5 Tips to Get Past the Post-Holiday Crash

5 Tips to Get Past the Post-Holiday Crash

It’s the start of a new year, but January can be tough when it comes to feeling happy. The holiday festivities are over, the gift-giving bills are coming in, the routine workweek has returned, and, in many places, the gloomy winter days are starting to take a toll. It’s no wonder the third Monday of January has been dubbed the most depressing day of the year, with some calling it Blue Monday. January might not be considered the most joyful month, but there’s no need to let the post-holiday blues dominate the first few weeks of 2023. Kick off the year positively by using these five tips to stay happy (even when the air is frigid and the festiveness has faded!): 1. Choose a word of the year Studies have shown that New Year’s resolutions can be very hard to keep, and failing to do so can add to those January blues. Instead of a resolution, choose a word that highlights what you want more of or a specific way you want to feel in 2023. Some word-of-the-year ideas: fun, inspired, love, joy. (Check out more here.) Make your word a priority all year long. Whenever you’re struggling with a decision, ask yourself, “Does this align with my word of the year?” 2. Plan a fun event, large or small The letdown following November and December’s fun events can curtail happiness. After socializing, parties, and festivities, it might feel as if there’s nothing to look forward to, making this is the perfect time to plan something fun. Whether you book a vacation for later in 2023 or schedule brunch with friends next weekend, planning something exciting is a real pick-me-up during these dreary days. 3. Pick up Your Pen When the days are short and your mood is low, try doing something we rarely do anymore: Write a letter to a loved one who lives far away, or find a pen pal via sites like Adopt a Soldier or More Love Letters or The Letter Writers Alliance. Having something positive to do (sending letters!) and the possibility of receiving personal mail will brighten up dull days. 4. Set a positive alarm clock If you use the alarm option on your phone to wake you each morning, program the sound it makes to give yourself a positive boost when you wake up. You can download a favorite ringtone, or even record your own wake-up invocation by recording yourself fun sounds and uplifting sayings like “Go smile at yourself in the mirror” or “Go get 'em, tiger!” 5. Create a new routine Getting back to the standard, day-to-day routines can be one of the most disheartening parts of January but you can spice up your schedule by creating a new and fun routine this month! Consider what you really enjoy doing—reading, drinking coffee, chatting with friends, going for walks—and find a way to incorporate what you love into your daily routine. Set aside an hour after dinner for reading or schedule a weekly date with a friend to catch up. It will make the time until spring a lot more joyful. Dani DiPirro is an author, blogger, and designer living in a suburb of Washington, DC. In 2009, she launched the website PositivelyPresent.com with the intention of sharing her insights about living a positive and present life. Dani is the author of Stay Positive, The Positively Present Guide to Life, and a variety of e-books. She is also the founder of Twenty3, a design studio focused on promoting positive, modern graphic design and illustration.
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Jillian Michaels on the cover of Live Happy

Peek Inside Our February Issue!

Our February issue of Live Happy magazine is now available. Here's a taste of what you'll find inside: Jillian’s World If you think you know Jillian Michaels, think again. She’s more than just a drill sergeant with abs of steel. The reality TV star has a new show that features her softer side—as a mom, a wife and epicenter of her own fitness empire. 90 Days to a Happier You Forget New Year’s resolutions—it’s time to try something transformative! We’ve enlisted five top experts in their fields to help us—and you—make 2016 the year we dream bigger, sleep better and conquer our greatest worries and fears. Join Live Happy staff members on a 3-month happiness challenge that will lead us to more joyful, fulfilling lives. Who’s Happier Than Hoda? Every morning America wakes up to the smiling face of Today anchor Hoda Kotb. Behind the dynamic cheerfulness and huge smile, Hoda has weathered her own challenges and come through them with the grit and wisdom of experience. She has also penned a new book about people willing to take risks and live with the consequences. Play Is the Thing Playtime is not just for kids anymore. Whether outdoors at the park or inside at the card table, research shows that play is good for your brain. Read about the science behind why we should all take time out of our busy schedules to play with friends and family. Plus Bethany Hamilton, Tal Ben-Shahar, foods to boost your mood and much more!! To find Live Happy magazine at a store near you, go to magfinder.magnetdata.net
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Half Marathon Goes a Long Way Toward Lasting Change

