MIND AND BODY WITH LEANNE HALL

Similar documents
Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

Contents. Chapter. A Closer Look at You. Section 17.1 Your Personality Section 17.2 Develop a Positive Attitude. Chapter 17 A Closer Look at You

Coach on Call. Thank you for your interest in Beating the Winter Blues. I hope you find this tip sheet helpful.

The transition from independent living to residential care is a significant life event for many older adults

Depression. Most of the time, people manage to deal with these feelings and get past them with a little time and care.

Ways to Wellness Challenge

Resolutions and Goal Setting

Effects of Extended Daylight and Darkness. Presented by Military and Family Life Counselors

Strengths Insight Guide

Talking to someone who might be suicidal

Using Mother Nature to Improve Your Health.

Overcoming Seasonal Affective Disorder Webcast December 19, 2011 Pamela Sheffield, M.D. Crystal Wong, M.D.

Blues, Blahs and Bouncing Back

Support for Kidney Cancer

Relaxation Techniques

Help in Coping with Study Pressures

STAR-CENTER PUBLICATIONS. Services for Teens at Risk

QUESTIONS ANSWERED BY

FEATURED IN THIS ISSUE

UW MEDICINE PATIENT EDUCATION. Baby Blues and More DRAFT. Knowing About This in Advance Can Help

WELLBEING: The Happiness Advantage

The Power of Positive Thinking

GOT CHRONIC PAIN? Exercise and Chronic Disease: Get the Facts. Issue 6-17

SHARED EXPERIENCES. Suggestions for living well with Alzheimer s disease

Discover the secrets to destroy depression >> DestroyDepression.com

Dealing with Depression Feature Article July 2008

Personal Medicine. Joe from Kansas said: Recovery Defined. Recovery s Four Dimensions. Guiding Principles of Recovery. Guiding Principles of Recovery

Well-being programme

7-DAY HAPPINESS CHALLENGE

RAL HEAL TH IMPROVEMENT CENTER

12 hours. Your body has eliminates all excess carbon monoxide and your blood oxygen levels become normal.

Depression: what you should know

ORIENTATION SAN FRANCISCO STOP SMOKING PROGRAM

Creating flourishing lives: putting positive psychology into practice

Chapter 4 Managing Stress & Coping with Loss

DEPRESSION. There are a couple of kinds, or forms. The most common are major depression and dysthymic disorder.

10 TIPS TO STRESS LESS DURING THE HOLIDAYS

Depression: Overcome Depression, Feel Happier And Love Your Life! (Depression, Depression And Anxiety, Depression Self Help, Depression Cure,

Depression- Information and a self-help guide

UW MEDICINE PATIENT EDUCATION. Baby Blues and More. Postpartum mood disorders DRAFT. Emotional Changes After Giving Birth

2/2/2016. Stress Introduction. As you read each slide, Fill in the missing information on your worksheet. 2/2/2016 Stress Introduction PP 2

Introduction. Today we hope to provide tips and resources to help balance the challenges of caregiving and ensure that everyone is being cared for.

Depression Major Depressive Disorder Defined. by Yvonne Sinclair M.A.

Stress outline: 1. A stressor is the cause of stress. of life. Page 1

Copyright 2016 SuccessVantage Group Pte Ltd. All rights reserved. Published by Kevin Richardson. Notes to the Reader:

4/9/2012. Happiness & Positive Emotion. Making choices choose what makes you happy

Your Journey to Living Well with Pain

Women s Mental Health Newsletter

Nutrition Response Testing SM New Patient Orientation Welcome. If you are like most people who come to us for help, then most likely: You have one or

Signs and symptoms of stress

Self-harm Workshop. Gemma Fieldsend

Messages of hope and support

Sharing the Harvest project: independent evaluation summary

Living well with and beyond cancer Information, support and practical advice to help you through treatment and beyond

LOSE up to ONE POUND A DAY

Depression and Bipolar Disorder

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) FACTS Families and Carers Training and Support Programme

Alopecia, Teens and. An Information Sheet for Parents, Guardians and Family Members.

After Adrenal Cancer Treatment

GENERAL BEHAVIOR INVENTORY Self-Report Version Never or Sometimes Often Very Often

Clinical Description. 2 Weeks or More. more than just feeling down. more than just feeling sad about something.

Understanding Emotional TRIGGER. What are triggers?

Lift Your Mood with. Physical activity could offer benefits if you are battling mild depression.

Determining Major Depressive Disorder in Youth.

University Staff Counselling Service

REGAINING CALM. You will need: An honest look at your behaviours. This workbook A Pen.

