неделя, 2 декември 2012 г.

Adapting to changes


Change happens whether we want it to or not. Some people welcome change and find ways to turn the unexpected into an opportunity for growth. Others become frightened and simply react. How we handle the inevitable changes in life is key to living a life without fear. The right attitude can mean the difference between allowing unexpected life changes to keep us from achieving our goals or dealing with the changes and growing because of them.
When we are confronted with unforeseen changes in our lives, our first response may be to either run away from it or fight against it. Run or fight is an inborn survival instinct that occurs when we feel threatened. Fueled by adrenaline, the run or fight response is exhausting and leaves us feeling overwhelmed. However, there are steps we can take to gain control of our fear, embrace the challenge and turn adversity into an avenue for success.
Gaining Control
Our first response to sudden change is often panic. Rapid breathing, sweaty palms and eye twitching are all signs of extreme alarm which keeps us from dealing with change in a positive way.
Deep breathing is one of the easiest and most useful techniques we can use to calm and center ourselves.
Follow these deep breathing relaxation steps:
  • Sit up straight in a comfortable chair in a quiet, darkened room.
  • Close your eyes.
  • Try to make your mind blank. Don’t think about the challenges you are facing.
  • Inhale through your nose slowly and deeply while silently counting to five. Feel your lungs fill with air.
  • Exhale slowly through your mouth while counting to seven. Expel all the air from your lungs.
  • Repeat as often as necessary.
Physical exertion is another great way to regain calm. Take a walk or weed the garden. Being outdoors in nature is helpful but the treadmill or exercise bike will work, too. Remember to take deep breaths; refrain from shallow breathing while exercising.
1. Reach out to friends and loved ones. Simply having a cup of tea with a friend can greatly reduce that feeling of panic.
2. Get some sleep but don’t overdo it. Clear your mind and do some deep breathing before retiring at night. Get up at the same time each morning. Don’t use sleep to avoid dealing with the challenges you must face.
3. Eat lots of fruits and vegetables. Stay away from junk food, caffeine and sugars.
4. Other useful techniques to calm stress include meditation, a warm bath and aroma-therapy.
Once the panic response is under control, you can face the problem and think about solutions.
Meeting the Challenge
Give yourself time to adjust. Your mind and body will show you the way to meet the challenge if you listen. Your attitude makes all the difference when dealing with adversity. Train your mind to see the change as a way to make something positive happen. Do not entertain negative thoughts.
Ask for direction from your spiritual force. We are all part of a universe that is much bigger than we are. Whether you call the source God, the universe, nature or your inner self, you are connected to a spiritual source that can not only help you through life’s changes, but can point the way to success.
Write down different choices that you have in response to a change. Ask yourself the consequences of each response, both to yourself, your friends and family. Remember, you will only be successful in meeting this challenge if you stay true to your core beliefs and values.
Picture yourself in the best case scenario after you have succeeded at meeting this challenge. Believe it can happen.
How Change Becomes Success
Unexpected changes often take us by surprise. We may feel as if we have lost our foundation and or are swimming against a rip tide. But change can give birth to our greatest life successes if we open ourselves up to the possibility.
What are the secrets that turn life changes into life successes?
1. Remain true to yourself. Never compromise your beliefs even if it is expedient or seems like the only way out at the time.
2. Listen to your spiritual source. You have asked for help, be receptive when the answer comes.
3. Think outside of yourself. How will your choices affect your friends, family, community and the earth on which we live? You are part of a much larger world and if you make decisions that benefit all, you will benefit yourself.
4. Dream your dreams. Your dreams cannot become reality if you don’t allow yourself to dream.
5. Be patient. Turning change into success may not happen overnight. Knowing that your spiritual source, mind and body are all working together toward one goal will help you stay focused and, in the end, become successful.
6. Help others. While we may be going through change and adversity ourselves, it is through helping others that we truly grow and succeed.
Success is measured in different ways in our society. Most commonly, it is measured by how many cars or homes we own and how our possessions compare to our neighbor’s. The fact is that having money does not necessarily equal happiness. True happiness comes from meeting life’s changes and overcoming challenges while remaining true to ourselves, knowing that we have lived our lives to the fullest, that we have valued others and that we’ve made our planet a better place.

By Julian Burke in Management on September 11th, 2009

вторник, 13 ноември 2012 г.

Motivation for change…a sharp mind required


By Lynne Dean

We encounter constant changes throughout our life; it could be educational, health, relationships or financial, and of course with oneself. Maintaining or increasing one's sense of self-worth and happiness are strong incentives for these changes.

Too often trials and errors affect our self-esteem and therefore hinder true engagement in learning and changing. It's very comforting to have a routine, and very frightening to go forward to the unknown. Its takes courage and determination. This is nothing new. You have done it before, perhaps not deliberately but you have gone through many changes during your life.

Change is stressful. No doubt about it. Why not make it as stressless as possible? Try to consider the following:

Uderstand the intentions, motivations, and desires of your new endeavours. Acknowledge the strengths and constraint it will bring. Allow yourself to take risks and not to take any fall back personally. Remember trials and errors are part of learning and being alive.

Compel to understand, to appreciate one's feelings, fears and motivations; be sure to use such information to better your life. Use this information to guide your thinking and action.

Let go of negative thoughts, integrate new ideas with what you already know and use the new information to move forward. Be flexible, allow for new and different ways to achieve your goal, it might bring you different opportunities at the end. Why not supply yourself with options. Have some contingencies as backup plans, it will calm down this feeling of vulnerability.

Unfortunately too often as adults we want to do everything ourselves...mistakes. We are not alone; tons of people have been through changes, often similar to ours; seek and accept support from others. They experienced it, they might know something you haven't' thought about. Give it a try.

Don't disown your future, own it. You make your life, take it as a movie set if you like; you are the director, the main actor and the editor. How do you want the story to ensue?

Ask yourself those fundamental questions:
What am I like?
What do I want to be like?
What are my strengths?
What are my weaknesses?
What do I need?
What do I want?
Who could help me?
Want is my plan?

Know that you can achieve whatever you set your mind to. Now is an opportunity to reflect and act upon those thoughts. Changing is a means to an end, not an end in itself.

Until next time,be conscious, flexible in your approach and make yourself happy.

Instead of saying "I don't know"
Say "I'll find out".

Instead of seeing a problem for every answer,
Try seeing an answer for every problem

Instead of saying "That's not my job",
See what has to be done and do it.

Instead of making promises,
Make commitments

Instead of looking at what can't be done,
Look at what can be done

When a mistake is made, instead of saying "It wasn't my fault
Say "I was wrong".

Instead of side-stepping most issues,
Try making decisions

Instead of saying "I'm not as bad as a lot of others",
Say "I'm good, but not as good as I can be".

Instead of saying "That's the way it has always been done",
Say "There ought to be a better way".

Instead of saying "It may be possible, but it's too difficult",
Say "It may be difficult but it's not impossible".



понеделник, 24 септември 2012 г.

How to Take Responsibility & Stop Blaming Others (Even if Others are to Blame)

Teaching children how to take personal responsibility for themselves and their actions is a key part of most elementary and middle school curriculums. We teach our kids the importance of making the right choices when it comes to drugs and alcohol, tending to their studies and behaving in class. We teach them to take responsibility for their choices, and to make them carefully in their life ahead.


As adults, though, it seems many of us forget the lessons we learned as children -- that we make choices and our choices have consequences, which, more often than not, we are responsible for.

Most experts agree, taking personal responsibility for yourself is not only the adult thing to do, it's the right thing to do and one of the only ways you can remain the happy, healthy person you want to be.

What Happens if You Don't Take Personal Responsibility?

You know you are not accepting personal responsibility if you do the opposite: blame others for your problems, life situation, hardships, character flaws, and just about everything and anything else. Rather than accepting the "blame" or responsibility for how your life is, you make excuses. Everything and anybody is to blame -- except yourself.

Sound familiar? You may be blaming others more than you think. Have you ever:

• Blamed traffic/truck drivers/slow drivers for being late to an appointment?

• Blamed your hectic schedule for the reason you've put on a couple of pounds?

• Blamed your spouse for your bad day?

People who take responsibility, on the other hand, would have handled these situations as follows:

• Admitted that they should have left a few minutes earlier for their appointment.

• Acknowledged that, while being stressed because of a busy time, they've been skipping the gym and eating junk food more often.

• Accepted that no one is to blame for their bad day, other than themselves.

When you constantly blame others, view yourself as a victim and feel others are causing all of your hardships, you inevitably surround yourself with anger, resentment and negative thoughts -- all of which are surefire ways to bring on fatigue, sadness, stress and even chronic disease.

