Periodically take your mental health temperature by asking
yourself
if you feeling hopeful about aging well and hopeful about
your future.
I was at a seminar for professional speakers and was
marveling at the
speaker's skill. Afterwards I asked him if he consciously
crafted his
speaking persona or if it just evolved. The more I thought
about it,
the more I thought about the relationships speakers have
with their
audiences.
Dull ones lecture or teach or inform. More interesting
speakers
entertain, play, have fun, inspire, or motivate their
audiences.
Then I asked myself what do I do? What came to me is that
whether
I am speaking, coaching, or doing therapy, I am helping
people feel hopeful.
I see in my mind what people can be, what they can do, what
they can achieve.
I use whatever approaches connect for them to move them
that direction.
In the case of aging, it is believing that your life can
get better as you age and that
a big part of making it better is easy--little mind shifts
in how you think about
yourself and aging.
For example, you can choose to think of yourself as really
younger than
your chronological age. It is an easy belief to adopt and
doesn't cost anything.
Having that self-image prompts you, consciously and
unconsciously,
to seek ways to make it happen. After all you don't want to
make a liar out of
yourself (psychologists call this avoiding cognitive
dissonance).
Overture says that in July 2005, 56,693 people searched for
"hope" on the Internet.
Also in July, 654,592 searched for "love" and 8,334,440
searched for "sex."
We often overlook hope but it is vital to our well
being--and even to wanting
to get out of bed in the morning. Asking yourself if you
feel hopeful is a
good way of taking your mental health temperature.
To
be seventy years young is sometimes far more hopeful than to be forty years old.
~Oliver
Wendell Holmes
At first we hope too much; later on, not enough.
~Joseph Roux
A person needs just three things to be truly happy in this
world.
Someone to love, something to do, and something to hope
for.
~Tom Bodett
I did an Internet search for "hope springs eternal."
There sure are a lot of sports fans out there.
~Mike Brickey
This article was from:
Anti-Aging
PsychologyThe following newsletter articles may be reprinted in E-zines, newsletters, newspapers, and magazines provided they the content is not edited and the attribution below is given. Formatting may be changed and you may use one of the web site pictures of the author to accompany the article.
"Dr. Michael Brickey, The Anti-Aging Psychologist, teaches people to think, feel, look and be more youthful. He is an inspiring keynote speaker and Oprah-featured author. His works include: Defy Aging, 52 Baby Steps to grow young, and Reverse Aging (anti-aging hypnosis CDs). Visit www.NotAging.com for a free report on anti-aging secrets and a free newsletter with practical anti-aging tips."