them wisely.

2. Stop fantasizing about a future that won’t occur if your current behaviors continue.

Daydreams are nice, but when your actions aren’t leading you towards the manifestation of those ideals, you’re just lying to yourself. At that point, you’re avoiding reality and pretending that you’ll be happy some day in the future, while simultaneously not making any real changes. That’s a recipe for unhappiness and regret.

3. Stop caring about what everyone else thinks. And Does. And says.

Don’t allow popular opinions to dictate your life–the masses are satisfied with a mediocre existence. Embrace your unique talents. Follow your intuition and do what works for you, even if it means breaking away from mainstream ideologies…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

How to Overcome Frustration: 3 Simple but Effective Steps

How to Overcome Frustration

Frustration. It winds you up and can take so much out of you.

Because it not only sucks energy but also distracts you and can steal quite a bit of time.

So what can you do?

Well, sometimes that frustration can actually be a positive and can give you a new idea or angle on things. Or it can give you the power to keep going just a little bit more until you reach your goal.

But when you start going in circles, when the frustration just makes you mad or your mind foggy and the day is starting to slip through your fingers then there are steps you can take.

There are ways to turn such a state of mind or day around.

Into something better. Into something more helpful. And into something that will make you feel better again.

Step 1: Be here now.

When you are frustrated then you are often somewhere in the future in your mind. Somewhere you wish you would be. Or you are reliving a stumble or failure from your past.

Snap out of those headspaces and calm down by focusing your mind and attention on what is now, right here at this moment.

You can do so by for example:

  • Focusing on your breathing. Sit down, close your eyes and just focus on the air going and out of your nose for 1-2 minutes. Take calm and slightly deeper breaths than usual and breathe with your belly and not your chest.
  • Focus on what is around you at this time. The sun shining in through your window. The kids playing out in the street and the cars and people going by. The smells and feeling of the clothes and warmth of the sun on your skin. Do this for 1-2 minutes to get your attention back to the present moment.

Step 2: Appreciate what you do have.

After you have pulled your attention back to where it can be most helpful focus it on what is still positive in your life.

The quickest and easiest way to do so is to focus it on appreciating what you do have.

A favorite of mine during this step is the important things we may sometimes take for granted.  Like for instance:

  • A warm home and a roof over your head.
  • Plenty of drinkable water.
  • Not having to go hungry.
  • Access to the internet.
  • Your friends and family.

Spend a few minutes on this and you’ll find much to be grateful for.

Step 3: Focus on what you can do right now.

With your attention in the present moment and your mood a more grateful and positive one it is now time to get constructive about what frustrates you.

You can do that by asking yourself:

What is one small step I can take right now to improve this situation?

It may be to see what you can learn from what frustrates you and to try another path towards your goal.

Or it could be to try one more time and to keep going (because not all things in life will come to you the first, second or third time you try).

Or it could be you simply realizing that you may have taken on a bit much lately or things have been tough and that you need to take this evening or a few days to just relax, take care of yourself and perhaps simplify a bit.

So that you can recharge and then get back into moving towards what you want out of your life in a more focused way.

Bonus tips to reduce or prevent frustration:

Make note of your triggers and see what you can do about them.

What triggers your frustration?

Is it when your partner doesn’t take out the trash as you had agreed? Or when you’re not making progress as fast you like with your career or hobby? Or when your phone’s interrupting your work all too often?

Whatever it might be, first ask yourself:

What can I do to prevent this trigger in the first place?

For example, put your phone in silent mode or airplane mode and then get back to people during 1-3 scheduled times throughout your workday.

If you can’t prevent it then ask yourself:

What can I do to reduce the frustration caused by this trigger?

For instance, if you get frustrated with delays or waiting time while on your daily commute then ask your friends or google for answers for how others handle this common issue.

You may discover that one helpful solution is an audio book or podcast to listen to divert your attention and to get something good out of the situation while you’re waiting.

Remember: you’re human (and so is everyone else).

Perfectionism towards yourself or others does most often lead to plenty of frustration and disappointment. So set your standards both for others and yourself at a human level rather than at perfection.

Accept that sometimes you will make mistakes, have setbacks and not reach your goals when you’d like to. And so will people around you too.

Work from that perspective both with yourself and others and when there is a setback then focus on what you can learn to improve and to do better the next time.

Talk it out (instead of keeping it bottled up).

When you talk a frustration over with someone then it can help you to start seeing it from a more level-headed perspective as you vent.

And your friend that’s listening may have one or couple of good pieces of advice from his or her own experience. Or the two of you can start coming up with a plan for how you can overcome or at least reduce this frustrating situation.

Communicate as directly as you can.

People can’t read your thoughts and you can’t read theirs.

So avoid trying to hint, guess or be passive-aggressive and go for simple, straightforward and calm communication as best you can.

It can be difficult to do right at that moment but it will most often save you a lot of unnecessary frustration, tension and misunderstandings in your relationships.

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

7 habits to ditch before you get too far in to 2018

via FastCompany by Gwen Moran

January 1  is often a time when people set goals and make plans for the next 12 months. However, it’s just as important to your health and happiness–as well as the accomplishment of your resolutions and goals–to think about what you’re not going to do anymore.

“We all have a million habits. Half of them are probably not great habits, but it’s important to understand which habits are blocking you from your important goals,” says consultant Robert “Bob” O’Connor, author of Gumptionade: The Booster for Your Self-Improvement Plan.

As you’re making your list of what you want to do in the New Year, don’t forget to also think about what you don’t want to do anymore. Here are seven habits to consider ditching when the door closes on 2017.