Blaming Others Brings on Chronic Stress

Harboring negative emotions and anger means you are living with chronic stress, the type that eats away at you little by little. Chronic stress is the type of stress that has been linked to fatigue, back pain, stomach upset and headaches, along with numerous more serious illnesses.

Signs You are Avoiding Personal Responsibility

It is often easy to spot someone else who blames others (they may be the one constantly complaining about how bad their life is, yelling at others, or harboring an overly negative outlook on life), but it can be more difficult to spot it in yourself. If you do any of the following as a matter of course, you may be avoiding personal responsibility.

• You dwell a lot on the past instead of looking toward the future.

• You almost never believe you are wrong. If you asked others to be completely honest, they'd say you believe you are never wrong.

• You use other people's irresponsible behavior to justify your own ("They're driving way over the speed limit, so why shouldn't I?").

• You believe apologizing is a sign of weakness (instead of what it really is … a sign of strength).

• You feel you have been dealt a "bad hand" in life.

• You view negative occurrences/relationships in your life as being out of your control.

• You don't think you can change anything in your life for the better.

• You believe life is unfair and often feel sorry for yourself.

How to Take Responsibility, Stop Blaming Others and Start Living Your Life

Everyone blames someone else at one time or another. Nobody's perfect. And you may even be thinking, "But it WAS my spouse's/parent's/boss' fault that I missed my plane/don't trust others/don't make enough money."

And it very well may be, but the key to living a long and happy life is knowing how to accept personal responsibility and not blame others -- even when it may be their fault. This does not mean you have to go through life letting others walk all over you. On the contrary, accepting personal responsibility means you have to take the high road and be the bigger person, even when it's hard. Here's how:

• Apologize when you're wrong (this means first accepting that you're not always right).

• Admit when you've made a mistake.

• Learn to forgive.

• Be open to the ideas and opinions of others.

• Identify the things in your life that you are not happy about, and do something to change them.

• Practice saying, "I am responsible." Eventually, you will start to believe it.

• Take smart risks, and realize that you are responsible for the outcomes.

• Adopt a positive outlook on life (assume that things will go your way).

• Recognize and embrace your own shortcomings, and ask others for help when you need it.

петък, 10 август 2012 г.

Морен бавен август

Много харесвам София през август. Ходиш денем по улиците в центъра и тук-таме се разминаваш с майки и деца, възрастни хора, чужденци или заблудени работещи, останали по неясни причини в града. Най-изумителното е, че ти се струва нереално тихо. Чуваш си стъпките, разговорите на старците пред шахматните дъски пред театъра, тежката лапа на морните кучета  и моторите на коли, глухи и далечни, сякаш идват от топлото социалистическо лято. Чуваш фонтана, веригата на велосипеда, преминаващ до теб и дори глухата въздишка на човека от пейката. Сякаш си в друга реалност-в същия град, но друго измерение, проекция на София на друго ниво. Някой е изключил стреса, махнал е ¾ от статистите, намалил е фоновия шум, направил е цветовете по-ярки и те е пуснал да се разхождаш сред тази мизансцена. От време на време ти се струва, че под асфалта е включен реотан, за ефект на танцуващ въздух, точно като от уестърн и краката ти силно негодуват. Целиш тежките сенки и си правиш ветрило с подръчни средства. Тръгнал си някъде, но не можеш да мислиш за крайната точка. Плуваш в безвремие.




А вечерите са приказни. Жегата стои, но вече по-ниско отпреди и тежко напомня за горещия ден. Гласовете са малко по-високи, стъпките-по-бавни. Цветовете се различават само под уличните лампи, а през останалото време силуети крачат по тротоарите. Дъх на морен летен град, събудил се късно за живот. Обичам София през август.



сряда, 1 август 2012 г.

To play or not to play?

Как сте се чувствали, когато човек играе роля във ваше присъствие и вие напълно го осъзнавате? Дали седите тихо и наблюдавате изпълнението, включвате се в играта или безпощадно го изобличавате? А случвало ли ви се е на вас да играете?




Често се замислям за цялата безразсъдност на тези ситуации. До каква степен усложняват общуването и колко нелеп е резултата от тях. Иска ми се хората да са по-открити. Иска ми се да няма предразсъдъци и комплекси и да цари непосредственост в общуването. Иска ми се хората да посмеят открито да изразяват идеите и мислите си. Колко малко ще ни трябва тогава, за да се разбираме! Колко усилия и анализ ще ни бъдат спестени?



Пожелах да направя експеримент и да говоря напълно открито и без никакви скрити мисли. Реших се да се превърна само за ден в Кандид на Волтер, за да видя как това ще се отрази на средата, в която живея и дали ще ме линчуват някъде. И си останах с желанието. Не посмях. Истината заседна някъде в гърлото ми.



Истината е, че имаме нужда от тези роли, имаме нужда да се преструваме, да преувеличаваме, да скриваме. Обществото и необходимостта да се адаптираме в него, да бъдем приети и да постигнем даден статус ни е превърнало в лицемери. Защото никой, освен безумците, децата и майка ти не може да си позволи да ти каже цялата истина.



Ами да си поживеем в театъра. Дано пиесата ви хареса.





понеделник, 16 юли 2012 г.

Don’t Indulge. Be Happy



By ELIZABETH DUNN and MICHAEL NORTON
• HOW much money do you need to be happy? Think about it. What’s your number?


• Many of us aren’t satisfied with how much we have now. That’s why we’re constantly angling for a raise at work, befriending aged relatives and springing, despite long odds, for lottery scratch tickets.

• Is it crazy to question how much money you need to be happy? The notion that money can’t buy happiness has been around a long time — even before yoga came into vogue. But it turns out there is a measurable connection between income and happiness; not surprisingly, people with a comfortable living standard are happier than people living in poverty.

• The catch is that additional income doesn’t buy us any additional happiness on a typical day once we reach that comfortable standard. The magic number that defines this “comfortable standard” varies across individuals and countries, but in the United States, it seems to fall somewhere around $75,000. Using Gallup data collected from almost half a million Americans, researchers at Princeton found that higher household incomes were associated with better moods on a daily basis — but the beneficial effects of money tapered off entirely after the $75,000 mark.

• Why, then, do so many of us bother to work so hard long after we have reached an income level sufficient to make most of us happy? One reason is that our ideas about the relationship between money and happiness are misguided. In research we conducted with a national sample of Americans, people thought that their life satisfaction would double if they made $55,000 instead of $25,000: more than twice as much money, twice as much happiness. But our data showed that people who earned $55,000 were just 9 percent more satisfied than those making $25,000. Nine percent beats zero percent, but it’s still kind of a letdown when you were expecting a 100 percent return.

• Interestingly, and usefully, it turns out that what we do with our money plays a far more important role than how much money we make. Imagine three people each win $1 million in the lottery. Suppose one person attempts to buy every single thing he has ever wanted; one puts it all in the bank and uses the money only sparingly, for special occasions; and one gives it all to charity. At the end of the year, they all would report an additional $1 million of income. Many of us would follow the first person’s strategy, but the latter two winners are likely to get the bigger happiness bang for their buck.

• We usually think of having more money as allowing us to buy more and more of the stuff we like for ourselves, from bigger houses to fancier cars to better wine to more finely pixilated televisions. But these typical spending tendencies — buying more, and buying for ourselves — are ineffective at turning money into happiness. A decade of research has demonstrated that if you insist on spending money on yourself, you should shift from buying stuff (TVs and cars) to experiences (trips and special evenings out). Our own recent research shows that in addition to buying more experiences, you’re better served in many cases by simply buying less — and buying for others.
• Indulgence is often closely trailed by its chubby sidekick, overindulgence. While the concept of overindulgence is probably all too familiar to anyone who’s ever attended a Thanksgiving dinner, the word “underindulgence” doesn’t exist. (Type it into Dictionary.com, and you’ll be asked, “Did you mean counter intelligence?”) But research shows that underindulgence — indulging a little less than you usually do — holds one key to getting more happiness for your money.

• In a recent study conducted by our student Jordi Quoidbach, chocolate lovers ate a piece of this confection — and then pledged to abstain from chocolate for one week. Another group pledged to eat as much chocolate as they comfortably could and were even given a mammoth two-pound bag of chocolate to help them meet this “goal.”