Half-Marathon a Milestone for Lasting Change

Welcome to 2016! I’m going to Disney World! Over the holidays I, like many of you, spent some time examining what I would like to accomplish in the coming year. I set personal, business and family goals. Some will require stopping bad habits (procrastination!) and others will require building new habits (regular sleep). In other words, I will need to change. And change is hard because, as Tal Ben-Shahar shares on the Live Happy Now podcast and in this month’s issue of the magazine, we don’t have much willpower. If you find yourself abandoning your resolutions after a couple of weeks or simply needing some strategies to accomplish change, Live Happy has a ton of information available this month to help you. Five of our staff members are undergoing their own transformations in our 90 Days to a Happier You! challenge. Time for change The great news is that we are all capable of change, and even small changes bring us closer to living the life that we want. I am feeling a sense of accomplishment because of a change I made last year. In late 2014, I took a hard look at my health. With three children and a job that requires travel, I was simply no longer making it to the gym. I was putting on weight and not feeling very energetic. I knew I needed a change. I wanted to add exercise into my life in a way that it became easy. I didn’t want complicated plans; I didn’t want to hire a trainer; and I needed to be able to exercise anywhere in almost every kind of weather with limited to no equipment. So, I took up running. Not born to run, but willing to try I know from reading Live Happy that running has tremendous benefits beyond physical health. Although I have played various sports, I have never enjoyed running. The runner’s high is something I have never experienced, and I am not sure I believe it exists. My spouse, on the other hand, has run four marathons, a half Ironman and too many half marathons for me to remember. She was quietly thrilled that I had decided to run, but aside from making some shoe and apparel suggestions, largely left me alone to do it my way (which is really the only way I ever do anything). Into the groove I set a goal of being able to run a 5K by Memorial Day and even took the initiative to register for a local race. Then I downloaded a Couch to 5K program and started to run. The idea was to run three times a week. Sometimes I did. Sometimes I didn’t. But, by Memorial Day I had stuck with it enough to lose a few pounds and be ready for the 5K. However, I was sick and couldn’t run. I surprised myself by being disappointed. Then one conversation jump-started my momentum. My run-crazy spouse said she has always wanted to run the Disney marathon. I said I wasn’t going to go to Disney to watch her run and be too weary to move for the rest of the weekend. She said, “If you run the half marathon, we can do it together.” I said OK. The goal Over the next week we researched, spent the money for plane tickets, arranged for her parents to watch the kids, and suddenly I was signed up for a half marathon—13.1 miles—when I hadn’t run more than 3.1 miles in 10 years or more than 10 miles at once since I was 18. Commitment—around the world, and back home So to start off this year, I am going to Disney World! I have prepared. Running has become a regular part of my life. I have run in Central Park and along the streets of NYC; in Cincinnati; Long Beach, California; on a cruise ship treadmill in San Jose; on a treadmill in Mexico City; on the beach in Gulf Shores, Alabama; and all over my neighborhood at home in Texas where my neighbors honk and wave. I am ready and excited! I have made real change, and this run will be a celebration of that accomplishment for me. I am not sure how I will do in the race. I still don’t love to run. And I am very slow. But it doesn’t matter. I achieved the goal of having a workout plan to fit my lifestyle. See how it goes! If you’d like to follow along and cheer or jeer me on the morning of the January 9 run, I will be on social media live from the event. You can follow on Twitter @dheisz on Instagram @debheisz or on Facebook/livehappy. Please share your goals and successes with our team in the Comments below or @livehappy on Twitter or on our Facebook page. Here’s to lasting change for us all in 2016! Deborah K. Heisz is the co-founder and editorial director of Live Happy.
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7 Steps Back From Depression