STRIVING FOR THE WRONG THINGS

Many professional goals are designed to achieve traditional measures of success–a higher-ranking job, more money, or other trappings that tell people we’ve “made it.” O’Connor thinks that’s the wrong focus. Instead of focusing on how to be more successful, instead look at how you can be better at what you do.

“Success has often to do a lot to do with luck, and it certainly has to do with other people’s opinions, both of which are outside of your control. If you focus on excellence, you are focused on something that is within your control,” he says. So, work on your craft. Get better at what you do. Look for areas where you can improve and create a game plan to address them…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Here’s how you can maintain positivity all year!

Happiness is…managing negative moods.

Happiness is…maintaining positive moods and a positive attitude.

Happiness is…something that requires constant work.

And happiness is…something you can enjoy more of if you do the following –

via CBC by Nicole Mahabir

During the winter months emotions can mirror the weather, feeling heavy, cold, dark and stuck. Personal motivation and inspiration may become scarce, and our hope to keep a positive perspective can turn into the tunnel vision of how to simply cope with “what isn’t working.”

Keeping a positive view on life is not pretending to be happy and hopelessly self-affirmed (I think I can, but deep down inside, I don’t really believe I can) it’s seeing things as they are, with a positive outlook about how we can create a beneficial change in our lives.

When we begin to focus on the areas of life that are not working, we can become overwhelmed and feel helpless. Seeing things as they are, not worse than they are, can help us to clearly realize the actions that need to be taken to create the change that we want. Shifting your focus to positive action, is a great way to start turning things around, for a better day.

The Mayo Clinic writes that “positive thinking lowers the rate of depression, increases longevity, gives greater resistance to the common cold, and produces better coping skills during times of stress.” An optimistic approach also creates a broader outlook in terms of seeing what is possible or achievable in life.

This year, if you want to creating lasting impactful change, you must first face the inhibiting thoughts and emotions that serve you no longer. The Dalai Lama wisely and simply states, that “Destructive emotions and thoughts do not bring inner peace.” Mindful tools can help you to face your thoughts, emotions and reality head on. They are not an escape or distraction. Instead of replacing your feelings with the entertainment of being busy, a new relationship, or another goal to achieve, start by having the courage to observe the root cause of your feelings.

The first step is to gain clarity. Then, you can create meaningful and lasting change from a place of courage, optimism and conviction. You can be positive that it may uncover the best version of you…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Monday, January 15, 2018

4 new beliefs for a surprising boost in happiness!

via Eric Barker

Traffic upsets you. People upset you. Your job upsets you… Wrong, wrong and wrong.

Actually, none of those things upset you. Your beliefs about them do. That’s what the ancient Stoic philosophers believed.

From The Daily Stoic:

“People are not disturbed by things, but by the views they take of them.” – Epictetus

Let’s say you expect something to cost $90. Turns out it costs $80. You’re thrilled. But if you expect it to cost $30 and it costs $80, you want to murder someone. Price didn’t change. Your belief did. And that determined your reaction.

Oh, and science agrees with the Stoics here. Big time. Albert Ellis was a psychologist and he took the ideas of the Stoics and weaponized them into some of the most effective therapies that professionals use today.

How big a deal was Albert? According to a survey of psychologists he was the 2nd most influential psychotherapist ever. Sigmund Freud came in third. Here’s what Wikipedia says about his system:

In general REBT is arguably one of the most investigated theories in the field of psychotherapy and a large amount of clinical experience and a substantial body of modern psychological research have validated and substantiated many of REBTs theoretical assumptions on personality and psychotherapy.

And Albert says your beliefs are what cause the majority of unhappiness, anger, and anxiety you experience. Problem is, some of these beliefs are sneaky.

You don’t even realize they’re there. If I told you that you believed them, you’d deny it. But they’re often dictating your reactions — and making you miserable in the process.

So what are some of the most common problematic beliefs Albert identified – and how do we fix them?

Let’s get to it…

#1: “This shouldn’t be happening!”

This is the big one. Here’s how Albert describes the #1 irrational belief we all too often hold:

“People and things should always turn out the way I want them to and if they don’t, it’s awful, terrible, and horrible, and that’s not fair.”

Sounds ridiculous. You would never say that, right? Problem is, you often believe it without realizing it.

Say I tell you this toaster over here almost never works. You try to use the toaster. It doesn’t work. Do you get furious and throw the toaster at me? No. Reality met expectations. No surprises. No emotional outburst. Now let’s apply that same logic in a different scenario…

You know the world is not always a fair place, right? But then something unfair happens and… you go ballistic. Does that make sense? Nope.

If you really believed the world wasn’t always fair and the world promptly delivered some unfairness, you wouldn’t get all bent out of shape. Reality met expectations. But what you really believe is the world shouldn’t be unfair to you. And that, my dear friend, is crazy talk.

Here’s Albert:

We know the world is not fair, yet we still get overly upset when it’s unfair to us. We start thinking, very early on, that the world should be fair to us in particular… The “upsetness” doesn’t make the problem go away or solve anything (as a matter of fact, you probably make poorer decisions, and deal with others less effectively), but you don’t question your reaction because it seems so natural.

So how do you stop getting angry when life (which you acknowledge is unfair) does exactly what you said it would (and acts unfairly)? You need to change that underlying belief — the one you didn’t know you had.

