Loving Without Limits

Happy Activists Deliver Love to Moms

When Andrea Braovac-Bialk’s husband asked her what she wanted for Mother’s Day last year, she stopped to think. A middle school teacher with two kids living in suburban Chicago, Andrea gives a lot of herself in both her work and life. But instead of asking for a spa day or breakfast in bed, she was struck by how many mothers she knew who had recently spent weeks in the hospital by their children’s bedsides. “We’ve had a lot of friends and relatives who have gone through terrible experiences—premature and sick babies. I’m so lucky, and my heart hurts so much for them,” says Andrea. “It’s Mother’s Day and I don’t want to be going to be brunch while all these amazing moms are at the hospital.” The Perfect Mother’s Day Gift Though she had no previous experience in nonprofit work, Andrea had an idea. For Mother’s Day, she would deliver “care bags” filled with comforting goodies to the moms and others waiting at her local children’s hospital, Advocate Children's Hospital in Park Ridge, Illinois. After speaking with the hospital’s child life specialist, Andrea learned that while many generous volunteers come in often to do arts and crafts and read to the kids, not much is done to provide support or care for the mothers and other caregivers. Andrea reached out to her support team of friends and family, who were eager to help fulfill her plan. She also found that local stores and restaurants were extremely generous in their donations as the care bags began to fill up with comforting items, such as warm, fuzzy blankets, cozy socks, gift cards to restaurants near the hospital and even Live Happy magazines. Delivering Happiness On Mother’s Day 2017, Andrea and her team delivered 200 gift bags to moms and caregivers at Advocate and two other Chicago-area hospitals. “The moms were in awe,” says Andrea. Some were speechless, some started crying. One of the moms didn’t even know it was Mother’s Day!” Andrea firmly believes that we need to care for our moms in order to care for the children. “We have great doctors and nurses who are attentive to those children’s illnesses, but the moms are crucial. If the moms aren’t eating, if the moms are not caring for themselves, everyone loses.” As Andrea organizes this year’s delivery in time for Mother’s Day, the bags’ contents have grown to include donations such as gourmet tea bags and cakes from Nothing Bundt Cake, as well as practical items like dental hygiene kits, Kleenex, hand lotion and lip balm. A grocery delivery service even donated memberships for the parents to use and will deliver to the hospital or home. Andrea hopes to double or triple her output and expand her reach—perhaps even take the Loving Without Limits care bag idea to a national level. What better way to celebrate heroic moms? How to Contribute If you are a Chicago-area retailer interested in donating goods or services, or a resident who would like to volunteer, go to Lovingwithoutlimits.org. Monetary donations can be made on the website via PayPal.
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Live Happy's 5 Tools for Happy and Health Mind

5 Tools for a Healthy and Happy Mind

1. Understand and moderate your self-sabotaging habits. Accurately diagnosing your patterns of self-sabotage is key to mental health. Let’s unpack a common example of how this can go wrong. Perfectionists typically think that all their problems will be solved by working harder or being more self-disciplined. However, overworking and being excessively self-critical are often the cause of perfectionists’ self-sabotage rather than the solution. If you’re stuck in self-defeating habits, experiment with whether looking at your patterns in a fundamentally different way helps you come up with more fruitful potential solutions. 2. Find your favorite strategies for overcoming procrastination. Avoidance increases anxiety and is implicated in most of the common mental health problems, including anxiety disorders, depression and eating disorders. For optimal mental health, everyone needs a set of strategies for overcoming procrastination and avoidance. In my book, The Healthy Mind Toolkit, I give 21 options so readers can build a personalized toolkit of the six to seven strategies that suit them best. For example, I like the strategy of “last things first,” which is that I sometimes do the last steps of a project first, since these can be easier than the initial steps. 3. Correct your thinking errors. We all have thinking biases. If you know what your typical biases are, you can mentally correct for them. An extremely common bias is blaming others. When we’re in a negative cycle of interaction, we usually see the other person as the cause of the cycle and overlook our own role. Another common thinking error is jumping to negative conclusions in ambiguous situations.  For instance, you send an email but don’t get a reply. You get stressed out that the lack of reply is indicative of a problem rather than assuming a more benign explanation, like the person didn’t get your message or forgot to respond. When you know your biases, you can recognize when these occur and consider alternative explanations for situations. 4. In relationships, focus on frequent, simple positive interactions. When it comes to relationships, a common sabotaging pattern is that unhappy people tend to over focus on reducing arguments and under focus on increasing their positive interactions.  Many types of relationship tension never get resolved (like arguments over your partner always running late). When you know how to keep your level of positive interactions high, you’ll have a more cooperative spirit for dealing with recurring conflicts. Simple positive interactions like reminiscing about good times, using affectionate nicknames and expressing admiration and appreciation make the world of difference to the emotional tone of a relationship. 5. Understand the psychology of money. Smart money decisions can reduce your stress and anxiety and increase your happiness. The most important money psychology principle to understand is probably loss aversion. This principle is what makes us scared to invest in assets that may lose value (e.g., stocks) but it also plays out in much smaller ways. For instance, it’s psychologically very difficult to cancel a subscription because we tend to overvalue anything we already possess. Understanding loss aversion may make you think twice about signing up for free trials or absurdly low-priced introductory offers, or at least make you turn off auto renew as soon as you start your trial.
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Boogeyman