• If you love chocolate, you might think that the students who absconded with the chocolaty loot had it made. But they paid a price. When they returned the next week for another chocolate tasting, they enjoyed that chocolate much less than they had the week before. The only people who enjoyed the chocolate as much the second week as they had the first? Those who had given it up in between. Underindulging — temporarily giving up chocolate, even when we have the cash to buy all we want — can renew our enjoyment of the things we love.

• The value of underindulgence casts a different light on the current debate over restricting sugary sodas. Driven by the childhood-obesity crisis, many school districts around the country have banished soda from their campuses. Leaving aside the potential health benefits of these initiatives, banning soda for a large chunk of the day may actually improve its taste. Researchers at Arizona State University demonstrated that people enjoy soda significantly more when they can’t have it right away. (The effect doesn’t hold for prune juice, a beverage that rarely incites overindulgence.)

• ¶Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s recent proposal to ban giant-size soda in New York City offers another intriguing route to underindulgence. Happiness research shows that, as the food writer Michael Pollan put it, “The banquet is in the first bite.” That first sip of soda really is delicious, catching our tongues by surprise with its bubbly sweetness. But our tongues and our minds quickly get used to repeated pleasures, and so the 39th sip is not as delightful as the first. Because limiting the size of sodas curtails these less pleasurable sips, Mayor Bloomberg’s proposal may improve our pleasure-to-calorie (and pleasure-to-coin) ratio, an overlooked benefit in the heated debate about the consequences of such initiatives for our freedom and our health.

• USING your money to promote underindulgence requires a shift in behavior, for sure. But another scientifically validated means of increasing the happiness you get from your money is even more radical: not using it on yourself at all.

• ¶Imagine walking down the street to work and being approached by our student Lara Aknin, who hands you an envelope. You open the envelope and find $20 and a slip of paper, which tells you to spend the cash on something for yourself by the end of the day. Sounds like a pretty sweet deal. Now imagine instead that the slip of paper told you to spend the cash on someone else. Being generous is nice, sure, but would using the money to benefit someone else actually make you happier than buying yourself the belt, DVD or apps you’ve been dying to get?

• Yes, and it’s not even close. When we follow up with people who receive cash from us, those whom we told to spend on others report greater happiness than those told to spend on themselves. And in countries from Canada to India to South Africa, we find that people are happier when they spend money on others rather than on themselves.

•  But what about individuals who are notorious for their struggles with sharing? Surely the emotional benefits of giving couldn’t possibly apply to very young children, who cling to their possessions as though their lives depended on it. To find out, we teamed up with the developmental psychologist Kiley Hamlin and gave toddlers the baby-equivalent of gold: goldfish crackers. Judging from their beaming faces, they were pretty happy about this windfall. But something made them even happier. They were happiest of all when giving some of their treats away to their new friend, a puppet named Monkey. Monkey puppets aside, the lesson is clear: maximizing our happiness is not about maximizing our goldfish. To be clear, having more goldfish (or more gold) doesn’t decrease our happiness — those first few crackers may provide a genuine burst of delight. But rather than focusing on how much we’ve got in our bowl, we should think more carefully about what we do with what we’ve got — which might mean indulging less, and may even mean giving others the opportunity to indulge instead.


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/08/opinion/sunday/dont-indulge-be-happy.html?_r=1



петък, 6 април 2012 г.

How to Boost Brain Power



Until just a few years ago, doctors believed that the brain stopped making new neural connections - meaning that the memory began to get irreversibly worse - when the body stopped developing, usually in the early 20s. And doctors knew that, like any other part of the body, neurons weaken as people age. Loss of brain function due to neural breakdown was assumed to be a normal, unavoidable part of aging. It turns out they were wrong.
In the past few years, it has become clear that you can, in fact, make new neurons starting in your 20s and continuing well into old age. You can literally rewire the brain with new parts as the older parts wear out. How?
There are lots of things you can do right now to preserve, protect and enhance your gray matter.

1. Physical exercise
A healthy body really does mean a healthy mind. In the last decade it became clear that regular exercise beneficially affects brain function. Exercise boosts brain power by stimulating formation of new brain cells (neurons), the process known as neurogenesis. Also, exercise strengthens connections between those cells. Researchers have found the areas of the brain that are stimulated through exercise are associated with memory and learning.
Physical exercise may even help prevent Alzheimer's disease. Several studies have confirmed that regular physical activity reduces the risk of cognitive decline and dementia in old age.

2. Lifelong learning - your brain is a learning machine
For most of us, after we graduate from high school or college, our pursuit of new knowledge bottoms out over time. We may be masters at what we do, but we aren't learning new things. There is clear evidence that education and learning produce favourable changes in the brain. Researchers believe that intellectual activity play a neuroprotective role against dementia. Some studies suggest that having a low level of formal education and poor linguistic skills is a risk factor for cognitive decline in later life.
But if you continue to learn and challenge yourself, your brain continues to grow, literally. Recent research have demonstrated that learning over time enhances memory and the survival of new brain cells. An active brain produces new connections between nerve cells that allow cells to communicate with one another. This helps your brain store and retrieve information more easily, no matter what your age.
How can you challenge yourself? Scientists agree that anything that is new and expands your knowledge will be effective:
Learning to play a musical instrument
Switching careers or starting a new one
Starting a new hobby, such as crafts, painting, biking or bird-watching
Learning a foreign language. According to the latest speaking more than one language may slow the aging process in the mind.
Staying informed about what's going on in the world
Learning to cook new dish
If you let your brain be idle, it's not going to be in the best health.




3. Mental stimulation
Stimulate your brain. Make sure you're actively problem-solving and having to use your memory. Just as physical activity keeps your body strong, mental activity keeps your mind sharp and agile. The more we think, the better our brains function - regardless of age. Without something to keep us mentally charged, our brains, like unused muscles, can atrophy, leading to a decline in cognitive abilities.
The study, conducted by researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, found that mentally active seniors reduced their risk of dementia by as much as 75 percent, compared to those who do not stimulate their minds. Researchers from the Princeton University found that simple cognitive stimulation such as Bingo can be of great value to the daily management of Alzheimer's patients.
Some good ways to stimulate your mind:
-Travel
-Going to museums
-Reading books, newspapers, or magazines
-Play 'thinking' games like cards, checkers, chess, crosswords, sudoku puzzles
-Scrabble or doing crossword puzzles
-Playing musical instruments
-Dancing
-Crafts such as drawing, painting, and ceramics
-Ditch the calculator once in while and forcing yourself to do the calculation
-Volunteering
”Researchers found that a woman's memory can be impaired for at least a year after giving birth, although the effects are minor.

4. Social interaction - People are good medicine
"Social interaction" can be measured by how often people talk on the phone with friends, neighbors and relatives, how often they get together with them, how many people they can share their most private feelings and concerns with.
Socializing may have a protective effect on the brain because it's a form of mental exercise. Not only does interacting with people stimulate the brain, but it can also keep you sharp, because dealing with people can be pretty challenging. Strong social ties have been associated with lower blood pressure and longer life expectancies. And having no social ties is believed to be an independent risk factor for cognitive decline in older persons
A U.S. team found that talking to another person for 10 minutes a day improves memory and test scores. They found that socializing was just as effective as more traditional kinds of mental exercise in boosting memory and intellectual performance. They also found that the higher the level of social interaction, the better the cognitive functioning. Social interaction included getting together or having phone chats with relatives, friends and neighbors.
In a study of more than 2,800 people ages 65 or older, Harvard researchers found that those with at least five social ties - church groups, social groups, regular visits, or phone calls with family and friends - were less likely to suffer cognitive decline than those with no social ties.
Men are one and a half times more likely than women to develop mild cognitive impairment (the transition stage before dementia




5. Sleep & Nap
Sleep plays a crucial role in brain development and growth. One of the explanations the science has come up with for the healing power of sleep is that sleep may contribute to neurogenesis, the formation of new nerve cells in the brain. New research in animals provides a clue about how the sleep deprivation harm the brains - reduces the number of new brain cells. Without sufficient sleep, neurons may not have time to repair all the damage, and so could malfunction during the day.
Sleep is necessary for the brain to process and consolidate knowledge and for memories to form. Neuroscientists say that during sleep the hippocampus (where memory is stored) becomes highly active and moves knowledge from short-term memory to long-term memory.
The memories laid down by the sleeping brain are of two kinds. Declarative memory is memory for information - facts, dates, and names. Procedural memory is what allows us to do things like play a musical instrument, ride a bicycle, or add up a bill. Scientists think these two types of memory are influenced by different parts of the sleep cycle. Slow wave sleep benefit mainly the consolidation of declarative memories. In contrast, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep seems to benefit procedural memory.
According to animal studies, when you perform a task, the brain cells fire in a certain sequence. If you then fall asleep, the same cells automatically fire in an identical sequence without being distracted or disrupted by incoming visual stimuli.
There is a consistent pattern: Learn something new during the day, consolidate what you have learned during a good night's sleep, then remember or perform the task better in the morning. However, sleep before learning is also critical in preparing the brain for next-day memory formation
Even a nap in the middle of the day may benefit some learning, according to a recent study5. Sleep appears to help "set" the declarative memories and make them easier to recall.