Next time you find yourself getting upset, notice it. Pause. And then:

  • Identify the underlying belief: “Uh-oh. I’m believing that this unfair life must treat me fairly, aren’t I?”
  • Dispute that belief: “Is this belief rational?” No. Uh-uh. No way, no how.
  • Replace the belief: So what’s a more reasonable stance? “I would prefer to be treated fairly, but I know things aren’t always going to be to my liking. I’m not surprised and I’m not going to lose my cool.”

(To learn more about the science of a successful life, check out my bestselling book here.)

Okay, so outside events aren’t always gonna go your way and holding an underlying belief that is aligned with that can make life’s ups and downs much easier to manage.

But what beliefs about your own behavior does Ellis say regularly cause you problems?

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Sunday, January 14, 2018

Are you a self-critic? Here are 7 ways to overcome this bad habit!

So many of us rob ourselves of happiness and contentment by constantly criticising ourselves.

So many of us working for more happiness are our own worst enemies.

But there is another way. And this other way can allow you to enjoy more happiness, peace, satisfaction and more…

via Inc.com by Amy Morin

Your private inner dialogue can either be a powerful stepping stone or a major obstacle to reaching your goals. If you constantly make negative predictions like, “I’m going to mess up,” or you call yourself names, your self-talk will rob you of mental strength.

Your thoughts affect how you feel and how you behave. The way you think has the power to become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Thinking, “I’ll never get this job,” may cause you to feel discouraged as you walk into an interview. Consequently, you may slump your shoulders, stare at the floor, and make a poor first impression–and inadvertently sabotage your chances of success.

If you have a harsh inner critic, you’re not alone. Self-doubt, catastrophic predictions, and harsh words are common. But, you don’t have to be a victim of your own verbal abuse.

Although there are many exercises that we use in therapy to help people change the way they think, here are seven ways to tame your inner critic:

1. Pay attention to your thoughts.

You’re so used to hearing your own narration that it’s easy to become oblivious to the messages you’re giving yourself. Start paying close attention to your thoughts and you may discover that you call yourself names or talk yourself out of doing things that are hard.

It’s estimated that you have around 60,000 thoughts per day. That’s 60,000 chances to either build yourself up or tear yourself down. Learning to recognize your thought patterns is key to understanding how your thinking affects your life.

2. Change the channel.

While problem-solving is helpful, ruminating is destructive. When you keep replaying a mistake you made in your head over and over again or you can’t stop thinking about something bad that happened, you’ll drag yourself down.

The best way to change the channel is by getting active. Find an activity that will temporarily distract you from the negative tapes playing in your head.

Go for a walk, call a friend to talk about a different subject, or tackle a project you’ve been putting off. But refuse to listen to your brain beat you up…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

If you can find answers to these 10 tough questions you’ll set yourself up for success and happiness…

Do you want more happiness and success in 2018?

Are you looking for answers?

If so, then happiness and success can be yours IF AND WHEN you find answers to these tough but essential questions…

via Inc.com by Jessica Stillman

According to science, if you want to actually keep your New Year’s resolution, it’s better to start it February first. Why? Because the hubbub of celebrations and back-to-work chaos in January often gets in the way of thoughtful commitment to our goals.

Whether you take that advice or not, it points to a powerful truth. The holidays are actually a lousy time for serious reflection. There are just too many distractions. It’s a fact I’ve been reminded of this week. As the festive period ends, I’ve felt a creeping need for deeper consideration of the year just past and the one just starting.

What changes do I need to make? Am I using my time well? Are my values lined up with my actions? These are the types of questions that are tiptoeing into my head as things quiet down. But what’s the best way to dig into these tough but important matters?

Thankfully, my job offers me the perfect excuse to comb the internet for the best questions to spur deep and valuable thinking about how to position yourself for real success in the coming year. Here are some of the best I turned up:

1. What advice would your 80-year-old self give your current self?

Several coaches and experts suggest variations on this question, but perhaps its most famous proponent is Jeff Bezos. He decided to leave a lucrative career in banking to start Amazon by considering what his 80-year-old self would think of this life-changing decision. He concluded that while his imagined elderly Bezos would regret not giving his youthful dreams a shot, he wouldn’t be much bothered by trying and failing (science backs up Bezos’s intuition). Maybe imagining your future self can yield similar insights.

2. What one event, big or small, in the past year are you going to tell your grandchildren about?

Not all reflection is about goal setting. Sometimes what you need isn’t to change your life. Instead, it’s a new perspective on your current one. Was that horrible, terrible, really bad thing that happened to you this year actually as big a deal as you first imagined? Did the things (or purchases) that you expected to bring you joy actually do so? Are the things that you spend most of your time on actually the most important things? Answering this question — from the unlikely source of a fashion blog — might prove insightful…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Saturday, January 13, 2018

5 ways to become more mentally tough

Happiness isn’t about being happy ALL the time.

And happiness isn’t just about focusing on the good and enjoying the good times.

Happiness is about positive emotion and gratitude and attitude and more…but it’s also about coping with challenges and bouncing back from adversity well.

Happiness is, therefore, also about mental toughness…

via Business Insider by Amy Morin

New Year’s resolutions aren’t particularly effective—in fact, most people give them up by mid-January. The reason resolutions fail is because people set big goals to change their lives without working on the mental strength they’ll need to succeed.

So this year, as the resolution you set on December 31st falls by the wayside, don’t be too hard on yourself. Instead, take a step back and commit to building the mental muscle you need to achieve your goals.

Here are five things you can start doing now to make yourself mentally stronger this year…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Friday, January 12, 2018

If you haven’t set your 2018 goals yet, or even if you have, ask yourself these key questions before doing anything else!

Happiness. Success. Goals, 2018…

…are you all set to go? Have you already started?