7 Steps Back From Depression

When I was in my 20s, I just wanted to stay in bed and cry. I had a journalism degree but worked as an administrative assistant and a waitress. A rough childhood with an alcoholic mother made me think I couldn’t do any better. I had an apartment that I shared with a friend, but depression left me feeling lost and hopeless. Desperately wanting to feel differently, I made an appointment with a psychologist. My psychologist was funny and blunt. After a long psychological assessment, he described me back to me: “Chronic depression; fear of abandonment; angry but you have a difficult time expressing it; people pleaser.” That hurt, but it also hit home. Talk therapy helped me because I finally felt heard and understood what was happening inside my head. I’d drive home from those appointments and write down everything I could remember. I wanted to study my way out of depression’s dark grip. Slowly, I started to feel strong. My solution wasn’t a quick fix, but I came away from therapy with an emotional toolkit that has stood the test of time. Here are some of the things I’ve learned: 1. Practice self-compassion Would you treat a friend the way you treat yourself? When I was depressed, I condemned myself for normal human flaws. Start treating yourself in the same compassionate way you would treat a child or close friend. Give yourself a soft place to land when things don’t go right or something doesn’t work out. Take our quiz: Are You Sabotaging Your Self-Esteem? 2. Make decisions that make you feel good about you Every decision you make can impact how you feel about yourself. Sharing a kind word, acting with integrity or facing a fear can all make you feel good about yourself, even in small doses. 3. Decide what you want your life to look like I learned in therapy that our relationships are often a reflection of how we feel about ourselves. When I was depressed in my 20s, my relationships were a mess. As I worked on me, I watched every aspect of my life improve: relationships, work, health, finances and personal goals. I made a list of what my life looked like in each of those areas, and what I wanted my life to look like. This simple step of jotting things down in a notebook was life-changing because it gave me a road map to follow. Inaction fuels depression. Action builds confidence and dissipates depression. Read more: 10 Questions That Will Change Your Life 4. Spend time with your strengths and assets If you are tough on yourself, spend some time doing the things you do well. Your strengths are your guideposts for who you are. My self-worth used to feel like an empty tank. Today, I keep it full by focusing on my strengths instead of dwelling on each flaw. Notice and be grateful for your positive traits, skills and abilities. Now I even laugh a little bit about the things I’m not so good at. 5. Sleep on it If you have a down day, wait it out and see how you feel tomorrow. Sleep can magically change your outlook and give you a fresh perspective. 6. Write it out I used journaling from the time I could write. It was my escape and my place of solace. Journaling is a cathartic and healing practice. As you write, your mind has a safe place to express thoughts. You connect with your authentic feelings. Writing can be incredibly illuminating and can help lead your mind out of its darkest place. 7. Take risks When I started going to therapy, I had an intense fear of being alone and not having a boyfriend at all times. Boyfriends were mirrors for me and if I didn’t have one, I didn’t think I had value. Facing my fear of living alone gave me the courage to realize I determine my own value. My choice to seek talk therapy put me on a path to fight depression and win. I still struggle from time-to-time with the ghosts of old issues, but I now see my battle with depression as a resilience builder that gave me the tools to be an incredibly happy adult. Read more: Top 10 Natural Remedies to Calm Your Anxiety Sandra Bienkowski is a regular contributor to Live Happy and the founder and CEO of TheMediaConcierge.net.
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Where She Belongs

Where She Belongs

If you’ve ever wondered what your passion truly is, you’re not alone.“Many of us contemplate that,” says Hoda Kotb, Today show co-anchor and The New York Times best-selling author. “I think from time to time most people gaze out at the path they’re on and wonder if they should turn around or switch lanes.”In her latest book, Where We Belong: Journeys That Show Us the Way, Hoda shares inspiring stories of people who have made a switch and found their life’s purpose in unexpected ways. The project is dear to her heart. “It’s amazing to see a person click into their lane—to be doing something they just know is right, that feels right in their gut,” she says.Stories include those of an investment banker who became a minister after years of working on Wall Street and a young woman from a blue-collar background whose passion took her to Harvard Medical School. Celebrities profiled in the book include comedian Margaret Cho and former boxer Laila Ali, both of whom pursued their passions to find fulfillment.Hoda sat down with Live Happy to discuss her book and the spot where she says she ultimately belongs.Live Happy: What inspired you to write this book?Hoda Kotb: The fact that it’s never too late to find your path. Most of us think “I’ve been working at this for so long” or “I have a steady job and insurance,” so that where we’re at seems like the safe place to stay. But you can only swim upstream for so long, then you have to ride the wave. The laws of gravity will push you to where you need to go. And once you find the right fit your life can snap into place like two puzzle pieces.It’s inspiring when you meet people who are brave enough to make these choices. This project reminded me that you can carve out what you want in your life.LH: What surprised you the most from the stories you heard?Hoda: It wasn’t simple to find these stories. Maybe it was tough because most people play it safe in life. People feel like, “This is OK, so I’m going to stay on a path that’s OK and live a fine life.” You may live a beautiful life. But you won’t live the life you’re meant to live.It was interesting that those who made a change are unique. Listen, it’s safer to stay in a miserable job for 15 years because you make enough money to do x, y and z. The bravery of the people [in the book] surprised me because it’s not simple to follow your passion, and many of them almost didn’t make these life-altering decisions. LH: What’s the best decision you almost didn't make?Hoda: I think it’s when I was anchoring in New Orleans. I was living in a city I absolutely loved—and still do—and was in a relationship with a man I cared very much about. I had a terrific best friend and longevity in my job so everything seemed like I had found a great fit.Then I received a job offer to move to New York City and work at Dateline. That meant going from being a big fish in a small pond to being a tiny, puny little guppy in a huge pond.I thought about the security I had in New Orleans and my circle of friends where I felt safe and all kinds of stuff, and that I was going to make less money in New York, where it would be more expensive to live. So I wasn’t sure if—or how—I would make it.But then I listened to my gut: If I turned down the Dateline job, I would live to regret it. I knew I would be one of several correspondents and my contract said the network could fire me after six months. I felt like I was on the edge of a cliff and wasn’t sure if I should jump. But I knew that if I didn’t jump and go to New York, I’d be left imagining. I would have been thinking of the “what ifs,” and I wasn’t sure how I could live with myself. I was fortunate because I could take that risk without it affecting other people. I didn’t have a family, so that made the leap a little easier.Want more Hoda? Read our feature article in the February 2016 issue of Live Happy magazine.LH: What message would you like the book to leave readers with?Hoda: We live our lives where Monday bleeds into Tuesday, then Wednesday, then a week, a month and a year. I was in awe of people with the courage to change. When you see people who make a choice like that, you want to follow them and get their recipe for the secret sauce.Everyone has their own road map, and it’s my hope that this book might help someone find their own sweet spot. Or realize that anything is possible.The book’s intent isn’t to say to readers “Quit your job” or “Leave your loved ones.” The message is: If there’s a part of you that wonders what else might have been, or you’ve always had a passion in your heart, it would be a shame not to try it.Most of us can’t just up and leave our profession or go back to college to pursue the degree we’ve always wanted. So I hope this inspires people to put 10 percent of their time and money toward the thing they really want to do. You can still continue to do what you have to do, but 10 percent of the time you can put your brain in another place. Maybe down the line that 10 percent will grow to 15, 20 percent or more.Read more: Strings of PassionLH: Have you found your sweet spot?Hoda: I’m not sure I’ve found it. Probably, in a perfect world, I would teach second grade; I think that’s what I’m supposed to be doing. That’s such a great age!My passion is to one day have a camp for kids who—and there are so many of them!—are right there on the edge of growing into greatness but need a little guidance, a nudge or some help. I want to have a summer camp for kids who need extra love that is a place that helps them become who they want to be.That’s what I’d love to do, ultimately. Talking, dreaming, thinking about that is what I do in my 10 percent of passion time.Read more: Do What You LoveGina Roberts-Grey is an award-winning writer whose work has appeared in Family Circle, Self and Essence. She is a frequent contributor to Live Happy.
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Win 3 Months of Expert Coaching!