6. Stress management
Scientists believe people exposed to chronic stress tend to have elevated levels of cortisol - a hormone produced by the adrenal glands in response to acute and chronic stress. High cortisol levels are dangerous to the brain.
Some of the most impressive effects of the stress on brain are hippocampus atrophy, shrinkage of the hippocampus or prefrontal cortex (the area of the brain unique to humans), and even neural death in some brain regions. The hippocampus, a vital brain region for episodic, spatial, and contextual memory, has many cortisol receptors, which makes it especially susceptible to stress.
Severe stress lasting weeks or months can impair cell communication in the brain's learning and memory region. Increased stress hormones lead to memory impairment in the elderly and learning difficulties in young adults.
Short-term stress is also destructive. Researcher from the University of California have found short-term stress lasting as little as a few hours can impair brain-cell communication in areas associated with learning and memory. They found that rather than involving the widely known stress hormone cortisol, which circulates throughout the body, acute stress activated selective molecules called corticotropin releasing hormones, which disrupted the process by which the brain collects and stores memories.
Stress is a constant in our lives and cannot be avoided. So, stress management is the key, not stress elimination. Several ways to help you manage stress in your daily life:
See problems as opportunities
Get away from the noise
Exercise
Learn relaxation techniques such as yoga and meditation
Cut down on unnecessary responsibilities and avoid over-scheduling
Make time for leisure activities
Get a massage

7. Laugh & Humor
Laughter is the best medicine! We've heard the expression time and again. Medical world has begun to take more serious notice of the healing power of humor and the positive emotions associated with it. By having fun and laughing, your stress levels decrease significantly. Humor stimulates the parts of our brain that use the "feel good" chemical messenger dopamine. Also, researchers found that humor improves memory

8. Healthy breakfast
It might be the last thing on your morning to-do list, or it might not be on your list at all. However, many studies have shown that having breakfast improves the ability of concentration, reaction time, learning ability, mood and memory, whereas skipping breakfast reduces people's performance at school and at work.
A recent study done at Cardiff University in Wales found that subjects who ate a high-fiber cereal in the morning showed a 10 percent reduction in fatigue, lower incidence of depression, and better cognitive skills. Fiber helps slow down the absorption of food in the stomach, so you have more energy for a longer period of time.




9. Omega-3 fatty acids
Omega-3 fatty acids are essential for brain health - they provide the physical building blocks necessary for the development and maintenance of the structural and functional integrity of the brain. In fact, one of the omega-3 fatty acids, commonly known as DHA (docosahexaenoic acid), makes up a large portion of the gray matter in the brain and is vital for brain cells function. Adding more DHA to your brain directly influences cell-to-cell communication, affects nerve conduction and neurotransmitter release, and other things that allow brain cells to send messages to each other. DHA is essential to normal brain function, and a diet rich in DHA improves learning, while a lack of DHA worsens learning ability.
French researchers4 found that people who regularly consume omega-3 rich oils, such as canola, flaxseed, and walnut oil, are 60 percent less likely to develop dementia than those who do not regularly consume such oils. Regular consumption of fruits and vegetables lowers dementia risk by 30 percent. People who eat fish at least once a week are 40 percent less likely to develop dementia.
Coldwater fish, such as salmon, tuna, mackerel, and herring are rich sources of omega-3 fatty acids (just be careful to eat this in moderation due to potential contamination with mercury). Dutch studies revealed that high fish consumption may reduce the risk of dementia and cognitive decline.




9. Blueberries
Would you believe that eating this tasty, low-glycemic superfood every day was found by the USDA at Tufts University to slow and even reverse age-related brain decline, as well as improve short-term memory loss and help reverse age-related loss of balance?!
Blueberries are a major source of flavonoids, in particular anthocyanins and flavanols. Although the precise mechanisms by which these plant-derived molecules affect the brain are unknown, they have been shown to cross the blood brain barrier after dietary intake. It is believed that they exert their effects on learning and memory by enhancing existing neuronal connections, improving cellular communications and stimulating neuronal regeneration.




10. Vegetables
Researchers found that eating vegetables appears to help keep the brain young and may slow the mental decline sometimes associated with growing old. Cruciferous and green leafy vegetables including cauliflower, spinach, kale, broccoli, cabbage, brussels sprout and collards appear to be the most beneficial. Researchers say that may be because they contain healthy amounts of vitamin E, an antioxidant that is believed to help fight chemicals produced by the body that can damage cells.
Increased blood level of homocysteine is a strong risk factor for the development of Alzheimer disease and dementia. Three B vitamins, folic acid, B6, and B12, can help lower your homocysteine levels. Fortified cereal, other grains, and leafy green vegetables are good sources of B vitamins.




11. Want to drink? Choose red wine
While heavy drinking clearly causes serious problems for many people, drinking in moderation may be good for the brain.
Intake of up to three daily servings of wine, unlike other alcohol beverages (liquor, beer), is associated with a lower risk of dementia. This may be due to the ability of red wine polyphenols to protect brain cells against alcohol-induced damage. There is well-documented evidence that resveratrol, a polyphenol found in red wine and red grape skin and seeds, has a significant antioxidant properties and produces neuroprotective effects.

12. Care for your heart and vessels
Many risk factors for cardiovascular disease may also contribute to cognitive decline and dementia.High blood pressure in midlife increases the risk of cognitive decline in old age. Diabetes and high levels of LDL ("bad") cholesterol appear to significantly increase the risk of dementia.




13. Neurobics
Created by Lawrence C. Katz, Ph.D., a professor of neurobiology at Duke University Medical Center, neurobics is a unique system of brain exercises using your five physical senses and your emotional sense in unexpected ways that encourage you to shake up your everyday routines. Studies have shown that even small changes in daily patterns cause brain stimulation.
Neurobics can be done anywhere, anytime, in offbeat, fun and easy ways. These exercises can activate underused nerve pathways and connections, helping you achieve a fit and flexible mind:
Drive to work a different route
Get dressed with your eyes closed
Brush your teeth with the other hand
Unlock the door with your eyes closed
Use your opposite hand to dial the phone or operate the TV remote
Listen to music and smell flowers at the same time
Shop at new grocery store
Research has suggested that using your left hand if you're right handed or your right if you're left handed more often, can help stimulate parts of the brain that you don't normally use.
http://www.emedexpert.com/tips/brain.shtm

четвъртък, 29 март 2012 г.

Коучинг?

Дефиниция

Коучингът е изкуството да създаваш – с помощта на беседи и поведение. Консултантът-коуч подготвя за клиента подходящата среда, в която да се движи и да успява да реализира желаните цели - и то така, че постигнатите разултати да му носят удовлетворение. Коучингът е индивидуално ориентирано към целия живот като цяло консултиране: Разискват се проблеми, цели и представи; изясняват се наличните ресурси, с които клиентът разполага; изготвят се стратегии за тяхното осъществяване и се тренират преди тяхното изпълнение. Коучингът е изкуството да съдействаш - да се повиши резултатността, обучението и развитието на друг човек. Коучингът е разделение на взаимоотношенията с другите на подгрупи, което подпомага клиента да постиге изключителна резултатност в своя живот, кариера, бизнес, в обществените дела. Посредством коучинга клиентът разширява своя кръгозор, ефективност и качество на живот.Според областите на прилагане коучингът се дели на три основни категории:





-кариерен коучинг,
-бизнес коучинг и
-коучинг на личностното развитие.Според участниците в коучинга се различават: -индивидуален и корпоративен ( групов ) коучинг:





Коуч – това е специалистът, който провежда коучинга,
Клиент – това е човек или организация, търсещи услугите на консултанта-коуч.