Banish the Boogeyman

We all want our kids to feel happy and carefree. But struggles with anxiety are a reality during childhood and more common than you may expect. One in eight children develop an anxiety disorder, according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Building character strengths to combat these anxieties—such as resilience and bravery—provide an opportunity to grow stronger by overcoming challenges, which is an important and rewarding aspect of your child’s life. Karen Reivich, Ph.D., director of training programs for the Penn Positive Psychology Center and co-author of The Resilience Factor, believes there is room for a wide range of emotions, both positive and negative. “Well-being, in my mind, is having the tools to live a life where you have a healthy diet of positive emotion, like happiness, but also other emotions, like curiosity or gratitude or contentment....I don’t think a life well-lived is solely focused on happiness.” If it’s getting harder to reassure your child, or if anxiety is starting to affect family life or school performance, the anxiety may be pushing past healthy boundaries. Knowing how to spot the warning signs will help your child find his or her bravest self. When Not to Worry About Worry It’s not fun to watch kids wrestle with fears, but a little anxiety from time to time is part of life. It can even be a good thing. “There’s often a myth or misconception that anxiety is a negative or unhelpful emotion,” says Lindsay Scharfstein, Ph.D., a psychologist at the Center for Anxiety and Behavioral Change who specializes in working with children and families. “Anxiety helps us in so many ways. It helps us keep things that are important on our minds, like an exam coming up, or finding friendships.” We want young kids to feel anxious about crossing the street, for example, and separation anxiety in babies is a sign of healthy bonding with parents. Older kids may feel stage fright before a big performance they’ve been looking forward to for months. “Viewing anxiety in a positive light helps us change the experience. Maybe that’s excitement about trying something new,” Lindsay says. Looking for the positive side can help parents, too. Interpret test-day jitters as a sign of your child’s motivation, and you’ll feel less stressed and be able to help your child calm down. Lindsay says anxiety affects the whole family, not just the child, so take time to care for your own mental well-being. An article in Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review found that fear cues in parents’ language may be associated with children’s anxiety. When you’re positive and confident, you’re modeling a healthy outlook for your child. Positive Childhood Anxiety Busters Parents can practice easy techniques at home to chase anxious thoughts away. Fans of the Harry Potter series will remember that the Boggart, a magical monster, is defeated by laughter. It turns out this works in real life, too. “Humor takes the power out of [anxiety],” says Kathleen Trainor, Psy.D., founder of the TRAINOR Center and author of Calming Your Anxious Child: Words to Say and Things to Do. “A lot of these kids are very serious, they can be very smart, they’re overthinking everything. The introduction of humor puts everything in perspective.” Timing is important. Gently joking about a fear is helpful when the kid is calm and thinking clearly. But when your child’s feeling panicky, humor’s more likely to make her angry. Allison Edwards, play therapist and author of Why Smart Kids Worry: And What Parents Can Do to Help, also recommends finding a positive spin for common fears. Movies like Monsters, Inc. can inspire kids to reimagine their own bedtime monsters as friends and protectors. Allison teaches kids to recognize anxiety in their minds and bodies. When it’s time to calm down (such as at bedtime or before a big game), breathing exercises can help. Her “Square Breathing” tool involves inhaling, holding, exhaling and resting, each on a count of four. Sometimes, parents may decide they need professional support to help their children control anxiety. “There are three areas of a child’s life: school, home and friends. If your child is struggling in two out of three of those areas, I would go to a counselor for additional support,” Allison says. Facing Their Fears Your child’s age and personality can guide your approach to easing his fears. Often, parental instincts fit beautifully with expert recommendations. When Mikaela Devine’s toddler developed a fear of the vacuum, Mikaela, a wedding planner in Bowie, Maryland, had family members and friends take turns hugging the machine. After a while, her daughter wanted a turn, too. Reframing a frightening object as something safe, and even cuddly, can help little ones relax. “What excites me about this work is...it’s science catching up with Grandma,” Karen says. “Traditional wisdom about building a happy life, like counting your blessings, looking on the bright side or sharing something you’re grateful for over family dinner, teaches healthy mental habits.” Sarah Hash, a prenatal genetic counselor in Rockville, Maryland, noticed her kindergarten-aged kids were excited to sign up for T-ball or gymnastics classes, but got clingy and anxious at drop-off time. “What we started doing is meeting the teacher or coach beforehand if possible,” she explained. “We ask them to give our child a job, such as collect all the balls in this bag, line up all the teddy bears, sort mats, organize shoes—something. That gave the child a focus because they knew what to expect and it led to a better first or second day of this new activity.” Happier Kids, Happier Families One unexpected benefit of childhood anxiety is that kids have the chance to develop new strengths. “It’s a very positive and self-esteem building and affirming process to work through anxiety. They [children] can feel proud of themselves for what they’ve mastered,” Kathleen says. Skills like enhanced self-awareness, confidence and self-control help kids keep fears at bay and serve them for the rest of their lives. They may even develop greater empathy. “I do believe they develop compassion for other kids, who face other challenges.” Allison also sees anxiety itself as a potentially positive force. The key is to harness its power for good. “If you channel anxiety in the right way, you can actually become very successful. Most of the kids I work with are very high-performing kids, and if they didn’t have anxiety, they wouldn’t be that way. Most high-functioning people have traces of [anxiety] because they’re afraid not to try, [and] not to do well.” Confronting anxiety head-on can lead to positive changes for the whole family. When parents learn to work together to handle a child’s fears, it can ease any tensions anxious behavior is causing in the marriage. Therapists can give siblings their own projects to master, reducing jealousy over the extra attention an anxious child receives. Working together to get anxiety under control doesn’t only lead to happier, braver kids, but happier families as well.
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stress free