Win 3 months of coaching and watch your life transform in 2016! The amazing coaches who are helping us change our lives for the 90 Days to a Happier You! challenge would like to give two lucky Live Happy readers the chance to win access to the same incredible “happiness makeovers” that have transformed the lives of our staff members, Donna, Kim, Chris, Susan and Shelley! To win three full months of coaching from one of our five experts, simply write an essay of 300 words or fewer to tell us how you think you could be happier by tackling a particular obstacle in your life. It should be an obstacle related to one of the following issues: unplugging from work, problems with sleep, anxiety, goal setting or communicating with a loved one. Send your essay to editor@livehappy.com by the deadline of March 31, 2016. The Live Happy team and one or more of the coaches will judge your essays, and we will contact the winners to let you know what happens next. Because of the expected high volume of entries, we will not be able to respond personally to each contestant. See below for complete contest rules. Complete contest rules When to enter: Live Happy magazine’s 90 Days to a Happier You Contest begins January 1, 2016, at 12:00 a.m., and ends March 31, 2016, at 11:59 p.m. Central Time (CT). By submitting an entry, each contestant agrees to the following rules of the contest and states that he or she is 18 years old or older. Who may enter: Persons 18 years old or older who are residents of the United States—except for individuals affiliated with Live Happy LLC, including employees, interns, contractors, and their immediate families (children, siblings and spouses) and others living in their households—are eligible. Live Happy LLC will determine winners’ eligibility. No purchase necessary to enter. How to enter: To win the 90 Days to a Happier You Contest and receive three full months of coaching from one of our five experts, a person must write 300 words or fewer about how the entrant thinks he or she could be happier by tackling his or her particular obstacle with the help of three months of coaching by one of our coaches (as defined in the Judging section of these rules) and send it to editor@livehappy.com. By entering the contest, entrants grant Live Happy LLC a royalty-free, worldwide, perpetual, nonexclusive license to display, distribute, reproduce and create derivative works of their submissions, in whole or in part, in any media now existing or subsequently developed, for any educational, promotional, publicity, exhibition, archival and all other standard Live Happy LLC purposes. Live Happy LLC will not be required to pay any additional consideration or seek any additional approval in connection with such uses. Judging: Judging will be conducted by the Live Happy LLC team and one or more of the coaches identified in the February 2016 Live Happy magazine story, “90 Days to a Happier You” (those coaches being Christine Carter, Karen Cassiday, Caroline Miller, Michele Gravelle and Michael Breus). Judging will be based on how well the entrant expresses that he or she will be happier tackling his or her particular obstacle with three months of coaching. Decisions of the judges will be final. The winners will be notified of their status by May 20, 2016, and will appear on our website by May 31, 2016. The contest is void where prohibited or restricted by law. Live Happy LLC reserves the right to cancel the contest or modify these rules at its discretion. Prizes: Each winner will receive three months’ worth of coaching as defined in the How To Enter section of these rules (what consists of three months’ worth of coaching will be determined by the coach who supplies it). Each winner must sign an affidavit and license and will be responsible for paying any taxes he or she owes on a prize.
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The Myth of Work-Life Balance