Коучингът представя най-разнообразни нива на комуникация, на общуване; чрез него се определя значението на ролите в различните сфери на живота на клиента, както и на водещите мотиви и представи, които го ръководят в действията му; разкриват се изопачени представи и модели насадени в мисленето му от миналото. С подкрепата на консултанта-коуч се създават нови, които се тренират и при нужда се прилагат в действие. Коучингът се провежда по поръчка на клиента – в тези области от живота, в които той среща затруднения:
в различните видове на общуване – в личен и професиоанален план, способности, таланти, умения, вяра, убеждения, собствен мироглед, лична идентичност и самооценка, социални роли и положение в обществото, религия, вяра, вероизповедание, ценностна система и възпитанието, произход на семейството, семейни и фамилни взаимоотночения, цели, стремежи, мечти, професионално развитие и други.
Коучингът е професионално консултиране, придружаване и подкрепяне от хора-експерти с лидерски качества и професионален опит. Главната цел на срещите с консултанта-коуч са индивидуалното или колективно обучение за постигане на успешни промени там, където клиентът желае да постигне такива. Посредством оптимизирането на човешкия потенциал за творчество и развитие коучингът съдейства и подпомага за овладяването и преодоляването на причините, спъващи изпълнението на целите – на отделния човек или фирмена организация. По своята същност коучингът е комбинация от индивидуално подпомагане и обучение - как да се използват ресурсите, с които всеки човек и всяка фирмена организация разполага, за да постигне желания успех. Коучингът улеснява разпознаването на проблемите и причините, които ги пораждат и подпомага тяхната идентификация - като средство за тяхното разрешаване. Клиентът се учи в този процес как сам да ги разпознава и овладява, как да комуникира по-добре с останалите и да постига добри резултати в желаната посока. Основно качество на професионалния коучинг е поощряване възприятието и развитието на собствените качества и рефлекси, които всеки човек притежава и използва във взаимоотношенията и общуването си с другите.




Какво е коучинг?
Коучингът е и си остава един универсален инструмент, който подпомага еднакво добре разрешаването на проблемите и в личен, и в професионален план. Консултантът-коуч има универсална роля - той оказва подкрепа и съдействие на клиента посредством техниките и методиките на този вид консултиране. Целият живот на човека е един непрекъсващ коучинг-процес. Подсъзнанието на човека разработва програми, които той прилага на практика в живота. Човек е винаги в състояние на вътрешен диалог със самия себе си. По този начин разбира какво трябва да направи, как да постъпва в различните житейски ситуации. Твърде малко импулси отвън влияят на човекото подсъзнание и твърде силнен е Аз-ът, който е в постоянна конкуренция с влиянието на външния за личността свят. Много хора не успяват да реализират мечтите и желанията си, и когато влязат в напреднала възраст им се струва, че не са успели да изживеят живота си така, както са искали. Това няма нищо общо с материалното богатство, с произхода на семейството или със социалния статус в обществото. Основното е:
-как е успяла личността да се развие през тези години живот,
-как е развила талантите и качествата, които е притежавала,
-какви чувства е изпитвала,
-как се е справяла във взаимоотношенията си с дугите хора,
-как е използвала ресурсите, с които е разполагала, за да реализира стремежите си.




Коучингът е съвкупност от техники и умения, които помагат клиентите (най-често висши мениджъри) сами да стигнат до решенията, които са им необходими. Това е силно индивидуализиран подход, който специалистите определят като най-висшата форма на въздействие върху хората. Той е особено ефективен в динамична среда на непрекъснати промени, както и при работа под силен стрес. Областите, в които се работи, обаче са разнообразни и не се ограничават единствено с професионалното развитие. Той влиза и в по-личната сфера на своите клиенти и им помага да създадат баланс в живота си.




Коучингът съветване ли е? Консултантът-коуч в никакъв случай не е конкретен специалист като например: адвокат, застрахователен агент, медицински работник и т.н. Коучът е специализиран помощник при определени моменти и състояния в живота на човека, когато той подпомага клиента как да подходи към проблема, който има, за чието разрешаване търси помощ и съдействие от коуча. Коучингът е процес, в който клиентът разбира как да използва собствените си ресурси, за да намери сам правилното решение за действие. Коучингът е подпомагане.




Коучингът тренировка ли е? Консултантът-коуч подпомага клиента в процеса на работа как да определя силните и слабите страни на личността си, с кои да се преборва и да намалява тяхното влияние в живота си, и в същото време - как да използват силните си страни, за да се справят успешно с целите, които си поставят – за която и да е сфера от живота. В този смисъл консултантът-коуч е личен треньор за клиента. Коучингът е интерактивен, центриран към личността на клиента подпомагащ го процес, който може да обхваща както личния, така и професиоанлния му живот, от една страна, и от друга – коучингът подпомага фирмени организации и висши управленски ръководители в различни сфери на дейността им, в управлението на персонала, в разрешаването на конфликти и други. Интерактивен означава, че коучингът не е услуга към клиента – консултантът-коуч и клиентът са равнопоставени в дадената ситуация, която се разисква и за която се търси решението за успешното й разрешаване и въвеждане в действие. Клиентът не е освободен от отговорност за това, как и до каква степен ще успее да постигне желания резултат.




Коучингът е индивидуален процес на консултиране. Консултантът-коуч не предлага готови директни решения на проблемите – той подпомага клиента по време на целия процес на консултиране, като го насочва как да намери сам правилното решение, от което се нуждае. Коучингът се занимава с индивидуалните потребности на клиента. Коучингът се базира на основата на взаимното доверие между консултант-коуч и клиент. То е доброволно проявено и е важен фактор за постигане на добри резултати в съвместния процес на консултиране. Консултантът-коуч гарантира дискретност и поверителност на информацията, изразена в този процес. Само при това условие може да бъдат постигнати добри резултати. Коучът трябва да е в състояние по време на процеса на консултиране да може да изгради необходимите връзки с различни хора от обкръжението на клиента, които са от ключово значение за разрешаването на казуса на клиента. Коучингът се стреми да засили рефлексите на личността – нейните възприятия, самосъзнание, отговорност, за да може клиентът да прозре и осъзнае как точно би могъл да се противопостави на недостатъците си, как да ги превъзмогне, как да създаде нови отправни точки на поведение и взаимоотношения, за които преди дори и не е подозирал, че е възможно да има. Това дава възможност на клиента да оформи нови печеливши стратегии на поведение водещи до желаните успехи. Консултантът-коуч разяснява на клиента кои интервенции и методи ще приложи в процеса на консултиране, как ще протече самият процес и какво клиентът би следвало да вземе под внимание след приключване на консултирането. Работната концепция на консултанта-коуч се определя винаги индивидуално и клиентът трябва да е съгласен с нея, след като му бъде разяснена. В противен случай той не би разбрал как точно ще протече процесът на консултиране и е възможно да остане недоволен от постигнатите резултати. Работният процес се състои от договорени между клиента и консултанта-коуч брой сесии(срещи) всяка с времетране от 60 минути, за което двете страни подписват договор. Една от клаузите в него е конфиденциалност на поверената информация.Коучингът е ориентиран освен към определена личност като индивидуалност и към дефинирана група от клиенти – с ръководни длъжности, с мениджърски отговорности, служители в отдел и други. Консултантът-коуч не е профилиран фирмен консултант. Той се занимава с определена зададена цел, за чието успешно изпълнение е потърсен да съдейства.Към кого е насочен коучингът?





Към хората, които наистина искат и се стремят да променят живота си или нещо в него,
Към тези служители във фирми и предприятия, които искат да се орентитрат в нова посока на професионално развитие,
Към тези фирмени ръководители, на които са делегирани нови отговорности и проекти за изпълнение,
Към тези служители и фирмени ръководители, които са поставени в конфликтна ситуация и търсят начини на разрешение,
Към тези фирми и предприятия, които биха желали да повишат ефективността на дейността си или желаят да се преструктурират,
Към тези хора, които желаят да започнат самостоятелен бизнес,
Към тези хора, които имат проблеми с общуването, които се намират в процес на промяна в различни сфери от живота.




Теми в индивидуалния коучинг
анализи на ситуазии в професионалния и индивидуалния живот на клиента, подобряване на самооценката на клинта за самия себе си, разрешаване на конфликти и конфликтни ситуации,
подобряване и промяна на взаимоотношенията с близките, на работното място, с колегите, с началниците и други; разработване на ръководни стратегии на поведение, разработване на стратегии за проедоляване на влиянието на стресав ежедневието, разработване на стратегии за управление на лични кризи и неочаквани удари – нападения, загуба на близък човек, наближаваща старост и други.