Understanding Depression

ADRENALINE. Alert and Engaged is packaged in moments of action, excitement & stress. Heightens your senses. Improves your body s performance & stamina

Sex... It s What the Doctor Prescribed

Teens. Self-Talk. Be positive. Practice. Try it and see. Using your thoughts, feelings and actions PATIENT EDUCATION

INFORMATION FOR PATIENTS, CARERS AND FAMILIES. Coping with feelings of depression

It s Mental Health Week!

How is depression treated?

Caring For You --- Reducing Stress

EXPLORING YOUR MIND-BODY CONNECTION Adapted excerpts from The Mindful Body. By Noa Belling (Rockpool Publishing)

Top 20 ways to live longer

Apply Your knowledge of the Psychology of Learning

2017 Monthly Calendar

7-DAY WELLNESS JUMPSTART: RECHARGE YOUR HEALTH IN ONE WEEK

Sample Do Not Copy IN GOD S IMAGE: SPIRITUAL PRACTICES FOR YOUTH WELLNESS. Youth Booklet

Psychology UNIT 1: PSYCHOLOGY AS A SCIENCE. Core

COGNITIVE DISTORTIONS AND PERCEPTION HOW THINKING IMPACTS BEHAVIOR

SIMPLE BELLY-FLATTENING SECRETS FAT BURNING SWTCH

Mental Health Awareness BY ALISHBA, KOPINA, TASMIN, AND ZEESHAAN.

Chapter 3 Mental & Emotional Health

I ll Do it Tomorrow. READTHEORY Name Date

Depression: More than just the blues

Can we avoid becoming depressed? Norton Radstock U3A Psychology group September 2018

Your answer to achieving the body, the energy and the health you want comes down to three words: Live Like Normal.

Managing Psychosocial and Family Distress after Cancer Treatment

Lose Weight. without dieting.

Managing Your Emotions

Information for young people about depression

Depression: 9 Simple Depression Self Help Steps To Overcome Depression For Life By Otto Viteri READ ONLINE

how do you view these? what is mindfulness? what is mind? simply put why mindfulness? The Neuroscience of Mindfulness 12/8/15 ! Brain!

Effects of Extended Daylight and Darkness. Presented by Military and Family Life Counselors

Self-Compassion: The Proven Power of Being Kind to Yourself

Physical Activity. Image 1

HEALTH 1 UNDERSTANDING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DEPRESSION AND HEALTH

Transcription:

MIND AND BODY WITH LEANNE HALL TOP 5 WAYS TO GET HAPPY There s been plenty of research on the negative effects of stress and anger on your health. But there is also a growing body of information on how being happy can make you healthier even improving immune function and lowering stress-related hormones. Yet some days you just get out of bed on the wrong side, but that s no excuse to walk around in a dark cloud all day. Here are Leanne s Top 5 ways to put that spring back in your step.

#1. SUNSHINE AND EXERCISE Get outside into the sunshine and move! Sunlight and exercise increase those feel good and happy hormones, endorphins and serotonin.* Sun exposure is good for you. After decades of avoiding it, researchers are finding that we may have been doing more harm than good. It's a shock to the system, for sure, but the evidence is substantial. A chronic lack of sun exposure has been linked to fertility problems, several forms of cancer, general poor health and varying degrees of depression. People actually get depressed, with symptoms like sadness, fatigue and hopelessness - from a lack of sunlight. The form of depression most often associated with variations in sunlight is seasonal affective disorder (SAD). The disorder runs in cycles of depression and wellness that follow the seasons more specifically, the availability of sunlight. Someone with SAD might feel perfectly fine in spring and summer, and then experience a severe downturn in mood when fall hits. They'll stay that way through the winter, until the sun comes out again in full force. SAD is particularly prevalent in parts of the world with little winter daylight and/or extended overcast periods, like Alaska or the U.S. Northwest. In this article, we'll find out why sunlight exposure can affect your emotional wellbeing and how you can safely use the sun to benefit your mood.* In a study at Ghent University, the longer participants sat around doing nothing, the more their moods tended to become negative and self-judgmental. Why? Because during periods of rest, people spend more time thinking (and analyzing) themselves, which is a recipe for depression flare-ups, says study co-author Igor Marchetti. But exercise may fend off depression by balancing the transfer of hormones between the endocrine and nervous systems, Marchetti says. Additionally, studies have found regular physical activity seems to improve self-esteem, self-confidence, and mood all conditions that are protective factors for depression." And it doesn't take much time to see the effects. In a study at the University of Texas, 28 percent of depressed people who worked out on a treadmill or stationary bike for 30 to 45