The Myth of Work-Life Balance

This year, will you take more time off from work than you did last year to spend more time with loved ones and do more of what brings you joy? Or will you, like many of us, try and fail to do it all? Work-life balance is a sham, an ideal that is nearly impossible to achieve." The dictionary’s definition of balance is “a condition in which different elements are equal or in the correct proportions.” But your priorities are never in equal proportions, nor should they be! Sometimes work takes precedence, or family does. A more realistic way of thinking about our lives is that we can set our own priorities and be flexible about what’s important when. The overflowing barrel Think of two big barrels sitting side-by-side. Imagine each of them filled with water. One barrel is your life and one is your work. Now imagine that in one barrel, the water level rises and rises, and starts to overflow. You know that feeling, when life or work demands become overwhelming—especially now, at the busiest time of the year. When you feel yourself getting overwhelmed with work, step back and visualize that barrel overflowing, and think about what constraints, or boundaries, you need to set for yourself. As we ask our coaching clients to ask themselves, “If I take on this new project, which project should I put lower on my priority list?” Find a thoughtful, honest way to share your boundaries with bosses, clients and others. Read more: 5 Ways to Survive a Micomanaging Boss What are your priorities? Here are a couple of our own examples of constraints that we have set to focus on what’s important to us: Senia takes Thursday afternoons off to be with her children. That’s a good day of the week in terms of their extracurricular activities, and Senia gets more in-depth time with her kids in the middle of the week. Now that Margaret’s children are grown, her husband often travels with her on business and they tack on days at the end of the trip to explore the new city or country. Michelle Phan, the YouTube star who has launched a makeup subscription service, describes starting the day with a fully charged laptop and phone. When the batteries die, she stops working for the day. She figures that if they need to recharge, she does, too. Pay attention to when your barrel overflows or your batteries fade. Knowing that you can be flexible and set your priorities accordingly. Read more: 6 Steps to Transitioning at Work Setting priorities Make lists of do’s and don’ts to keep you on the right track. DO plan how you’ll exercise when you’re on a business trip. DON’T check email at your child’s holiday performance. DO create an out-of-office message to let people know when you’ll be back. DON’T let work worries spoil your Christmas or Hanukkah. Ask yourself: Twenty years from now, what do I want to remember about today? Margaret H. Greenberg and Senia Maymin,Ph.D., are highly sought after organizational consultants and executive coaches, and authors ofProfit from the Positive: Proven Leadership Strategies to Boost Productivity and Transform Your Business. For more information about Senia and Margaret, go toProfitFromThePositive.com or to their Facebook page.
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Why Forgive?

Why Forgive?

Tense, heavy, weighed down. We can all relate to the feeling of holding onto anger, resentment, grudges and things that don't serve us well. Withholding forgiveness “is bad for our health and creates increased risks for cardiovascular, immune system and other problems, including depression, anxiety, anger, and PTSD disorders," says Everett Worthington, professor of psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University and a leading researcher on forgiveness. A difficult skill to learn The good news is forgiveness is a skill that can be taught. "People can learn to forgive better and the amount of forgiveness experienced is related to time spent trying to forgive," says Everett, who has dedicated more than two decades to studying the concept. Recently, Everett found that married partners made relationship gains when trained in communication and conflict resolution but within a year lost about half of the gains, whereas those trained in forgiveness and reconciliation made gains and retained them a year later. Two kinds of forgiveness While forgiveness can sustain and strengthen our most cherished relationships, it is often easier said than done. Everett's REACH forgiveness model is designed to help people learn to forgive. It depicts two types of forgiveness: “decisional” forgiveness (a decision to act differently toward the offender in the future), and emotional forgiveness (transformation from resentment and anxiety to positive emotions such as compassion and empathy). While decisional forgiveness is more important for restoring relationships, emotional forgiveness is vital to our physical and mental health. The five steps of REACH: R = Recall - Remember the hurt as objectively as possible E = Empathize - Try to put yourself into the shoes of the person who hurt you A = Altruism - Give the person the gift of forgiveness C = Commit - Publicly forgive the person H = Hold onto Forgiveness - Remind yourself you made the choice to forgive Listen to our podcast: The Slow Medicine Approach to Forgiveness Forgiveness becomes personal Everett doesn't just study forgiveness, he has lived it. He has experienced first-hand how to forgive others and himself after two tragic experiences: his mother's murder and his brother's suicide. While he was remarkably able to forgive his mother's murderer; it was his brother's death that challenged him on another level and propelled the direction of his research. Up until that point, he had done a couple of studies on self-forgiveness, but they were not as central to him as studying forgiveness of others, he says. "When my brother committed suicide, I felt guilt over not being able to help him more... I also had a deep emotional experience with self-condemnation that helped me understand more deeply what people were going through when they struggled to forgive themselves," says Everett. Read more: 9 Steps to Foregiveness The hardest person to forgive “Self-forgiveness is not just about feeling better about ourselves,” Everett says. "We also must do things to restore the moral damage we might have inflicted on ourselves by harming others, and we must do things to repair the damage done socially, and we need to deal with our offense against God, nature, other people or whatever we think is sacred. If [we only work on] moral repair, we are left with remaining guilt and shame for what we've done. If [we only work on] positive self-regard, we just let ourselves off the hook." While the process is tough, letting go of resentment while holding onto forgiveness—for ourselves and others—lightens our load and lifts us all up in the end. Read more: 33 Ideas on Forgiveness Suzann Pileggi Pawelski is a contributing editor and regular blogger for Live Happy. To read more about forgiveness, see the feature article "Forgive to Flourish" in the December 2015 issue of Live Happy magazine.
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Happiness of the Holiday Table