Постигане на целите и ползи за клиента / фирмената организация
В началото на всеки коучинг процес най-често клиентът задава въпроса, дали той наистина може да му помогне да разреши проблема или да постигне целта, за които търси консултация.
Да, коучингът помага. Но хората, които страдат от зависимости ( алкохол, дрога, психични разстройства ) не биха могли да разчитат на коучинга, че той ще им помогне да се справят с тези си проблеми.
Още на първата среща се обсъждат проблемите и целите, с които клиентът отива при консултанта-коуч за подпомагане и разрешаване. Конкретизират се критериите и начините за постигане на желаната цел. В процеса на работа се използват знанията и компетентностите на клиента, прилагат се ментални подходи и техники на въздействие върху клиента, посредством които той се освобождава от блокади и задръжки за възприятие на обкръжаващата среда.
Ползите за клиента / фирмената организация се постигат в рамките на 5 до 10 сесии от по 60 минути, които се договарят между двете страни в зависимост от целта / проблема, поставени за обсъждане и разрешаване в съвместния процес. В случай на необходимост – по желание на клиента се провеждат допълнителни сесии, за които се сключва нов договор. Полза от коучинга фирмените организации виждат в:
-подобряване на колективната работа в екип / отделите,
-повишаване на мотивацията на екипа служители,
-засилване генерирането на нови идеи за развитие в различни области на дейността на организацията,
-намаляване на текучеството на кадри,
-намаляване на заболеваемостта сред служителите,
-повишаване на работоспособността, удовлетвореността, конкурентноспособността и други.




Много често клиентите постигат следните цели:
-по-добро самовглъбяване и вслушване във вътрешния глас – гласът на АЗ-а,
-повишаване на печалбите на самостоятелно работещите – на свободна практика,
-преодоляване на проблемите за свободната комуникация с близки, с роднини, с колеги, началници, висшестоящи,
-разрешаване на дългогодишни тежки конфликтни взаимоотношения, постигане вътрешна удовлетвореност от себе си и начина си живот,
-намиране на хармония и уравновесеност на личността,
-подобряване на постигнатите резултати в работата и в личния живот и други.




Source: http://galacreativeconsulting.com/kouching

сряда, 25 януари 2012 г.

За подвига

Замислих се за начина, по който дефинират подвиг повечето хора днес. „Онзи пич, който си купи най-новото ауди, дойдоха му едни пари от нещо, оная мацка, дето се омъжи за богаташа, който живее в огромна къща в Бояна-леле сигурно на ръце я носи, онова момиче, което дойде от с. Х и се уреди с апартамент, новичка колица и удължаване на косата+чифт силиконови импланти...колко често, колко тъжно...това ли е успеха? Това ли е щастието?

Вие от какво се впечатлихте последно?

Аз се впечатлих днес. Впечатлих се от един подвиг, от подвига на една майка. На една майка, която на 56 години страда ужасно, че поради лекарско „недоразумение” дъщеря и не може повече да износва дете, въпреки, че това според момичето е единственото наистина смислено нещо в живота на един човек-да дадеш живот. Една майка, която проучи пред очите ми всички закони, отиде и попита всички лекари и реши да стане сурогатна майка на бъдещото си внуче. След две години на множество болезнени процедури, неуспешни опити и пари, хвърлени на вятъра, сега тази майка носи бъдещия си внук, с цената на много физически и психически усилия.

Не знам през какво точно е минала, какво и се е наложило да изтърпи, как се е чувствала през това време, но пред мен винаги е била широко усмихната, вечно забързана и непоколебима жена, на която страшно се възхищавам.

Руми, за мен ти си герояТ днес, не „онази мацка”. Твоя подвиг има смисъл и стискам палци всичко да е наред, за да получиш удовлетворение и много много щастие.

Бъдете искрени и истински, не бъдете конформисти! Бъдете от онези хора, които наистина харесват себе си, вършете смислени неща, помагайте си и не завиждайте. Бъдете директни, дори когато гласът ви трепери. Печелете приятели и харчете пари, възхищавайте се на постъпки, не на вещи, бъдете честни с вас самите, а после и с всички останали. Не е важно, което е модерно, бъдете старомодни!

понеделник, 23 януари 2012 г.

The Courage to Live Consciously


www.stevepavlina.com

Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature,
nor do the children of men as a whole experience it.
Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure.
Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing.
To keep our faces toward change and behave like free spirits
in the presence of fate is strength undefeatable.
- Helen Keller

In our day-to-day lives, the virtue of courage doesn't receive much attention. Courage is a quality reserved for soldiers, firefighters, and activists. Security is what matters most today. Perhaps you were taught to avoid being too bold or too brave. It's too dangerous. Don't take unnecessary risks. Don't draw attention to yourself in public. Follow family traditions. Don't talk to strangers. Keep an eye out for suspicious people. Stay safe.

But a side effect of overemphasizing the importance of personal security in your life is that it can cause you to live reactively. Instead of setting your own goals, making plans to achieve them, and going after them with gusto, you play it safe. Keep working at the stable job, even though it doesn't fulfill you. Remain in the unsatisfying relationship, even though you feel dead inside compared to the passion you once had. Who are you to think that you can buck the system? Accept your lot in life, and make the best of it. Go with the flow, and don't rock the boat. Your only hope is that the currents of life will pull you in a favorable direction.

No doubt there exist real dangers in life you must avoid. But there's a huge gulf between recklessness and courage. I'm not referring to the heroic courage required to risk your life to save someone from a burning building. By courage I mean the ability to face down those imaginary fears and reclaim the far more powerful life that you've denied yourself. Fear of failure. Fear of rejection. Fear of going broke. Fear of being alone. Fear of humiliation. Fear of public speaking. Fear of being ostracized by family and friends. Fear of physical discomfort. Fear of regret. Fear of success.

How many of these fears are holding you back? How would you live if you had no fear at all? You'd still have your intelligence and common sense to safely navigate around any real dangers, but without feeling the emotion of fear, would you be more willing to take risks, especially when the worst case wouldn't actually hurt you at all? Would you speak up more often, talk to more strangers, ask for more sales, dive headlong into those ambitious projects you've been dreaming about? What if you even learned to enjoy the things you currently fear? What kind of difference would that make in your life?

Have you previously convinced yourself that you aren't really afraid of anything... that there are always good and logical reasons why you don't do certain things? It would be rude to introduce yourself to a stranger. You shouldn't attempt public speaking because you don't have anything to say. Asking for a raise would be improper because you're supposed to wait until the next formal review. They're just rationalizations though - think about how your life would change if you could confidently and courageously do these things with no fear at all.


What Is Courage?

Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.
- Ambrose Redmoon

Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear - not absence of fear.
- Mark Twain

Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway.
- John Wayne

I like the definitions of courage above, which all suggest that courage is the ability to get yourself to take action in spite of fear. The word courage derives from the Latin cor, which means "heart." But true courage is more a matter of intellect than of feeling. It requires using the uniquely human part of your brain (the neocortex) to wrest control away from the emotional limbic brain you share in common with other mammals. Your limbic brain signals danger, but your neocortex reasons that the danger isn't real, so you simply feel the fear and take action anyway. The more you learn to act in spite of fear, the more human you become. The more you follow the fear, the more you live like a lower mammal. So the question, "Are you a man or a mouse?" is consistent with human neurology.

Courageous people are still afraid, but they don't let the fear paralyze them. People who lack courage will give into fear more often than not, which actually has the long-term effect of strengthening the fear. When you avoid facing a fear and then feel relieved that you escaped it, this acts as a psychological reward that reinforces the mouse-like avoidance behavior, making you even more likely to avoid facing the fear in the future. So the more you avoid asking someone out on a date, the more paralyzed you'll feel about taking such actions in the future. You are literally conditioning yourself to become more timid and mouse-like.

Such avoidance behavior causes stagnation in the long run. As you get older, you reinforce your fear reactions to the point where it's hard to even imagine yourself standing up to your fears. You begin taking your fears for granted; they become real to you. You cocoon yourself into a life that insulates you from all these fears: a stable but unhappy marriage, a job that doesn't require you to take risks, an income that keeps you comfortable. Then you rationalize your behavior: You have a family to support and can't take risks, you're too old to shift careers, you can't lose weight because you have "fat" genes. Five years... ten years... twenty years pass, and you realize that your life hasn't changed all that much. You've settled down. All that's really left now is to live out the remainder of your years as contently as possible and then settle yourself into the ground, where you'll finally achieve total safety and security.

But there's something else going on behind the scenes, isn't there? That tiny voice in the back of your mind recalls that this isn't the kind of life you wanted to live. It wants more, much more. It wants you to become far wealthier, to have an outstanding relationship, to get your body in peak physical condition, to learn new skills, to travel the world, to have lots of wonderful friends, to help people in need, to make a meaningful difference. That voice tells you that settling into a job where you sell widgets the rest of your life just won't cut it. That voice frowns at you when you catch a glance of your oversized belly in the mirror or get winded going up a flight of stairs. It beams disappointment when it sees what's become of your family. It tells you that the reason you have trouble motivating yourself is that you aren't doing what you really ought to be doing with your life... because you're afraid. And if you refuse to listen, it will always be there, nagging you about your mediocre results until you die, full of regrets for what might have been.