48 Ways to Naturally Reduce Stress

A certain amount of stress is just part of the human experience. It’s natural. Yet too many people suffer with severe stress that disrupts sleep, work performance, health, relationships and life satisfaction. High stress often calls up its pal anxiety, and together they can stir up panic attacks that can interfere with a purposeful life. When we live at such a rapid pace, we may not even realize we are in a tense and stressed state. We reached out to Live Happy readers and staff for their best tips to reduce stress, quiet the mind and brighten your outlook. Dial back on detrimental stress with our 48 natural fixes to find your calm. Use the tips that resonate with you most! 1.       Practice Yoga. Slow down and connect. There’s a form of yoga for every preference. 2.      Enjoy a cup of hot tea. Sample different types until you find one that soothes you. Peppermint, chamomile and green tea will all do the trick. 3.      Meditate. Clear thoughts from your mind with deep breathing. Let the apps Headspace or Breethe become your mindfulness coach. 4.      Walk in nature. Fresh air, birds chirping, trees reaching to the sky and sunshine beaming down all have a calming effect on your mind. 5.      Try alternate nostril breathing. It’s called “Nadi shodhana” and it activates the parasympathetic nervous system to reduce blood pressure. 6.       Exercise. It’s just science. Regular workouts combat stress and give you a dose of feel-good endorphins. Plus, it helps you get a better night’s sleep making you more equipped to positively handle stress. 7.      Use essential oils. Just smelling a bit of lavender can help you shift to a calmer state. 8.     Have music you love readily available. Whether you use Pandora, Spotify, iTunes or something else, make sure you have music you love at your fingertips. Belt out your favorite song, blast your favorite band or go Zen with your tunes. Music is a powerful outlet and coping strategy all in one. (Loud rap music was a popular suggestion to de-stress.) 9.      Dance. Dancing can help release pent-up emotions. It’s a healthy way to escape stressors, and you also get the endorphins that come from exercise if you sweat it out. 10.  Stretch. It feels good, it’s good for you and it slows you down. 11.   Take a bath. Bubbles and dim lighting can create a relaxing atmosphere. Wine optional. 12.  Schedule acupuncture. A quiet dimly lit room and those tiny needles placed in your skin is an ancient Chinese practice thought to foster natural healing and boost immunity. 13.  Savor a glass of wine. Feet propped up of course. 14.  Pray. 15.  Listen to mantras. Repetitive sounds and positive sentences can reach the unconscious mind. Chant, listen to mantras or repeat them to yourself. 16.  Hike for the exercise benefits and the calming landscape. 17.   Get a full body massage. 18.  Try your hand at art. Paint. Color in an adult coloring book. Shape clay. Hands-on expression is a healthy outlet for stress. 19.  Clean. Vigorous cleaning can give you a sense of accomplishment and order. 20. Walk dogs. Two in one—walking and the calming effects of spending time with a pooch you love. Bonus. 21.  Count. The repetitive mundane task of counting can distract your mind when it goes to a worrisome place. 22. Sit on the patio. When is the last time you sat just to relax and do nothing? 23. Run. They call it runner’s high for a reason. There’s something magical about being able to lace up your shoes anywhere, open a door and go. 24. Punch a punching bag. Release stress through physical exertion. 25. Organize. Let’s face it. Stress is often caused by situations that feel out of our control. Organizing puts us back in the control seat and brings on the calm. 26. Talk therapy. A professional can help you process and rethink your beliefs. Gain new insights that empower you to defeat stress. 27.  Talk to friends. Social connectedness is directly related to our mental and physical health. 28. Sleep. Sleep is part of the big three—with the other two being nutritious food and exercise. Go for eight hours, even if you’ve tried to convince yourself you only need six. 29. Hug. Give them freely. Accept them regularly. 30. Reduce caffeine, alcohol or sugar. Consciously decide when you will have any of the three to regulate consumption. Overindulging can amp up stress. 31.  Cuddle with your significant other. Physical intimacy reminds us that we aren’t in this alone. 32. Garden. Flowers, vegetables or spices—make your choice to occupy your hands in the earth to feel grounded. 33. Replay fond memories like little movies in your mind. 34. List gratitude. Ask yourself what’s good right now. Train your brain to notice everything that’s going right in your life. 35. Journal. Get what’s churning in your head on paper. It’s just cathartic and often the process leads to solutions. 36. Smile. 37.  Do one nice thing for someone. It’s human nature to help and it feels good for the receiver and the giver. 38. Go fishing. 39. Try a mental shift. Realize you and your significant other are on the same side. Next time you get agitated about something your “other” has said or done, remind yourself that you’re on the same team. Choose not to react and watch the difference it makes. 40. Pet an animal. The repetitive motion and the loving care will relax you. 41.   Go near water—a pond, a lake or an ocean. Listening to or watching water has a soothing effect. 42. Savor a cup of coffee. 43. Listen to a Live Happy Now Podcast. 44. Watch a comedy show. Laughter is the best medicine. 45. Let it go. If you can’t control it or change it, consider letting it go. 46. Try labor rage. Curse like mad at those weeds while you are gardening. 47.  Laugh at yourself. Can’t find your keys (again!) or you trip on a curb? Smile and laugh at yourself. We’ve all been there. 48. Burn natural candles to inspire a peaceful environment in your home.
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Tipper Gore