Happiness of the Holiday Table

There are a few things you can always count on during family holidays: kids showing up a foot taller since last you’ve seen them; Aunt Lisa nailing the perfect sweet-potato-to-marshmallow ratio in her signature dish; and roof-raising joyful chaos that leaves you flopped out on the couch once everyone hits the road.And there’s another part of families’ gatherings that’s taken so for granted that we don’t even think about it: the tales that get retold so often that they become part of the very fabric of your family’s identity. But these stories aren’t just idle ways to fill the silence between forkfuls—they serve a real purpose in making our lives richer and more meaningful.Family narratives bring us togetherRobyn Fivush, Ph.D., a psychology professor at Emory University in Atlanta, studies family narratives. These reminiscences contribute to a young person’s formation of her identity and her understanding of her place in the world, Robyn says. For older people, sharing family stories allows them to satisfy what psychologist Erik Erikson termed generativity, or the desire to impart your wisdom and legacy to the next generations. “There is some anthropological and sociological research that suggests that these kinds of stories become kind of a family motif,” says Robyn, “like ‘We’re a lucky family’ or ‘We’re a family that struggles but overcomes.’ ”What that means, says William Dunlop, Ph.D., a University of California, Riverside, assistant professor who studies personal narratives, is that these stories can affect a person’s entire worldview. A listener comes away with a sense of collective identity. “These stories say, ‘This is my kind of family,’ ” Will says.Holiday sharingWhile holiday time is not the only time family lore gets shared—car trips, dinners and other less formal moments are terrific opportunities to recount and listen—the gatherings offer a unique opportunity. “The thing about a holiday is it’s a chance to ask questions that a lot of different people might have answers to,” says Linda Coffin, the executive director of the Association of Personal Historians, an organization that encourages the preserving and sharing of people’s life stories.“If you ask your mom about crazy Uncle Harold she’ll have her perspective, but with 12 people at Christmas, you’ll get a lot of different perspectives.” You come away with a richer, more three-dimensional picture of your family’s history and the people who formed it.Read more about how family stories enrich our lives.A hero in the familyThere are many other life-enriching benefits to family stories, perhaps the most overt of which is imparting values to young people. “Sometimes they’re moral stories, or admonitions or warnings—what not to do,” says Marshall Duke, Ph.D., Robyn’s Emory colleague who also studies family narratives. Other times, they’re stories of what Marshall calls heroism. “In this case, heroism is doing something the listener thinks he would never do, such as picking up and leaving Europe and going to a new country, or overcoming some political and social obstacles.”The idea that you are part of a group of people who are capable of such heroism—which almost everyone in a nation of immigrants is—is a source of pride to people of any age, but especially to teens and children. In his research, says Marshall, “we’ve found that heroic stories give strength to kids. The fact that they are related to someone who did this, it becomes ‘That’s what we do in our family, our family rises above.’ It teaches resiliency.”A story worth retellingStories of her mother’s heroism had a big impact on Marisa Fox-Bevilacqua, 52. Her mother, Tamar Fromer, was a soldier in the Israeli underground. Marisa heard again and again how Tamar fled Poland alone at age 13 to Palestine, which was then under British governance before the state of Israel was established, just before World War II. “My mother told me how she and other girls smuggled [goods past the gates] in Jerusalem” to aid the Israeli statehood movement, Marisa recalls. The British guarding the city were too formal and polite to check women, Tamar recounted. “She’d just walk by with this big innocent smile on her face.”Tamar also told her daughter of the pain of leaving her mother behind in Poland, where she died in the Holocaust. “Growing up with that story—you, too, can be severed from your mother—filled me with a lot of anxiety as a kid,” Marisa says. “But I think what she was trying to tell me was that you can’t walk through life with fear—you get over whatever it is that you’re afraid of, that you must adjust, that life is random and you have to make the best of it.” And while Marisa knew her mother as a homemaker, not a soldier, “I learned from her stories that girls can do anything,” she says, and that breaking the rules for a worthy cause was an admirable thing to do.The past is prologueTales of events that took place before we were born don’t just help people understand their places in their families but also the families’ places in the larger world. “Because by listening you are now included in these stories, they become part of your history,” Will says. And especially when the story is being told by an older person to a younger person, the listener experiences what Marshall calls an “extension of the self.”“When a 10-year-old knows about how his grandparents lived 60 years ago he feels a part of something that has been going on longer than he’s been around.” He is woven into an ongoing family narrative and on some level may feel a responsibility as a participant in the story, which, says Marshall, can help guide his choices in the future. The child, says Will, “is aware that his behavior affects the family in a broad sense.” CJ McKiernan, 48, of Somerville, Massachusetts, says she grew up hearing her dad tell a story about his own father that, while primarily humorous, nonetheless had a strong message about what was expected in their family.