Either way, if you really want to achieve your 2018 goals, and enjoy as much happiness and success as you deserve, then before going any further you really should ask yourself these 7 questions…

via Forbes by Henna Inam

The end of December is a great time to step back to reflect on the year before the frenzy of a new year starts again. One of the activities I cherish the most (and recommend to my executive coaching clients) is to do a personal year-end review.

Doing a personal review is critical before you set new year goals because it helps you set smarter goals . You can assess what’s important and tap into your motivators to help you achieve those goals. It is also critical to setting more authentic goals that are in alignment with values and priorities.

Here are seven questions I recommend we each ask ourselves:

What were moments of greatest joy and fulfillment? This is a great question to start with as it puts us in a positive and appreciative state of mind. It helps us reflect on what is good in our lives as well as gives us insight on what’s fulfilling to us. As we reflect on the people and activities that brought us this fulfillment we learn about what energizes us in both our personal and professional lives. We may find clues to our leadership purpose (link) within what serves others while also energizing us. We remind ourselves about what we want more of in the coming year.

What was challenging? As we reflect on the challenges we faced, we can remind ourselves that life doesn’t always bring us what we desire. We also remind ourselves that we can be resilient in the face of challenge. Our taking time to acknowledge challenges can also help unlock difficult emotions which we may have avoided. As we process this emotion, we recognize that some of our best qualities of courage, perseverance, patience, selflessness, grace, and strength are borne out of challenge. Without those challenges we wouldn’t be who we are today. This question helps us notice and honor our qualities of character, celebrate who are becoming, and be more grounded in values that are important to us…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

One of the best things you can do to live a happier and more fulfilling life

Are you as happy as you want to be?

Are you living your best possible life?

Happiness and fulfilment can be yours, more often, if you apply this one, powerful strategy…

via Inc.com by Jeff Haden

Stories have power. Stories shape the way we think, the way we feel, the way we respond to certain situations… stories matter.

Especially the stories we tell ourselves.

(That’s an underlying premise of Stoicism. Stoicism has nothing to do with being stone-faced and not showing emotion; Stoicism is a practical philosophy that says while we can’t control everything that happens, we can control how we respond.)

How you decide to respond, to whatever happens around you and to you, is up to you — and responding the right way is a lot easier if you tell yourself the right stories, especially about yourself.

That’s the premise of a cool new book by Bruce Kasanoff and Amy Blaschka, I Am: Escape Distractions, Unlock Your Imagination and Unleash Your Potential. Their goal is to shift the stories you tell yourself, not just from negative to positive but at a deeper level so you can unlock your imagination, creativity, and aspirations.

Bruce and Amy don’t target your rational, logical, orderly side; plenty of books do that. Instead, they trust the power of your brain and heart to come up with amazing possibilities — to let you wander, explore, imagine, and experience as you discover ways to unlock your full potential.

Sound like a tall order? Maybe not. Here’s one of my favorite portions of the book, partly because it’s about willpower and determination (persistence is critical for achieving any huge goal) but also because I tried it — and it works…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Thursday, January 11, 2018

For more happiness and better mental health…get outside and in to nature

When it comes to happiness and mental health, the focus is often on “internal” strategies – meditation, attitude etcetera

And although these “internal” strategies are undoubtedly important, there are some “external” strategies that can also be very powerful.

We know, for example, that happiness and mental health can be boosted by getting outside; literally outside. Not just out of your head but out into nature…

via Psychology Today by Douglas LaBier

From observations in psychotherapy we know that mental health and well-being become elevated when people experience some kind of engagement or connection with the larger world, outside of themselves. That is, when you extend yourself, your perceptions, beyond focusing primarily on your own self — your needs, worries, regrets or desires for the future.

Now, a new empirical study(link is external) finds evidence in support of what we see clinically. It found that virtually any form of immersion in the natural world, outside of your internal world, heightens your overall well-being and well as more positive engagement with the larger human community.

The research, described here(link is external), is from the University of British Columbia. It highlights, in my view, an essential dimension of true “mental health” – the realm beyond healing and managing conflicts and dysfunctions (as important as they are). Mental health includes the capacity to move “outside” of yourself, and thereby Increase and broaden your mental and emotional perspectives about people and life in general. That’s the realm that grows, for example, from meditation – the mindfulness state of being grounded in awareness of the present moment. It’s a kind of buffer zone between being pulled by emotions and thoughts about the past, or into anticipations about the future…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Friends with benefits

We know that good quality relationships is key to happiness.

We also know that positive connections enhances resilience and mental health.

But in addition to health and happiness, friendships provide additional and important benefits…

via the Washington Post by Judith Graham

Ask Edith Smith, a proud 103-year-old, about her friends, and she’ll give you an earful.

There’s Johnetta, 101, whom she’s known for 70 years and who has Alzheimer’s disease. “I call her every day and just say, ‘Hi, how are you doing?’ She never knows, but she says hi back, and I tease her,” Smith said.

There’s Katie, 93, whom Smith met during a long teaching career with Chicago Public Schools. “Every day we have a good conversation. She’s still driving and lives in her own house, and she tells me what’s going on.”

Then there’s Rhea, 90, whom Smith visits regularly at a retirement facility. And Mary, 95, who doesn’t leave her house anymore, “so I fix her a basket about once a month of jelly and little things I make and send it over by cab.” And there are Smith’s fellow residents at a Chicago seniors community, whom she recognizes with a card and a treat on their birthdays.

“I’m a very friendly person,” Smith said, when asked to describe herself.