Mental Health Mission

Tipper Gore learned early in life just how devastating depression could be. Raised largely by her grandmother, she watched her mother suffer from depression long before experts understood it. Tipper also knew that she, too, could possibly be at risk. Even so, when she began suffering from depression, she didn’t recognize the signs. “I knew to watch for it because of my mother, but it took friends coming to me and saying, ‘I think you might be depressed,’” says the former second lady. “I was like, is that what it is? Thank you!” Her depression was triggered by the trauma of watching her son, Albert Gore III, being struck by a car. The 6-year-old recovered from the accident, but she remained traumatized. When she finally sought help through counseling and medication, she was able to overcome depression—and it gave her a new mission. “You can’t pray your way out of it; you can’t pull yourself by the bootstraps. You have to realize it’s a health issue and take care of it.” Giving Children a Voice The same incident that launched her depression also became a catalyst for lasting change. After her son recovered from the accident, Tipper met a woman who asked about her Albert III’s condition. “I told her that he was fine, and she said she was so glad I’d been able to get the support I needed,” Tipper recalls. The woman went on to explain that her 7-year-old daughter had been diagnosed with bipolar illness, and on top of struggling with the medical and insurance challenges, she didn’t feel supported by her friends and family because they weren’t sure how to approach her. “I was struck by the inequity of that,” Tipper says. She sprang into action, contacting people she knew in the field of mental health. That gathering became Tennessee Voices for Children, a coalition of individuals, agencies and organizations working together to promote mental health for children. During her time in the White House, she remained a mental health advocate and hosted the White House Conference on Mental Health in June 1999. Called to Action Since leaving the political spotlight, Tipper has lived a quiet, private life, but has remained involved with Tennessee Voices for Children. Last year, she increased her involvement in mental health awareness, making a $1 million donation to the National Alliance on Mental Illness to help expand its teen outreach program. “They have a program called Ending the Silence, which provides mental health education for teens,” she explains. “I really wanted to help them expand it. Teen suicide is the second leading cause of death for teens.” She believes that by providing education to help friends and family members understand mental illness and identify warning signs, teens can receive the treatment and help they need. Finding Her Happy Place In recent years, Tipper has found ways to bring happiness into her life. A drummer since her youth—in high school, she was part of an all-girl band called The Wildcats—she continues to find enjoyment from banging on the skins in her free time. Beyond that, she says, her friends and family are her greatest source of joy. “I just mean talking to one of them during the day,” says the mother of four adult children. “It’s about making a connection.”
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Philippines chalk drawing

Earth Day is Every Day in the Philippines

The Philippines, a country of beautiful scenic islands, unique emerald rice fields, graffiti-splashed jeepneys, smoldering volcanoes and happy, hardworking and generous people, is unlike any other nation in the world. The beautiful mixture of culture and tradition unites thousands of islands into one shared and increasingly vulnerable land. The archipelago’s geography lends itself to extreme weather. With an increase in deadly typhoons in recent years and rising sea levels, any discussion about well-being or happiness returns to the topic of protecting the Earth to ensure future generations can enjoy nature’s benefits and not suffer as greatly from disasters. The Philippines’ Climate Change Commission emphasized the critical importance of both well-being and environmental protection as they unveiled their Happiness Wall at the Cultural Center of the Philippines and the senate house in Manila, Philippines, just a few weeks ago on March 20. Climate Change Commissioner Rachel S. Herrera, said, “As we celebrate the International Day of Happiness today, let us keep in mind that the more we preserve and treat our environment with kindness, the more we ensure our well-being and security as a nation.” Senator Loren Legarda, chairwoman of the Philippines’ Climate Change Committee, is working to adopt a policy similar to Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness (GNH) rather than Gross National Product (GDP) to reflect the happiness and well-being of Filipinos. The goal is to pursue a holistic development of their country to boost equality and environmental protection amid threats of climate change and increased risk of disaster. The panel’s efforts to connect happiness and environmental sustainability in the Philippines strives to create positive effects in many ways. The Live Happy article, “Can Happiness Save the Planet?” cites the Happy Planet Index’s conclusion that societies that practice sustainability are shown to be happier than their less environmentally minded counterparts. The global measurement standard multiplies an index of life satisfaction and the life expectancy average of each country’s residents, then divides that by the ecological footprint of the country. Results consistently show that residents with a smaller ecological footprint register greater levels of happiness, satisfaction and well-being.
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Edith Eva Eger