minutes, 3 to 4 times a week eliminated their symptoms. When another group exercised 2 to 3 times a week for just 20 to 30 minutes, 16 percent saw symptoms disappear. * Source: Baker Institute for Heart and Diabetes, Australia #2. EAT SOMETHING SPICY Tuck into something hot and spicy! Spicy food stimulates our happy hormones - Endorphins and in turn lifts your mood. Scientific research suggests that some vegetables, fruits and spices can affect the chemistry of the brain and act as mood enhancers, promoting calmness and a sense of well-being, while vitamin and mineral deficiencies can lead to mood swings, insomnia and depression.* "The food that we eat every day has a massive influence on the functioning of the brain," says Tanushree Podder, author of You Are What You Eat. * Source: http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/diet-and-fitness/how-to-eat-your-way-to-happiness20120810-240fh.html#ixzz2zbxbhm00 #3. PAT A PUPPY Patting a puppy actually lowers blood pressure and your heart rate, helping take away those stress levels. According to positive psychology, pet-owners are generally happier and less lonely. Support from a pet is equivalent to support you get from parents and siblings. The one-year mortality rate following a heart attack is 1 per cent with a pet, and 7 per cent with no pet. * In an article from mid 2010 in Psychology Today The organizers of the 12th International

Conference of Human-Animal Interactions have announced that at their meeting this July, scientists will be presenting their latest findings confirming that friendly human-dog interaction releases oxytocin in both human and dog.** The experiment found that women and their dogs experienced similar increases in oxytocin levels after ten minutes of friendly contact. Also the women's oxytocin response was significantly correlated to the quality of the bond they reported in a survey taken prior to the interacting with their pets. Source: * Uppsala University, Sweden Dr. Kerstin Uvnas-Moberg ** http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/made-each-other/201005/dog-good #4. RANDOM ACT OF KINDNESS Be nice to someone. Making someone else feel better in turn makes ourselves feel better. Researchers have found a positive correlation between happiness and kindness. And it s not just that. Happier people are kinder, or kinder people are happier, one study showed that engaging in a random act of kindness improves your happiness level.* In one of the studies, published last year in the Journal of Social Psychology, researchers in Great Britain had participants take a survey measuring life satisfaction, then they assigned all 86 participants to one of three groups. One group was instructed to perform a daily act of kindness for the next 10 days. Another group was also told to do something new each day over those 10 days. A third group received no instructions. After the 10 days were up, the researchers asked the participants to complete the life satisfaction survey again. The groups that practiced kindness and engaged in novel acts both experienced a significant and roughly equal boost in happiness; the third group didn t get any happier. The findings suggest that good deeds do in fact make people feel good even when performed over as little as 10 days and there may be particular benefits to varying our acts of kindness, as novelty seems linked to happiness as well. So what are you waiting for? Get out and perform some acts of kindness!

Source: *http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/kindness_makes_you_happy_and_happiness_m akes_you_kind/ #5. SMILE! Smile! Research shows that smiling is contagious, boosts your immune system and is proven to lift your mood.* It sounds like the most useless advice imaginable: Just put on a happy face. Conventional wisdom is that smiling is an effect of feeling happy, rather than the other way around. Simply smiling in stressful situations can t possibly make you feel any better, right? Wrong. A fascinating new study by University of Kansas psychologists indicat es that, in some circumstances, smiling can actually reduce stress and help us feel better. After putting 169 participants through various testing- the results proved the connection between facial expressions and underlying mental states is still largely unexplored, but some have suggested that smiling could reduce levels of cortisol, a stress-related hormone. This study flips our traditional understanding of emotion and appearance on its head: Feeling good could sometimes be a consequence of smiling, not just the other way around. What does this mean for your daily life? When feeling stressed, try forcing a smile on your face. If you can manage a genuine, Duchenne smile what people often refer to as smiling with your eyes, not just your mouth that s even better. For whatever reason, forcing yourself to look happier could actually end up helping you feel happier. Source: * http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/simply-smiling-can-actually-reducestress-10461286/#t6ldsjqg1kwhvo8b.99

** http://www.hr.emory.edu/blomeyer/resources/news-06/smiling.html WEBLINKS Joining Leanne on her quest to get HAPPY was a cast of thousands including: Puppies from the Animal Welfare League of NSW www.awlnsw.com.au or Ph: 02) 8899 3333 Bollywood dancers from Australian Performing Arts College www.apac.net.au or ph: 02) 9634 6333