That may be one reason this lively centenarian has an extraordinary memory for someone her age, suggests a recent study highlighting a notable link between brain health and positive relationships…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

The ONE THING that will INCREASE your happiness this year!

via Inc.com by Marcel Schwantes

Positive psychology has got me hooked. This explosive field’s body of research is telling us that if we desire a life of happiness, and if we truly want to experience its psychological, physical, and social benefits, we need to train our brain to the “positive.” This can only be done through intentional action and choice. Yes, every day.

Shawn Achor, one of the world’s leading experts on the connection between happiness and success, said this in his viral TED talk:

What we’re finding it that It’s not necessarily reality which shapes us, it’s the lens through which your brain views the world that shapes your reality, and if we can change the lens not only can we change your happiness we can change ever single educational and business outcome at the same time.

90 percent of your long-term happiness is predicted not by the external world, but by the way your brain processes the world. And if we change it, if we change our formula for happiness and success, we can change the way that we can then affect reality.

Do you work in a challenging and not so civil setting? Is conflict among teams high? Are people not appreciated for their work? What if we could employ simple, but rare, workplace practices to help shift how our brain processes and views the immediate world around us, so we’re happier and more productive?

…interested? Keep reading the full & original article HERE

13 Powerful Ways to Overcome Self-Doubt (So You Can Finally Move Forward in Life)

“Our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt.”
William Shakespeare

Self-doubt can be a troubling and persuasive voice that holds you back.

It holds you back from seizing your opportunities.

It makes getting started or finishing things harder than they need to be.

Sure, it can sometimes be useful as it helps you to soberly see your current limitations or simply recognize a half-baked or bad idea. But mostly, it holds you back in life.

So how can you get around that, how can you overcome those times of self-doubt so that you can move forward once again?

In this article I’ll explore 13 tips and habits that have helped me to decrease that destructive inner voice.

1. Say stop.

First, when your inner doubts bubble up, be quick. Don’t let them spin out of control or grow from a whisper to a stream of discouraging sentences. Instead, talk back to that doubtful part of yourself.

In your mind, say or shout something like: No, no, no, we are not going down that road again.

By doing so you can disrupt the thought pattern and stop that inner self-doubter from taking over.

2. Look to the past and awash yourself in the memories.

Be real with yourself and ask yourself:

How many times when I doubted myself or feared something would happen did that negative thing come into reality after I still took action?

The answer for me – and probably for you too – is not very often at all.

Self-doubts are most often just monsters in your head that your mind may use to keep you from making changes and to keep you within the comfort zone.

If you look to the past and see how well things have gone many times despite those self-doubts then it become easier to let go of them or to ignore them and to focus on the more likely positive outcome and to take action.

3. Talk to someone about it.

When you keep your thoughts on the inside they can become distorted, exaggerated and not very much in line with reality or reasonable expectations.

This is very much true when it comes to self-doubting thoughts.

So let them out into the light. Talk to someone close to you about your self-doubts.

Just letting them out and saying them out loud can often help you to hear how exaggerated these thoughts have become. And by talking about those doubts with someone that is supportive you can get a change in perspective.

4. Don’t get stuck in the comparison trap.

If you compare yourself to other people all too often, to their successes and especially to their high-light reels that they share on social media then self-doubt can quickly creep up.

A better way to go about things is to compare yourself to yourself. To see how far you have come. To see what you’ve overcome.

And to see how you’ve kept going, succeeded and grown as a human being.

5. Start keeping a journal.

Keeping a journal can be a helpful habit for many reasons. When it comes to self-doubts it can help you to:

  • Keep a realistic record of your life. And help you to remember the positive things, the successes you have had and how you have overcome obstacles if you are prone to remembering things with a negative slant.
  • Gain clarity more easily. It is often easier to alleviate fears and doubts and to gain clarity if you have an issue laid out on paper or in a computer document rather than if you try to go through it all in your mind. By making lists of pros and cons, going through your thoughts and emotions and similar events from the past and by writing down different perspectives on the issue it becomes easier to find solutions and to see your challenge in a clearer and more level-headed way.

6. Remember: people don’t care that much about what you do or say.

When you worry about what others may think or say if you do something then the self-doubt can quickly become stronger and you get stuck in inaction and in fear.

When that happens remind yourself that the truth is that people don’t really care that much about what you do or not do.

They have their hands full with thinking about themselves, their kids and pets, jobs and upcoming sports matches and with worrying about what people may think of them.

7. What someone said or did might not be about you (or about what you think it is).

When someone criticizes you then it’s easy to start doubting yourself. When someone rejects you and you don’t get a second date after that first one that you think went pretty well then it’s not so strange to get down on yourself.

But what if what he or she said or did isn’t really about you at all?

Perhaps your co-worker that verbally lashed out at you is having a bad day, month or marriage.

And you might not have gotten that second date because the other person’s mom got sick and he had to focus on that or because he reconnected with his ex-girlfriend and wanted to give their relationship another shot.

You don’t know everything that’s going on in another person’s life. And the world doesn’t revolve around you. So be careful so you don’t misinterpret and build blame and doubt within without any reason.

8. Get a boost of optimism.

Let someone else’s enthusiasm, motivation and constructive optimism flow over to you.

Spend 20 minutes with a an audio book, a podcast or a book that gives you that. Tim Ferriss’ podcast has helped me with this recently and  I’ve over the years often listened to audio books by Brian Tracy to get this boost.

This quick 20 minute session can greatly help you to shift your self-doubts into optimism and into thinking constructively about your challenge.