Choosing Hope: The Life of Edith Eva Eger

Chatting from her home in La Jolla, California, the morning after her 91st birthday, Edith Eva Eger is ebullient as she recounts the celebration she shared with good friends. She cut slices of celebratory tiramisu for everyone but took only a bite herself. “I have really bad scoliosis,” she says, “and if I gain weight that cuts down on my mobility and my freedom.” Her curvature of the spine aside, Edith still goes out swing dancing once a week with 93-year-old Eugene Cook, “the dancing partner and soul mate” she met through her acupuncturist. And she maintains her practice as a clinical psychologist. “I am the happiest I have ever been,” she says. “I feel younger today than I did 50 years ago.” That statement coming from any nonagenarian would be notable. But, in light of Edith’s history, it’s remarkable. She was born in Hungary, and as a teenager in the 1940s she was a serious student of ballet and a gymnast training for the next Olympics. But her dreams of winning a medal for her country were smashed when she was told that as a Jew she was no longer qualified to be part of the Olympic team. Not long after, when Edith was 16, she and her family were herded into a wagon and then onto a train, crowded with Jews, and sent to Auschwitz. While her mother was being sent to the gas chamber, camp doctor Josef Mengele, the “Angel of Death,” would order Edith to dance for him. She closed her eyes, heard strains of Tchaikovsky and imagined she was dancing Romeo and Juliet in the Budapest Opera House. As she performed pirouettes, her mother’s last words echoed: “We don’t know where we’re going. We don’t know what’s going to happen. Just remember, no one can take away from you what you put here in your own mind.” Surviving Against Incredible Odds A few months later, Edith and her sister Magda would be part of the death march from Mauthausen to Gunskirchen. As she recounts in her newly published memoir, The Choice: Embrace the Possible, out of the 2,000 famished people who marched, only 100 survived. Many fell into ditches along the way; others, too weak to keep moving, were shot on the spot. The sisters would overcome even more remarkable odds. On May 4, 1945, after a year in the camps, Edith, her back broken—a cause of her lifelong scoliosis—and weighing just 70 pounds, was pulled from a pile of corpses by American soldiers. Few had made it to this day of liberation; of the 15,000 people deported from their hometown, Edith and Magda were among fewer than six dozen who survived. Edith would go on to marry Bela, a Slovakian she met on the train to a tuberculosis hospital. They immigrated to the United States, penniless and not speaking a word of English. She was undeterred. While raising three children in El Paso, Texas, Edith became a teacher, was named Psychology Teacher of the Year in 1972 and, then in her 40s, she earned her doctorate in psychology. “I needed to discover what life expected of me,” she says. She also wanted to understand how people could both meet everyday challenges and survive devastating experiences. “How could I help people to transcend self-limiting beliefs,” she asked herself, “to become who they were meant to be in the world?” A Therapy Built on Choice In graduate school, Edith was inspired by the work of positive psychology pioneer Martin Seligman, Ph.D., and that of Albert Ellis, Ph.D., who is considered one of the founders of cognitive behavior therapy. She developed her own approach to working with patients, which she calls Choice Therapy, for choosing compassion, humor, optimism, intuition, curiosity and self-expression. “Every one of us every day can reach for the Hitler within us or to the love within us,” she says. That means, she says, choosing not only to act with kindness toward others but also toward oneself. “It’s important to pay a great deal of attention to self talk,” she says. “When you go to the bathroom in the morning you can look in the mirror and say, ‘It’s going to be another crappy day.’ Or, you can say, ‘I’m going to honor myself, treasure myself, cherish myself and I can make a difference today.’ Practicing love and kindness can be as simple as making eye contact when you go to the grocery store.” Edith’s own impact has been deep. She’s become a renowned specialist in treating patients suffering from post-traumatic stress disorders and is a consultant in resiliency training to the U.S. Army and Navy. As Mark Divine, a retired U.S. Navy SEAL commander and author of The Way of the SEAL, has written in endorsing The Choice, “I would take Edie Eger on an op with me any day.” Telling Her Truth Ask Edith how long it took her to write her memoir and she’ll tell you it’s taken a lifetime, “and a lot of pain, a lot of tears.” It wasn’t, however, until 11 years ago, when her first great-grandson, Silas, was born and she was approaching 80 that she thought seriously about telling her story. “I thought one day the book will be in his library for his children to read when they want to know about great-great-grandma.” The Choice has been met with rapturous reviews; The New York Times, for one, proclaimed it “mind-blowing.” But more important than accolades for Edith is the hope that, by bearing witness to her own experience and sharing stories of her patients’ triumphs over trauma, the book will be a tool for healing. “Suffering is universal,” Edith says. “Victimhood is optional.” We’ll all inevitably face some kind of affliction, calamity or abuse. We often have little or no control over these outside circumstances. But, she says, “Victimhood comes from the inside. We become victims not because of what happens to us, but when we choose to hold on to our victimization.” We develop, she says, a “victim’s mind”—thinking and actions that are rigid, blaming, pessimistic, stuck in the past and unforgiving. As for herself, Edith says, “I will not forget my time in Auschwitz, but I don’t live there. I call it my cherished wound, because it’s a part of whom I’ve become today.” Moving Forward Edith Eger on how to break out of a victim’s mindset. Give yourself permission to feel what you feel without judging yourself. “When I work with depressed patients, I don’t try to cheer them up,” she says. “Instead I try to give their feelings of despair company. I listen compassionately. I say, tell me more.” To stop repressing your own feelings try this mantra: notice, accept, check and stay. When a feeling like anger, jealousy or sadness comes up, acknowledge and name the feeling. Accept that whatever is triggering the reaction, your feeling is your own. Check your body response: Are you hot? Cold? Is your heart racing? Is your breathing shallow? Finally, recognizing that feelings are temporary, stay with the feeling until it passes or changes. Express yourself. “Expression is the opposite of depression,” Edith says. “When we force our truths and stories into hiding, secrets become their own trauma, their own prison.” Writing about your deepest feelings, even if you keep these accounts private, can be healing. Pick a time of day when you can write uninterrupted for 20 minutes, and write down whatever painful recollections come to mind, whether they’re harrowing or trivial. “There’s no comparison or competition,” Edith says. “Your trauma is your trauma.” Try out a new vocabulary. Before you can change your behavior, you might need to change how you describe your actions to yourself. Instead of saying “I always do this” or “I can’t do that” say, “Up until now I’ve done this.” Or, “In the past, I was this way.” “You can’t change what you did or what was done to you,” Edith says. “Having unpleasant experiences and making mistakes is part of being human. But we can choose how we live now.”
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Stress Free Books