“When my dad was young, he ran out of money in California and so he called my grandfather for help. Grandpa says, ‘They have buses, don’t they?’ ” she says. “So my dad takes a nine-day bus trip back to Massachusetts from California and finally arrives all dirty and tired and calls his father from the bus station to pick him up. Grandpa says, ‘They have buses, don’t they?’ It was rush hour and he wasn’t about to go pick him up at the station.” The moral of the story, CJ says, is “You are responsible for your own mistakes—your family is not going let you get hurt but if you do something idiotic, you take responsibility for yourself.”Read more: 33 Ideas on FamilyBut these family stories, experts say, do not have to be positive, funny or even have a happy ending to confer the same benefits of family identity and values on the people hearing them. In Marshall and Robyn’s research, adolescents who knew many details about happy and unhappy aspects of family history tended to have higher levels of self esteem, lower levels of anxiety, fewer behavioral problems and greater resilience. “They learn that bad things happen to good people, and we can overcome obstacles,” Marshall says.They also learn that failure is not the end of the world. “Sometimes you work as hard as you possibly can and things still don’t come out well—it helps people accept that there are times like that.” The stories don’t even need to be true to bring the good stuff. In fact, says Marshall, they are often hardly true at all. “They have a certain ‘truthiness’ about them, as [Stephen] Colbert would say. They’re often embellished or the edges are softened.”The joy of storytellingMarisa and CJ both took away valuable lessons from their parents’ stories, but the upsides of family storytelling aren’t just to the listeners—the teller, too, gains a sense of meaning, which is often tied to generativity. Northwestern University narrative researcher and psychologist Dan McAdams and his colleagues have been studying storytelling and generativity for decades.“Generativity,” he writes, “is an adult’s concern for, and commitment to promoting the well-being of future generations through…a wide range of endeavors aimed at leaving a positive legacy for the future.” “It’s kind of like, ‘I’ve gotten me figured out, now what am I going to give back to the world?" Robin explains.Dan’s research reveals that highly generative people find happiness in telling these stories. “Not everyone achieves that generativity, but those that do report higher levels of life satisfaction and a sense of meaning and purpose,” Robyn says. People who are more generative, Dan’s research shows, also report telling more of these family stories, particularly ones with the themes of suffering, growth and human kindness.Linda, who helps clients put their life stories into book form to give to their loved ones, has seen what telling personal narratives can do for her clients. “In sharing these stories, people get a sense that they’re passing on something that’s significant in a way that’s not always true of an estate that consists of things,” she says.“It’s a personal legacy that they’re passing on.” Even if an older person is not particularly concerned about the next generation or needs to be coaxed to tell their story, “I find that people who tell their own stories have a sense of looking back through their lives and feeling a sense of accomplishment,” Linda says. “Like, wow, you know, I’ve had a life! Even if they didn’t do something ‘big,’ ” she says.The tales that bondIn some families, stories are sheer entertainment, and the ritual and repetition of the same stories—with the same sometimes corny punch lines that families recite in unison—are what binds members together, even more than the specific content. One family classic of CJ’s is the tale of how her dad got lost driving to Logan airport. “Oftentimes the whole story won’t get told, because we’ve already heard it. It’ll be just one sentence, and it’s like hearing the whole story,” she says.“Whenever there’s mention of someone getting lost while driving, we say, ‘You gotta go into New Hampshire to turn around,’ ” CJ says. “It’s the same joke over and over again, and the four of us think it’s funny. I’m sure it’s not as funny to other people, but it binds us together as a family.”Of course, not all families have delightful (or even hilarious-in-retrospect) memories to share and some family gatherings are strained, but the stories we tell in those circumstances can also serve a positive purpose.Sharing makes it hurt lessSiblings sharing gallows humor about a difficult parent, for example, is healthy and positive and bonds them together in a different way. “These stories cement the relationships,” Will says. “Nothing is better than not feeling alone. It doesn’t make the stories less terrible, but it does make you feel less isolated.”What’s more, if a sad story is told during the holidays, around food and gifts and loved ones, the message is, “This terrible thing happened in our family history, but look how nice everything is now,” Marshall says. “Things pass and people overcome.” So don’t worry if it appears that the younger folks in your family aren’t obviously enthralled with your anecdotes that illustrate your years of accrued wisdom.“You just want to put the story out there,” Marshall says. When your kids are adults and you hear them repeating your meaningful stories to their own children, you can sit back, enjoy Aunt Lisa’s sweet potatoes, and know that what you said did, in fact, make a difference.
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90 Days to a Happier You Home Base