So how do you respond to this ornery voice that won't shut up? What do you do when confronted by that gut feeling that something just isn't right in your life? What's your favorite way to silence it? Maybe drown it out by watching TV, listening to the radio, working long hours at an unfulfilling job, or consuming alcohol and caffeine and sugar.

But whenever you do this, you lower your level of consciousness. You sink closer towards an instinctive animal and move away from becoming a fully conscious human being. You react to life instead of proactively going after your goals. You fall into a state of learned helplessness, where you begin to believe that your goals are no longer possible or practical for you. You become more and more like a mouse, even trying to convince yourself that life as a mouse might not be so bad after all, since everyone around you seems to be OK with it. You surround yourself with your fellow mice, and on the rare occasions that you encounter a fully conscious human being, it scares the hell out of you to remember how much of your own courage has been lost.


Raise Your Consciousness

Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage.
- Anais Nin

Courage is the price that Life exacts for granting peace.
- Amelia Earhart

You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, "I have lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along." You must do the thing you think you cannot do.
- Eleanor Roosevelt

The way out of this vicious cycle is to summon your courage and confront that inner voice. Find a place where you can be alone with pen and paper (or computer and keyboard). Listen to that voice, and face up to what it's telling you, no matter how difficult it is to hear. (The voice is just an abstraction - you may not hear words at all; instead you may see what you should be doing or simply feel it emotionally. But I'll continue to refer to the voice for the sake of example.) This voice may tell you that your marriage has been dead for ten years, and you're refusing to face it because you're afraid of divorce. It may tell you that you're afraid that if you start your own business, you'll probably fail, and that's why you're staying at a job that doesn't challenge you to grow. It may tell you that you've given up trying to lose weight because you've failed at it so many times, and you're addicted to food. It may tell you that the friends you're hanging out with now are incongruent with the person you want to be, and that you need to leave that reference group behind and build a new one. It may tell you that you always wanted to be an actor or writer, but you settled for a sales job because it seemed more safe and secure. It may tell you that you always wanted to help people in need, but you aren't doing so in the way you should. It may tell you that you're wasting your talents.

See if you can reduce that voice to just a single word or two. What is it telling you to do? Leave. Quit. Speak. Write. Dance. Act. Exercise. Sell. Switch. Move on. Let go. Ask. Learn. Forgive. Whatever you get from this, write it down. Perhaps you even have different words for each area of your life.

Now you have to take the difficult step of consciously acknowledging that this is what you really want. It's OK if you don't think it's possible for you. It's OK if you don't see how you could ever have it. But don't deny that you want it. You lower your consciousness when you do that. When you look at your overweight body, admit that you really want to be fit and healthy. When you light up that next cigarette, don't deny that you want to be a nonsmoker. When you meet the potential mate of your dreams, don't deny that you'd love to be in a relationship with that person. When you meet a person who seems to be at total peace with herself, don't deny that you crave that level of inner peace too. Get yourself out of denial. Move instead to a place where you admit, "I really do want this, but I just don't feel I currently have the ability to get it." It's perfectly OK to want something that you don't think you can have. And you're almost certainly wrong in concluding that you can't have it. But first, stop lying to yourself and pretending you don't really want it.


Move From Fear to Action, Even if You Expect to Fail

When a resolute young fellow steps up to the great bully, the world, and takes him boldly by the beard, he is often surprised to find it comes off in his hand, and that it was only tied on to scare away the timid adventurers.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson

Most of our obstacles would melt away if, instead of cowering before them, we should make up our minds to walk boldly through them.
- Orison Swett Marden

Courage and perseverance have a magical talisman, before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish into air.
- John Quincy Adams

Now that you've acknowledged some things you've been afraid to face, how do you feel? You probably still feel paralyzed against taking action. That's OK. While diving right in and confronting a fear head-on can be very effective, that may require more courage than you feel you can summon right now.

The most important point I want you to learn from this article is that real courage is a mental skill, not an emotional one. Neurologically it means using the thinking neocortex part of your brain to override the emotional limbic impulses. In other words, you use your human intelligence, logic, and independent will to overcome the limitations you've inherited as an emotional mammal.

Now this may make logical sense, but it's far easier said than done. You may logically know you're in no real danger if you get up on a stage and speak in front of 1000 people, but your fear kicks in anyway, and the imaginary threat prevents you from volunteering for anything like this. Or you may know you're in a dead end job, but you can't seem to bring yourself to say the words, "I quit."

Courage, however, doesn't require that you take drastic action in these situations. Courage is a learned mental skill that you must condition, just as weight training strengthens your muscles. You wouldn't go into a gym for the first time and try to lift 300 pounds, so don't think that to be courageous you must tackle your most paralyzing fear right away.

There are two methods I will suggest for building courage. The first approach is analogous to progressive weight training. Start with weights you can lift but which are challenging for you, and then progressively train up to heavier and heavier weights as you grow stronger. So tackle your smallest fears first, and progressively train up to bigger and bigger fears. Training yourself to lift 300 pounds isn't so hard if you've already lifted 290. Similarly, speaking in front of an audience of 1000 people isn't so tough once you've already spoken to 900.

So grab a piece of paper, and write down one of your fears that you'd like to overcome. Then number from one to ten, and write out ten variations of this fear, with number one being the least anxiety-producing and number ten being the most anxiety-producing. This is your fear hierarchy. For example, if you're afraid of asking someone out on a date, then number one on your list might be going out to a public place and smiling at someone you find attractive (very mild fear). Number two might be smiling at ten attractive strangers in a single day. Number ten might be asking out your ideal date in front of all your mutual friends, when you're almost certain you'll be turned down flat and everyone in the room will laugh (extreme fear). Now start by setting a goal to complete number one on your list. Once you've had that success (and success in this case simply means taking action, regardless of the outcome), then move on to number two, and so on, until you're ready to tackle number ten or you just don't feel the fear is limiting you anymore. You may need to adjust the items on your list to make them practical for you to actually experience. And if you ever feel the next step is too big, then break it down into additional gradients. If you can lift 290 pounds but not 300, then try 295 or even 291. Take this process as gradually as you need to, such that the next step is a mild challenge for you but one you feel fairly confident you can complete. And feel free to repeat a past step multiple times if you find it helpful to prepare you for the next step. Pace yourself.

By following this progressive training process, you'll accomplish two things. You'll cease reinforcing the fear/avoidance response that you exhibited in the past. And you'll condition yourself to act more courageously in future situations. So your feelings of fear will diminish at the same time that your expression of courage grows. Neurologically you'll be weakening the limbic control over your actions while strengthening the neocortical control, gradually moving from unconscious mouse-like to conscious human-like behavior.

The second approach to building courage is to acquire additional knowledge and skill within the domain of your fear. Confronting fears head-on can be helpful, but if your fear is largely due to ignorance and lack of skill, then you can usually reduce or eliminate the fear with information and training. For example, if you're afraid to quit your job and start your own business, even though you'd absolutely love to be in business for yourself, then start reading books and taking classes on how to start your own business. Spend an afternoon at your local library researching the subject, or do the research online. Join the local Chamber of Commerce and any relevant trade organizations in your field. Attend conferences. Build connections. Enlist the help of a mentor. Build your skill to the point where you start to feel confident that you could actually succeed, and this knowledge will help you act more boldly and courageously when you're ready. This method is especially effective when a large part of your fear is due to the unknown. Often just reading a book or two on the subject will be enough to dispel the fear so that you're able to take action.

These two methods are my personal favorites, but there are many additional ways to condition yourself to overcome fear, including neuro-linguistic programming, implosion therapy, systematic desensitization, and self-confrontation. You can research them via an online search engine if you wish to learn such methods and increase the number of fear-busting tools in your arsenal. Most of these can be easily self-administered (implosion therapy is the notable exception).

The exact process you use to build courage isn't important. What's important is that you consciously do it. Just as your muscles will atrophy if you don't regularly stress them, your courage will atrophy if you don't consistently challenge yourself to face down your fears. In the absence of this kind of conscious conditioning, you'll automatically become weak in both body and mind. If you aren't regularly exercising your courage, then you are strengthening your fear by default; there is no middle ground. Just as your muscles automatically atrophy from lack of use, so your courage will automatically decay in the absence of conscious conditioning.