10 Books to Beat Stress

Stress is part of the human experience. Yet if it becomes disruptive—keeping you awake at night, worried during the day and feeling physically tense, it’s time for a change. The Mayo Clinic Guide to Stress-Free Living by Amit Sood, M.D. “We get so caught up weeding the yard that we completely miss the tulips that nature gives us for a few precious weeks. We postpone joy.” In The Mayo Clinic Guide to Stress-Free Living, Amit Sood, M.D., M.Sc., a Mayo Clinic specialist in stress and resilience, collected his findings from the past two decades. He shows us how the mind’s instinctive restlessness can generate stress and anxiety and presents strategies for a more peaceful life. Learn skills such as developing deep and sustained attention and practicing gratitude, compassion and acceptance. Meditation for Fidgety Skeptics: A 10% Happier How-to Book by Dan Harris, Jeffrey Warren and Carlye Adler Meditation can make us smarter emotionally by reducing the negative noise in our heads and giving us mental clarity. Dan Harris, best-selling author of 10% Happier and a Good Morning America anchor, makes meditation more doable with practical with entertaining tips. This book—relating Dan’s journey across the country with meditation expert Jeffrey Warren—addresses the reluctance many people have to meditation and offers ways to get started based on where you are in your life. Count Your Rainbows: A Gratitude Journal by Jenny Mecher What’s the key to quieting stress? Switch your mind from the churn of negative thoughts to a sea of gratitude. In this beautifully designed journal, quotes, art and writing prompts will help you establish a regular gratitude practice where you see and savor all the positive aspects of your life. Science indicates that expressing gratitude has numerous health benefits, including reducing stress. “Your thoughts are powerful possessions,” author Jenny Mecher writes. Practice choosing your thoughts wisely with this guided journal. The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative by Florence Williams There’s inspiration to be found in trees, rocks and nature, contends Florence Williams, a fellow at the Center for Humans and Nature at George Washington University, a contributing editor to Outside Magazine and a public speaker. Use the setting that inspires artists and philosophers to take you to a calm place. Our connection to nature is more important than you might think. Discover how it can improve your mood and creativity. 10-Minute Mindfulness: 71 Habits for Living in the Present Moment by S.J. Scott and Barrie Davenport In 10-Minute Mindfulness, the authors contend that stress manifests from unconscious living. You can go through life on autopilot, not really connected to who you are and what choices you are making. The authors offer 71 tips to become more conscious about your values, priorities and deep longings. Learn mindfulness habits to experience the present moment rather than be consumed with past regrets or worries about the future. This book aims to improve your focus, productivity, happiness and peace of mind. Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu Ancient Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu’s Tao Te Ching is a guidebook full of wisdom on how to live a life that you will want to turn to again and again. “If you are depressed you are living in the past. If you are anxious you are living in the future. If you are at peace; you are living in the present.” Discover the power of living from a nonjudgmental place. Be more humble and flexible in your thinking. Practice a mindset of “unattached action,” a peaceful way of being where you don’t fixate on particular outcomes, you simply experience life in the present moment. Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff: And It’s All Small Stuff: Simple Ways to Keep the Little Things From Taking Over Your Life by Richard Carlson What if you started looking at the problems in your life as teachers? Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff is a classic self-help book to shift your perspective. Make small daily changes to reduce your stress levels. Begin to trust your intuition. Do one thing at a time. And understand the statement: Wherever you go, there you are. Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers: The Acclaimed Guide to Stress, Stress-Related Diseases, and Coping by Robert Sapolsky “Stress is not a state of mind…it’s measurable and dangerous, and humans can’t seem to find the off switch,” writes neuroscientist Robert Sapolsky. Over time, this activation of our stress response “literally makes us sick.” Using research and humor, Robert gives practical advice on what causes stress and how to better control our stress responses. Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers explains how prolonged stress causes or intensifies a range of physical and mental afflictions, including depression, ulcers, colitis, heart disease and more. This third edition features chapters on how stress affects sleep and addiction as well as the impact of spirituality on managing stress.  A Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Workbook by Bob Stahl, Ph.D. and Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) is a clinically tested way to handle stress. “Stress makes people angry, tense, overwhelmed, irritable and tired. It can burn you out, leave you feeling pain and even open your body up to sickness,” Bob writes. The practice teaches you to respond to stress in a mindful and nonjudgmental way before it damages your body and mind. Use the practical ideas and exercises to change how you handle stress. The Upside of Stress: Why Stress Is Good for You, and How to Get Good at It by Kelly McGonigal, Ph.D. What if you could get better at stress? Rather than focusing on eliminating stress, Stanford psychologist Kelly McGonigal presents research indicating that stress can make us stronger, smarter and happier if we learn how to embrace it. The Upside of Stress shows the correlations between resilience—the human capacity for stress-related growth—and mindset, the power of beliefs to shape reality. With science, stories and exercises, you can cultivate a mindset to embrace stress and learn from challenging experiences.
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Bellamy Young