9. See a setback as temporary.

When you have a setback then you may start to see things through a negative and dark lens. You might see this current setback as something that will simply be your new normal.

This way of looking at things can trap you in thinking that there’s no point in continuing to take action.

So instead:

  • Remember: You are not a failure just because you failed. Setbacks happen to everyone who take chances. It is simply a part of living life fully. Sometimes things go well and sometimes they don’t. So don’t make a failure into this huge thing or into your identity.
  • Ask yourself: what is one thing I can learn from this setback? Use the mistake or failure to your advantage and to move forward once again in smarter way.

10. Sharpen your skills.

If you, for instance, often get self-doubt before a presentation in school or at work then sharpen your presentation skills.

Read a few books about it and practice at home in front of a mirror or in front of a friend. Or join Toastmasters to get the experience or knowledge you need.

Then you’ll feel more confident, competent and relaxed in such situations.

11. Don’t beat yourself up about it.

A common way to handle self-doubt is to get angry at yourself and your lack of motion. To try to beat yourself up as a way to get yourself to move forward.

That does not – in my experience – help that much.

I have found that being kind and constructive when feeling self-doubt is a better choice. So I use kind and understanding words towards myself but I also ask myself:

What is one very small step I can take to move forward in this situation?

Then I take that very small step and start to step by step move towards where I want to go.

12. Celebrate that small step and win.

When you’ve taken one small step forward and you’re done with it then you have a win. It may be a small one but it’s still a win. So celebrate it.

Have a tasty snack or your favorite food for dinner, spend some time on your favorite hobby or buy yourself something you’ve wanted for some time now.

This will renew and recharge your motivation and make taking action feel more exciting and fun. And that will push self-doubts aside so that you can keep moving and get more small and bigger wins.

13. Remember: You can course-correct along the way.

Trying to plan every move you will make on a journey towards a goal or dream can become draining and lead to quite a bit of self-doubt.

And it it usually don’t work that well anyway since the best laid plans often start to fall apart a bit or need some change when they are confronted with reality.

So do a bit of rough planning and then start your journey.

And remember that you can always course-correct along the way towards what you want. Empowered by the new knowledge, experience and feedback you will get as you keep going on that path.

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

50 life hacks for better mental health

There are so many ways we can boost our happiness and mental health.

But sometimes we need a good reminder; else our mood and happiness suffer.

So here are 50 great life hacks for more happiness, improved mental health, and generally a better life…

via Psychology Today by Linda Esposito

Humans are unique, complicated creatures with unique, complicated minds. According to The National Science Foundation (NSF) we have between 12 and 50 thousand thoughts per day. That fact can make managing personal lives sticky. By internalizing a few psychological tenets and tips, you can drastically improve your chances of having more positively focused thoughts to make the most of your day.

1. Recognize all the times you got it right. Rather than wake up each morning anxious about what didn’t get done on the to-do list, focus on what’s going well. *Bonus: Make a list of three times you were gracious in the midst of meanness; three times you faced your fears and prevailed; three times you wanted to quit, but kept going.

2. Know that failures contain the recipes for success — Learn from your mistakes, gather your ingredients, do your thing.

3. Protect your emotional well-being day with the Big Three: Quality sleep, lots of water, and slow, deep-breathing.

4. Consider your options when catastrophic thinking threatens to derail your mood. Close your eyes (this helps to block out stimulation) and fill in the blanks: I am afraid of ________. The worst-case scenario would be  ________. On a scale of 1-10, the likelihood of this happening is  ________. If this happens, I can do ________ and ________ and ________, instead of worry, feel helpless or stuck.

5. Smile more. While it’s not easy to keep smiling when stressed out, studies report doing exactly that has health benefits. When recovering from a stressful situation, study participants who were smiling had lower heart rates than those with a neutral expression…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Monday, January 8, 2018

How to understand and cultivate real self-awareness

To be happy, one needs to know oneself – the good and the bad.

Happiness, therefore, requires knowledge of oneself and one’s attributes.

The good news is that we can become more self-aware and as a result, happier!

So happiness seekers, read on to learn more about what self-awareness REALLY is and HOW to cultivate it…

via the Harvard Business Review by Tasha Eurich

Self-awareness seems to have become the latest management buzzword — and for good reason. Research suggests that when we see ourselves clearly, we are more confident and more creative. We make sounder decisions, build stronger relationships, and communicate more effectively. We’re less likely to lie, cheat, and steal. We are better workers who get more promotions. And we’re more-effective leaders with more-satisfied employees and more-profitable companies.

As an organizational psychologist and executive coach, I’ve had a ringside seat to the power of leadership self-awareness for nearly 15 years. I’ve also seen how attainable this skill is. Yet, when I first began to delve into the research on self-awareness, I was surprised by the striking gap between the science and the practice of self-awareness. All things considered, we knew surprisingly little about improving this critical skill.

Four years ago, my team of researchers and I embarked on a large-scale scientific study of self-awareness. In 10 separate investigations with nearly 5,000 participants, we examined what self-awareness really is, why we need it, and how we can increase it. (We are currently writing up our results for submission to an academic journal.)

Our research revealed many surprising roadblocks, myths, and truths about what self-awareness is and what it takes to improve it. We’ve found that even though most people believe they are self-aware, self-awareness is a truly rare quality: We estimate that only 10%–15% of the people we studied actually fit the criteria. Three findings in particular stood out, and are helping us develop practical guidance for how leaders can learn to see themselves more clearly…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Sunday, January 7, 2018

12 ways you can make 2018 the year you learn real self-love

Happiness is NOT selfishness.

