Things turn
out best for the people who make the best of the way things turn out.
-John Wooden
Michael A. Cohn, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher
with the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California,
San Francisco studies emotions. He believes in what he terms, the
broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions.
Cohn recently conducted a study with 86 college
students who submitted daily emotion reports. He measured the students' ability
to respond with flexibility to challenging and shifting circumstances and used
a scale to assess life satisfaction.
The study showed that positive emotions increased
resilience. This included skills for identifying opportunities and bouncing
back from adversity as well as life satisfaction.
"We found that as positive emotions go up,
there comes a point where negative emotions no longer have a significant
negative impact on building resources or changing life satisfaction," Cohn
says. He continues, "Positive emotions won't protect you from feeling bad
about things, nor should they. But over time, they can protect you from the
consequences of negative emotions."
Life throws a variety of challenges at us each
day. We can choose to see them as flat lines of negativity or take
action to draw a vertical line through the horizontals and create a plus sign.
Taking action always makes something happen to keep us moving, regardless of
mood. Humor colors life with vibrancy.
These exercises will help you create more
Positivity in your life:
1. Focus on your sense of humor to provide buoyancy
in all types of weather. Laughter strengthens the stomach muscles and releases
chemicals in the brain, such as serotonin, to elevate the mood.
2. To practice laughter, begin with a breathing
exercise. Take five breaths in and five out through the nose. After five
repetitions, let the out breath go with: ha ha ha ha ha. Notice how energized
you feel. Remember this exercise the next time you feel stressed.
3. When a negative emotion crosses your mind, write
it down. When you write: frustration, anger, worry or fear, include emotions to
counteract them. Give them names and write a dialogue between the opposites.
4. Make three columns and list your three greatest
accomplishments. In each column, write ways you accomplished these Feats of
Fantastic. Keep the list with you and add to it. If you feel frustrated during
a challenge, refer to the list to see how you succeeded in the past.
5. Who is a Hero in your area of expertise or life
in general? How does this person achieve success? How do you suppose this
person greets failure?
If you spend time working on the above five areas,
you will develop Positive habits that will grow into your Best Friends during
times of need.
Creative Write: When you find
yourself in a negative mood, write the mood across the top of a page. Then
begin writing about feelings that arouse satisfaction. What really makes your
day and gives you buoyancy? Include sounds, scents, tastes and
sensations. Don't forget to include humor. Notice what happens as you write two
or three pages. Do you feel an emotional alteration?
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