Every Day is a Blessing for Bellamy Young

For seven seasons, Bellamy Young has portrayed power-hungry-yet-vulnerable Melody (Mellie) Grant—the first female president of the United States—on the hit ABC drama Scandal. She has weathered the emotionally charged character’s numerous heartaches, losses and emotional despair, as well as the exhilaration of assuming the country’s highest office—in precarious heels. Unlike her character, however, Bellamy prefers a quieter life that includes living with intention in the present moment, finding calm through meditation and giving back with kindness and compassion. Living in the MiraculousPresent “Whether it’s a sound I hear or an emotion I feel, I try hard to be aware of the present moment and enjoy the gift of life,” says Bellamy, while curled up on her couch with her beloved Chihuahua, Bean. “This plant in my living room isn’t just decoration. If you really look at it, it’s a most miraculous experience of life. That’s true of animals, people, tragedy and fear. They’re all gifts to be cherished and experienced fully.” This attitude includes enjoying and appreciating her flourishing career. In addition to her meaty role on Scandal, Bellamy appears this year in Disney’s feature film A Wrinkle in Time. An accomplished singer, she has performed to acclaim in numerous Broadway productions, including Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along, and in 2015 she recorded her debut album, Far Away So Close. A New Way of Thinking Before graduating high school in Asheville, North Carolina, where she grew up, Bellamy discovered meditation. Although she didn’t necessarily understand the formal practice, she was in search of a change in mindset and a positive attitude. She began by taking long walks, which allowed her to be with her thoughts as she soaked in every nuance of the world around her. “Nature was a quiet space that allowed me to turn inward. When that came into my life, I could feel the energetic state I wanted to keep myselfin.” Later while attending college at Yale University, Bellamy amped up her study of practicing active compassion and living in the moment through meditation. Now she continues her mindfulness practice even while working, “or at the supermarket or the vet this morning,” she explains. “We’re in a state of being tucked in phones and screens. But it’s remarkable to experience a moment blossom between two people who are awake and alive together and interacting. Even if it’s about the weather or the grapes you’re buying that day.” When she is acting, Bellamy seizes the opportunity for connection. “My job as actor goes beyond learning lines. It is also to quiet my mind and open my heart to connect with my scenepartner.” After nearly two decades of guest-starring and having recurring roles on television and appearing in movies, Bellamy, 48, was cast in the daunting role of first lady and then President of the United States on Scandal. “It’s such an honor to inhabit Mellie and see her through all the ups and downs, especially because through it all, she’s shown she’s strong, resilient and determined,” says Bellamy. “And to be able to connect with fans via social media is amazing. I love each and every one of our ‘Gladiators.’” But no matter if she’s starring as one of the most powerful women in the world on one of television’s most popular dramas or has just one line as an actor, Bellamy maintains the same perspective. “We’re in a state of being tucked in phones and screens. But it’s remarkable to experience a moment blossom between two people who are awake and alive together and interacting. Even if it’s about the weather or the grapes you’re buying that day.” “It’s so good for the soul when you look beyond those big, sweeping exciting times that might take your breath away, but enjoy the mundane moments like when you’re cooking dinner and a pet runs past you. Or you have the chance to see a neighbor as you’re both checking your mail. Those little moments when you can actively connect and love each other is a great kindness,” Bellamy explains. “It opens your heart and causes a ripple effect that makes you want to do one more good and kind thing.” The Butterfly Effect As an adoptee, Bellamy says trying to live with a heart full of compassion, love and gratitude is deeply rooted in her soul. As she sees it, she was the recipient of two powerfully compassionate gifts long before she understood their impact. “I think both sides of adoption are blessings. I’m grateful my biological mother knew it wasn’t right for her to keep me at the time and she did the selfless and loving act of giving me up. And then I had these wonderful parents who, after a very long journey to have children, decided genetics wasn’t an issue and welcomed me into their home.” And every day, she lives with the purpose of paying that compassion forward to foster civility in the world. In 2016, Bellamy endowed a scholarship at her alma mater. “I was a big scholarship kid at Yale. And now, because of this wonderful job I have, I can experience the joy of opening the door to the whole world for others. Thanks to Shonda [Rhimes, creator, writer and executive producer of Scandal], I got to do something I’m so proud of.” She is also a huge champion of rescue animals, partnering with charities such as Best Friends Animal Society, Operation Blankets of Love and The Humane Society. But Bellamy isn’t looking for a pat on the back. “I believe in the butterfly effect (one small change can have large effects elsewhere). And if my legacy is quiet but means that I helped someone feel better about themselves, believe in themselves more or want to put more love in the world, I’d die so happy.” In addition to giving back and valuing what life offers, Bellamy appreciates small but meaningful tokens of gratitude. “I’d love to see thank-you notes make a comeback. They’re the loveliest things,” she says. And while she believes it’s important to thank someone for a gift or invitation to dinner, she relishes surprise, handwritten—versus texted or emailed—thank-yous. “How lovely to send a note to the second-grade teacher you think doesn’t remember you and explain how she made you love math and as a result today you’re an engineer or math teacher.” She says pausing to acknowledge the impact of others isn’t just good for the note recipient’s spirit. “It’s so beautiful for you, too. To have that moment of gratitude can be so healing for your outlook and attitude.” What the Future Holds As for life after Scandal, which is coming to an end after seven successful seasons, Bellamy is resolutely positive. Her journey has been less dramatic than that of Mellie Grant, though she has certainly experienced her own share of heartbreak and loss, including the death of her adoptive father at an early age. Through it all, she retains a caring, compassionate view of others and of a life lived in the present. “When you live through those painful moments, you really are instantly grounded in the present and become aware of the brevity of this gift of life,” says Bellamy, who instead of facing her waning days of life with Mellie (and Olivia, and Jake...) with a heavy heart continues to enjoy every moment on set among the show’s cast and crew. “Living in the present in an open way is what sets me free of stress, negativity and turmoil,” she adds. “I know we are only here for a little while. And I want to enjoy every single second of my time here.”
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national sibling day