Happiness is NOT narcissism.

Happiness is NOT “me, me, me”!

But happiness IS appropriate self-love and self-compassion and here are 12 great ways you can make 2018 a more self-loving and happier year…

via Positively Positive by Laura Fenamore

It’s January, and a whole new year lies ahead of us!

This is a time when many of us make resolutions for positive changes in our lives – a tradition that can be both exciting and overwhelming… or even disheartening as we consider our current state of being, and the reasons we wish to change.

My intention as a body image expert and self-love ambassador is to give you the tools you need to strengthen yourself in heart, mind, and spirit. You don’t need to wait for a New Year’s Resolution. There is no time like the present to embrace change with those we love… and with ourselves.

The following tips are some helpful changes you can make so that 2018 is your best year yet!

1. Accept your fabulous self just as you are. And please don’t downplay your worth by comparing yourself to others. Ever. We are all unique individuals, and such comparison is a waste of energy. Go grab my self love tools to utilize TODAY.

2. Take complete responsibility for your circumstances and your outcomes. You are where you are today because of choices you have made in the past. But the good news is that you also decide where you will be tomorrow through the choices you make today.

3. Erase the graffiti of negative self-talk. Scrape off the layers of demeaning words and insults. Then give yourself a fresh coat of positive self-talk. When you continuously offer yourself morale-boosting feedback, you will feel happier and freer about who you are…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Just 24 Hours to Go to Until Stop Procrastinating Now Closes

“A year from now you may wish you had started today.”
Karen Lamb

Just a quick heads up today.

There’s only 24 hours left until the registration for The Stop Procrastinating Now Course closes.

And then it won’t be open for enrollment again until the fall of 2018.

Until 1.00 p.m EST (that’s 18.00 GMT) on Monday the 8th of January you can still join it.

So if you are interested in that – and in getting the free bonus course 31 Days to a Simpler Life worth $27 if you join the Standard Edition of the course and 6 additional bonuses plus The Power of Positivity program (value $27) if you
enroll in the Advanced Edition – then now is the time to take action.

Click here to learn more about Stop Procrastinating Now and to join it before the doors close

Saturday, January 6, 2018

Find your purpose for a good AND healthy life

Happiness is a life lived on purpose.

Happiness is living a good life.

Happiness is health and wellbeing.

Here’s how you can have it all…

via the NY Times by Dhruv Kullar

My favorite medical diagnosis is “failure to thrive.”

Not because patients are failing to thrive — that part makes me sad. But because of the diagnosis’s bold proposition: Humans, in their natural state, are meant to thrive.

My patient, however, was not in his natural state. Cancer had claimed nearly every organ in his body. He’d lost a quarter of his body mass. I worried his ribs would crack under the weight of my stethoscope.

“You know,” he told me the evening I admitted him. “A few years ago, I wouldn’t have cared if I made it. ‘Take me God,’ I would’ve said. ‘What good am I doing here anyway?’ But now you have to save me. Sadie needs me.”

He’d struggled with depression most of his life, he said. Strangely enough, it seemed to him, he was most at peace while caring for his mother when she had Parkinson’s, but she died years ago. Since then, he had felt aimless, without a sense of purpose, until Sadie wandered into his life.Sadie was his cat.

Only about a quarter of Americans strongly endorse having a clear sense of purpose and of what makes their lives meaningful, while nearly 40 percent either feel neutral or say they don’t. This is both a social and a public health problem: Research increasingly suggests that purpose is important for a meaningful life — but also for a healthy life…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Do you rob yourself of happiness with toxic self-criticism? If so, read on…

Happiness can be yours if you engage in the right types of positive behaviours.

But happiness will never be yours if you engage in toxic self-criticism; constantly undermining yourself and being negative about all and who you are!

So if you want more happiness, and mental strength among other things, check out this article with its 7 ways to overcome negative self-talk…

via Inc.com by Amy Morin

Your private inner dialogue can either be a powerful stepping stone or a major obstacle to reaching your goals. If you constantly make negative predictions like, “I’m going to mess up,” or you call yourself names, your self-talk will rob you of mental strength.

Your thoughts affect how you feel and how you behave. The way you think has the power to become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Thinking, “I’ll never get this job,” may cause you to feel discouraged as you walk into an interview. Consequently, you may slump your shoulders, stare at the floor, and make a poor first impression–and inadvertently sabotage your chances of success.

If you have a harsh inner critic, you’re not alone. Self-doubt, catastrophic predictions, and harsh words are common. But, you don’t have to be a victim of your own verbal abuse.

Although there are many exercises that we use in therapy to help people change the way they think, here are seven ways to tame your inner critic:

1. Pay attention to your thoughts.

You’re so used to hearing your own narration that it’s easy to become oblivious to the messages you’re giving yourself. Start paying close attention to your thoughts and you may discover that you call yourself names or talk yourself out of doing things that are hard.

It’s estimated that you have around 60,000 thoughts per day. That’s 60,000 chances to either build yourself up or tear yourself down. Learning to recognize your thought patterns is key to understanding how your thinking affects your life.

2. Change the channel.

While problem-solving is helpful, ruminating is destructive. When you keep replaying a mistake you made in your head over and over again or you can’t stop thinking about something bad that happened, you’ll drag yourself down.

The best way to change the channel is by getting active. Find an activity that will temporarily distract you from the negative tapes playing in your head.

Go for a walk, call a friend to talk about a different subject, or tackle a project you’ve been putting off. But refuse to listen to your brain beat you up…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

4 more tips to help you achieve your goals in 2018

Happiness is achieving your goals.