Now this may sound overly gloomy, so here's a positive way to look at it. Heavy weights can be a physical burden, but they are helpful tools to build strong muscles. You would not look at a 45-pound dumbbell and say, "Why must you be so heavy?" It is what it is. Heaviness is your thought, not an intrinsic property of the dumbbell itself. Similarly, do not look at the things you fear and say, "Why must you be so scary?" Fear is your reaction, not a property of the object of your anxiety.

Fear is not your enemy. It is a compass pointing you to the areas where you need to grow. So when you encounter a new fear within yourself, celebrate it as an opportunity for growth, just as you would celebrate reaching a new personal best with strength training.


Catch a Glimpse of Your Own Greatness

Everyone has talent. What is rare is the courage to follow the talent to the dark place where it leads.
- Erica Jong

The highest courage is to dare to appear to be what one is.
- John Lancaster Spalding

Whatever you do, you need courage. Whatever course you decide upon, there is always someone to tell you that you are wrong. There are always difficulties arising that tempt you to believe your critics are right. To map out a course of action and follow it to an end requires some of the same courage that a soldier needs. Peace has its victories, but it takes brave men and women to win them.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson

So what do you do with your newly developed courage? Where will it lead you? The answer is that it will permit you to lead a far more fulfilling and meaningful life. You will truly begin living as a daring human being instead of a timid mouse. You will uncover and develop your greatest talents. You will begin living far more consciously and deliberately than you ever have before. Instead of reacting to events, you will proactively manufacture your own events.

Courage is something you can only truly experience alone. It is a private victory, not a public one. Summoning the courage to listen to your innermost desires is nota group activity and does not result from building a consensus with others. Kahlil Gibran writes in The Prophet, "The vision of one man lends not its wings to another man." The purpose of your existence is yours alone to discover. No one on earth has lived through the exact same experiences you have, and no one thinks the exact same thoughts you do.

On the one hand, this is a lonely realization. Whether you live alone or enjoy the deepest intimacy with a loving partner, deep down you must still face the reality that your life is yours alone to live. You can choose to temporarily yield control of your life to others, whether it be to a company, a spouse, or simply to the pressures of daily living, but you can never give away your personal responsibility for the results. Whether you assume direct and conscious control over your life or merely react to events as they happen to you, you and you alone must bear the consequences.

If you commit to following the path of courage, you will ultimately be forced to confront what is perhaps the greatest fear of all - that you are far more powerful and capable than you initially realized, that your ultimate potential is far greater than anything you've experienced in your past, and that with this power comes tremendous responsibility. You may not be able to solve all the woes of this planet, but if you ever do commit yourself 100% to the fulfillment of your true potential, you can significantly impact the lives of many people, and that impact will ripple through the future for generations to come.

What is the difference between you and one of those legendary historical figures who did have such an impact? You both had many of the same fears. You both were born with talents in some areas and weaknesses in others. The only thing stopping you is fear, and the only thing that will get you past it is courage. What you do with your life isn't up to your parents, your boss, or your spouse. It's up to you and you alone.

Catching a glimpse of your own greatness can be one of the most unsettling experiences imaginable. And even more disturbing is the awareness of the tremendous challenges that await you if you accept it. Living consciously is not an easy path, but it is a uniquely human experience, and it requires making the committed decision to permanently let go of that mouse within you. Going after your greatest and most ambitious dreams and experiencing failure and disappointment, running butt up against your most humbling human limitations instead of living with a comfortable padding of potential - these fears are common to us all.

The first few times you encounter such fears, you may quickly retreat back to the illusory security of life as a mouse. But if you keep exercising your courage, you will eventually mature to the point where you can openly accept the challenges and responsibilities of life as a fully conscious human being. Continuing to live as a mouse will simply hold no more interest for you. You will acknowledge within the deepest recesses of your being, I have awakened to this incredible potential within me, and I accept what that will require of me. Whatever it costs me, whatever I must sacrifice to follow this path, bring it on. I'm ready. Even though you will still experience fear, you will recognize it for the illusion it is, and you will know how to use your human courage to face it down, such that fear will no longer have the power to stop you.


Embrace the Daring Adventure

Before you embark on any path ask the question, does this path have a heart? If the answer is no, you will know it and then you must choose another path. The trouble is that nobody asks the question. And when a man finally realizes that he has taken a path without a heart the path is ready to kill him.
- Carlos Castaneda

The deeper that sorrow carves into your being, the more joy you can contain. Is not the cup that holds your wine the very cup that was burned in the potter's oven? And is not the lute that soothes your spirit, the very wood that was hollowed with knives?
- Kahlil Gibran

Inaction breeds doubt and fear. Action breeds confidence and courage. If you want to conquer fear, do not sit home and think about it. Go out and get busy.
- Dale Carnegie

As you develop a sense of your true purpose in life, you may begin to feel an uneasy disconnect between your current life situation and the one you envision moving towards. These two worlds may seem so different to you that you cannot mentally conceive of how to build a bridge between them. How can you balance the practical reality of taking care of your third-dimensional obligations like earning money to pay your bills and taxes, pleasing your boss, raising your family, and maintaining social relationships with people who can't even relate to what you're experiencing vs. the new vision of yourself you desperately want to move towards? A whole host of new fears may crop up related to this seemingly impossible shift. How will you support yourself? What will become of your relationships? Are you just deluding yourself?

The best advice I can give you here is to forget about trying to build a bridge. Focus instead on independently beginning the process of manifesting the new vision of yourself from scratch, as if it were a totally separate thread in your life. If this creates a temporary incongruence in your life, just do it anyway. For example, suppose you currently work as a divorce attorney, but your courage tells you that you must eventually abandon such adversarial work. You envision yourself passionately teaching couples how to heal their broken relationships. But you can't even fathom yourself as a trial lawyer trying to speak about healthy relationships, and on top of that problem, you can't see any way to make a decent living in this new career, at least not quickly. There's just too big a disconnect between this new vision and practical reality. So instead of trying to bridge this gap, just begin building your new vision completely from scratch in whatever time you have, even if it's only an hour or two each week. Keep doing your regular work as an attorney, but in your spare time, start posting anonymously on relationship message boards to give couples advice on how to heal their relationships. Use the oratory skills you developed as an attorney to begin speaking to small groups about healing relationships. Perhaps create a new web site, and start writing and posting articles about your new passion. You don't have to hide the fact that you're an attorney, but don't worry about bridging these two worlds. Live in paradox. Just start developing the new you, and allow the old one to continue in parallel for a while.

What will happen is that you'll develop skill in your new undertaking, and you'll eventually be able to support yourself from it, even if you can't see how to do so right away. You may not be able to see a way to support yourself in your new vision right now, and that's fine. Just begin it anyway, doing it for free, without any concern of how to turn it into a new full-time career. Patiently wait for clarity; you will eventually find a way to make it work. Then when the time is right, you'll be able to peacefully let go of the old career and focus all your energy on the new one. At some point you'll be able to commit fully to your new self. Your passion for your new work will eventually overwhelm your fear of letting go of your old source of stability. So instead of trying to transform your old career into your new one, just start the process of building your new one, and let your old one gradually fade. Even if you can only invest an hour a week in your new undertaking, you will probably discover that this hour is more fulfilling to you than all the other hours put together, and that passion will drive you to find a way to gradually grow this presence until it fills up most of your days. The most important thing is to begin now by introducing your new vision of yourself to your daily life, even if you can only initially do so in a small way.

No matter how difficult it may seem, make the choice to live consciously. Do not succumb to that half-conscious realm of fear-based thinking, filling your life with distractions to avoid facing what you feel in those silent spaces between your thoughts. Either exercise your human endowment of courage and progressively build the strength to face your deepest, darkest fears to live as the powerful being you truly are, or admit that your fears are too much for you, and embrace life as a mouse. But make this choice consciously and with full awareness of its consequences. If you are going to allow fear to win the battle for your life, then proclaim it the victor and forfeit the match. If you simply avoid living consciously and courageously, then that is equivalent to giving up on life itself, where your continued existence becomes little more than a waiting period before physical death - the nothing as opposed to the daring adventure.

Don't die without embracing the daring adventure your life is meant to be. You may go broke. You may experience failure and rejection repeatedly. You may endure multiple dysfunctional relationships. But these are all milestones along the path of a life lived courageously. They are your private victories, carving a deeper space within you to be filled with an abundance of joy, happiness, and fulfillment. So go ahead and feel the fear - then summon the courage to follow your dreams anyway. That is strength undefeatable.