Sisterhood Is Powerful

My sister Sara and I shared a wall between our bedrooms growing up. We had a secret knock we’d use to say good night to each other: I’d knock first and my sister would knock back. I’m younger than my sister by three years, and her little knock always made me feel safe. If there was a thunderstorm, I’d get scared and drag a blanket down the hall to her room. “Can I sleep in your room?” I’d whisper. “Yes, but on the floor,” she’d whisper back. Adults in midlife now, we laugh about that one. (She couldn’t give me a tiny sliver of her bed?) My sister and I are so different. We live about 1,000 miles apart and our personalities are that far apart, too. I talk too much; she’s shy. No one would know we are sisters; we are adopted and don’t look alike. While we don’t share genetics or personality type, we do share something powerful—sisterhood. Now science is even backing up this premise. A 2015 study from De Montfort University in the U.K. showed that “the presence of a female sibling may be a protective factor…improving family relationships and increasing self-efficacy, optimism and perceived social support.” This could not have been more true in my case. Sisterhood is a fierce bond. I could be my sister’s publicist in life. I love her and I’ve always looked up to her. She’s smart (high school valedictorian, educated at Harvard) but she would never tell you because she’s also humble. I feel fiercely loyal to my sister because we shared a tumultuous childhood that revolved around an alcoholic parent. We both had to enter adulthood with burdens to overcome, and that shared experience resulted in a stronger bond. My sister told me once, “You have never let me down.” And I responded, “You are my sister.” By which I meant, no matter what happens in our lives, I know she understands my past because it was hers, too. I don’t have to fill in the blanks for her or explain who I am, she just knows. Our connection is strong and comforting. Sisters have shared experience. When Sara and I were kids, I would take clothes out of her purple-beaded closet without asking. As sisters do, she’d yell at me for stretching out her clothes or ruining them. She’d read books in her bedroom and I’d slip notes under the crack in her door to make her laugh again and forgive me. We shared the levity of childhood—flashlight tag, long bike rides to the lake and road trips. And we also shared in the heaviness of adulthood—when we gathered around my mom’s bed on her last day of life. During every part of life, we have leaned on each other. Sisters are your tribe. At 26, I found my birth family and learned I had married birth parents and a birth sister. Gulp. When I finally met my birth sister, Jen, in the flesh, it was like looking in a mirror. Two redheads, two talkers. Two people who love to laugh and be the life of the party. Our connection was instant and easy. We didn’t have to share a past—we immediately got one another. Sisters are like that. A sister’s presence is powerful. When I am around either of my sisters, I feel happier. We all live in different states but we share an invisible connection beyond geography. Life is in session when we’re together. We relate. Sisters make you feel like you aren’t experiencing the highs and lows of life alone. With a sister, you always feel like you have a home base where you can draw strength, where someone is always in your corner. Sisters get personal. Even though my sister Sara is a quiet person, we still share everything and hash things out together. Swapping stories and venting gives us both a healthy outlet to process emotions and get feedback. This kind of expression also happens to foster well-being. Sisters look out for one another. My daughters are twin 5-year-olds. By watching their sisterhood play out before me, I notice how often they look out for each other, even at this young age. Sure, they tell on each other, but the sisterly love, generosity and consideration for one another seems innate. In separate preschool classes, they check in on each other on the playground. They shriek and chase each other around the house and prevent each other from falling asleep at night with their antics. Each will come up to me and say, “Mom, sister needs you.” I’m so happy they have each other. Sisterhood is powerful indeed.
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