Happiness is accomplishment and the satisfaction that comes with it.

Happiness will be yours if you put in to practice the tips in this great article…

via Inc.com by Gordon Tredgold

As we enter the goal setting season, I think it’s important that when you set your goals, you give yourself the best chance of success. Especially when you look at the failure rates, according to Forbes 92 percent of people failing to reach their targets. Here are five goal setting tips that I have used which will help you to join the 8 percent of people who achieve their goals.

Aim High, But Start Low, Celebrate and Keep Going

If you have read any of my previous articles, it will come as no surprise that I am a huge fan of setting big bold goals, and I think they are exciting and inspiring and can really help you to not only achieve but also exceed your full potential.

But when setting big bold goals, it can be daunting in the early days, and the best way to counter this is to break down your big goal into a series of small goals.

When I set the goal to run my first marathon in 6 months, my first goal was to run for just 15 minutes per run in the first week and then just increase the time I ran by five minutes per week for next two months. Taking this approach allowed me to generate some early success, which allowed me to build momentum and increase confidence, which then encouraged me to raise the weekly increase by 10 minutes for the next two months and then 15 minutes per week for the last two months.

Taking these small steps and then just increasing by comparatively small amounts put me in the position where, after 24 weeks, I was able to run for over 4-hours which then allowed me to be successful in achieving my big bold goal.

When it comes to setting you big bold goal, the more you can slice that elephant the higher your probability of achieving it…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

How to achieve every goal you set this year (almost guaranteed!)…

So you’ve set your New Year goals. And you want to be happier, more successful, achieve more etcetera…

…but how many times have you set similar goals and not accomplished all you wanted?

Happiness and success (in any shape or form) can be ours; but as we all know, it’s easier said than done.

So this year, in 2018, make sure you prioritise happiness and success and all goals you’ve set; and make sure you read this article to ensure you make it happen…

via Inc.com by Jeff Haden

New Year’s resolutions: We love to make them. And, statistics show, we almost never keep them. (Eighty percent of people who make New Year’s resolutions abandon them by the second week of February.)

Of course you could try using silence to accomplish a goal. Or you could try to sneak up on big goals. Those strategies help, but they are far from foolproof.

As I explain in my new book, The Motivation Myth: How Highly Successful People Really Set Themselves Up to Win, even if you’re trying to achieve a huge goal, the difficulty of achieving that goal isn’t really the problem.

The problem is your approach.

So let’s fix that.

1. Make your goal extremely specific.

Say you want to get in better shape. “Get in better shape” is an admirable notion, but what does it mean? Nothing; it’s just a wish.

“Lose 10 pounds in 30 days” is a specific, measurable, objective goal. Not only do you know what you want to accomplish, but setting a goal that way also allows you to create a process guaranteed to get you there: You can set up your workout schedule an your diet plan, and then all you have to do is follow the plan.

Another example: “Grow my business” sounds great but is also meaningless. “Get five new clients a month,” on the other hand, allows you to figure out what you need to do to land those clients.

Make sure you set a goal that allows you to work backward to create a process designed to achieve it. It’s impossible to know exactly what to do when you don’t know exactly what you want to achieve…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE

What if you were afraid of happiness; and didn’t even know it!

Happiness…we all want it.

Well, we think we all want it!

But what if you were afraid of happiness and weren’t even aware of your fears? This great article is well worth reading…

via the Huffington Post by Shannon Bradley-Colleary

You Might Be Blocking Happiness and Not Even Know It!

If you were raised in an unpredictable, volatile or drug-and-alcohol addicted home, you may have developed a Fear of Happiness.

In my family of origin, I learned that happiness, fun and gaiety could be swiftly followed by rage and/or withdrawal. As a result, I unconsciously began to fear Happiness, because sometimes it was followed by pain.

I also unconsciously attracted relationships that kept me in low-grade misery; a state of worry, anxiety and control, partly because I was fearful of too much good coming into my life. Then I’d actually have something to lose!

After working 12-step recovery, I fell in love with an emotionally available, kind man who was head over heels for me. This is when things got worse.

The happier I was in the relationship, the more terrified I became that something awful would happen to my love. I’d never felt so exposed and vulnerable.

How Do You Know if You’re Staying in a Toxic Relationship Because You’re Afraid to Be Happy?

Answer these questions:

1. When something good happens, do you downplay it because you worry the universe will take it away, or balance it out with something painful?

The cause of this might stem from being physically or emotionally abandoned by one of our important caregivers.

2. Do you feel shame when someone is kind to you, or something good happens to you, because you feel you’re not worthy?

When we were children, someone might’ve criticized us, and those voices live in our unconscious mind; constantly undermining our ability to feel worthy of love and happiness.

3. Were you taught Happiness is associated with laziness?

Many of us come from families where we’ve learned that if we’re happy we must be goofing off, not working hard enough, or not taking life seriously. Workaholism was our main value.

Choosing Happiness as a New Value

Below is a photo of me with my husband of sixteen years, because marrying him was the happiest choice I’ve ever made.

Yet I still have nightmares we’ve been separated; that I can’t find him; can’t dial the numbers on my phone to reach him; or that he doesn’t love me anymore.

One day we will be separated by death. It’s inevitable. But, I have to train myself not to push him away, or enact barriers to protect me from that inevitability.

Guarding myself against misery by shoving away happiness will not make the misery any less painful when we one day part. So I’m practicing happiness. Tentatively allowing myself to feel it — even if it scares the ever-loving shit out of me…

…keep reading the full & original article HERE