Make 2016 a year of bigger dreams, better sleep, stronger relationships and less stress! Join the Live Happy team as we're coached by top experts on how to swap bad habits for good ones so that we—and you!—can make lasting change and lead more fulfilling lives. This page is our home base for articles, blogs, podcasts, contests and more. Throw away your New Year's resolutions and join us on this 90-day transformational journey. THE ARTICLE FROM OUR FEBRUARY ISSUE THAT KICKED IT ALL OFF: 90 Days to a Happier You by Shelley Levitt Join the Live Happy team as we’re coached by a squad of experts on how to swap five bad habits for good ones—so we (and you!) can lead more fulfilling lives. BLOGS FROM LIVE HAPPY STAFFERS AND OUR EXPERT COACHES: Better Communication With a Loved One Smells Like Teen Spirit by Susan Kane, contributing editor Susan's teenage daughter, Coco, is in that phase when it can be tough to even get a "hello." Join Susan as she learns tips and tools to improve communication with Coco. 6 Steps to Healthier, More Productive Conversations by Michele Gravelle Executive coach and communication expert Michele Gravelle takes us through the six steps to open up dialogue and initiate difficult conversations with a loved one. Podcast: Michele Gravelle - Improving Communication with Others - Listen Now! Overcoming Anxiety No Worries by Kim Baker, art director Though usually fun and easygoing, Kim is often plagued by worry and anxiety about her family. Join Kim in her quest to overcome the unnecessary worry in her life. 6 Steps to Win the War Against Worry by Karen Cassiday, Ph.D. Karen walks us through six steps to address own anxiety and worry. She introduces powerful new tools to track and battle anxiety, including a method to desensitize us to our greatest fears. Podcast: Karen Cassiday - Managing Negative Thinking - Listen Now! Help With Chronic Insomnia My Sleep Intervention: A Torturous Beginning by Shelley Levitt, editor at large Shelley had struggled with poor sleep for years. Her expectations are high for this 90-day intervention, though the beginning of her treatment has been anything but easy. 6 Steps to Better Sleep by Michael Breus, Ph.D. Renowned sleep expert Michael Breus Ph.D., takes us through the six steps he uses to treat chronic insomnia. If poor sleep is affecting your life, you will not want to miss this post. Podcast: Michael Breus - Overcoming Chronic Insomnia - Listen Now! Setting Short- and Long-Term Goals Goals, What Goals? by Chris Libby, section editor Chris has always been a pretty easygoing guy—and that's worked just fine for him. But when coach Caroline Miller challenges him to set hard goals, Chris's life begins to change in unexpected ways. 6-Step Goal-Setting Challenge by Caroline Adams Miller High-powered speaker, author and coach Caroline Miller is not going to let Chris—or the rest of us—rest on our laurels. Read her "6-Step Goal-Setting Challenge" to kick yourself into gear. Unplugging From Work Let Me Answer This Email First by Donna Stokes, managing editor The first step to recovery is admitting you are an addict. Donna was looking at her work email during dinner and at stoplights while driving. Read about her digital detox here. 6 Steps to Unplug From Work by Christine Carter, Ph.D. Who better than Christine, an expert on "finding your sweet spot" at work and at home, to teach us how to step away from the phone. Read her "6 Steps to Unplug from Work" to start your own intervention now. WIN 3 MONTHS OF EXPERT COACHING! Our amazing coaches would like to give two lucky Live Happy readers the chance to win access to the same three-month “happiness makeovers” that have transformed the lives of our staff members. MEET OUR COACHES We've gathered top experts from around the country to help us shed bad habits and transform our lives in a mere three months. Learn more about the coaches—including their publications and accomplishments—by clicking here.
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