Showing posts with label change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label change. Show all posts

A Love-Hate Relationship: Daylight Savings Time


I love this time of year.  I can smell Spring coming, and the milder weather means we can put the windows down in the car, the garden is starting to grow, and Jumpin' Jacks is open!  (Woot woot!)  It also means Spring Break and the days start getting longer.  Huzzah!  

There's only one caveat to this blissful Spring Fever mindset:  We move the clocks an hour forward, which means an hour less sleep.  Don't know about you, but the change to Daylight Savings Time on Sunday has thrown everything out of whack.  

I'm not tired at the time I'm "supposed" to wind-down at night, and instead of falling asleep within the first ten minutes, I lay in bed for an hour.  (Only got 4-1/2 hours last night.  Yikes.)  The 4:30am alarm that I was used to is now rousing me at what was 3:30am last week.  (No wonder the gym is empty.)  As I sit here writing this, I'm chugging down the largest coffee the cafeteria sells because I could so fall asleep at my desk right now.  (Caffeine is my friend today.)  Can you relate?

So what's really going on?  Here is an explanation of why we have trouble adjusting and some interesting facts about the biological impact of Daylight Savings Time:
 

(Couldn't resist...guess I'm punchy from
serious lack of sleep)
Our circadian rhythm, nature's built-in mechanism that affects our behavior, is triggered primarily by the amount of light and darkness in our environment.  Changes in daylight hours disrupts the release of melatonin, a hormone that regulates sleep, and interrupts our circadian body clocks. Interference with the body's natural processes can impair memory, concentration and performance, and produce symptoms often compared to jet lag.

A highly-respected expert on "
chronobiology" (the study of circadian rhythms), Prof. Till Roenneberg's studies show that our internal body clocks never adjust to gaining an "extra" hour of sunlight at the end of the day during daylight saving time.  "The consequence of that is that the majority of the population has drastically decreased productivity, decreased quality of life, increasing susceptibility to illness, and is just plain tired," Roenneberg said.
Roenneberg goes on to say that light doesn't have the same affect on the body in the morning as it does in the evening.  "More light in the morning would advance the body clock, and that would be good. But more light in the evening would even further delay the body clock," he said.


This stuff is starting to make sense, but what do we do about it?

  (Damn...My eyelids feel like lead right now.)


Several experts offer suggestions for dealing with the effects of the time change:
1.  Get your exercise or workout done early in the day
2.  Avoid coffee in the afternoon; drink decaf green tea instead
3.  Resist the urge to spend that extra hour of daylight outdoors; get
inside and prepare for night time
4.  Drink a cup of chamomile or other calming herbal tea before bed
5.  Avoid alcohol (it may help you fall asleep, but it's actually a stimulant that will keep you from sleeping well)
6.  Turn off the TV, cell phone and computer an hour before bedtime (the light from the screen can disrupt your body's ability to relax)
7.  Make your bed as comfortable and cozy as possible and keep your bedroom cool and dark
8.  Darken your windows (with shades or room-darkening drapes) to keep early morning light out of your sleeping area
9.  Practice deep breathing after tucking yourself in
10.  Once you wake up, throw open the drapes or sit near a bright window during breakfast to reset your inner clock



Geez...I can't stop yawning! (Not pretty.  Trust me on this one.  See above.)  I'll give these tips a try and see whether they lessen my sluggishness.  Are you with me?  What've we got to lose? 
 
Guess I better throw out that cuppa coffee, get my butt outta this chair and take a damn walk around campus. 



QUESTION:  How has turning the clocks forward affected you?  What helped you get through the first few days?


All images courtesy of Google Images, unless otherwise noted.
(c)2012 Robyn M. Posson

What are you giving up...and what are you giving?



Today is Ash Wednesday.  It marks the beginning of Lent, a 40-day period where Christian followers fast, abstain from eating meat, and repent of their sins.  During this time, they also give up something they value, such as coffee, TV, their iPod, etc, or decide to change a bad behavior or habit.  Then, on Easter Sunday (the last day of Lent), the person decides whether the sacrifice is continued or abandoned.

When you think of it, 40 days out of 365 isn't really a lot of time, but when you choose to turn your back on something you are accustomed to having or doing, it can seem like an eternity.  Many people report, however, that with each day that goes by, it gets a little bit easier to bear.  Sometimes, at the end of the forty days, they wonder why they bothered having or doing whatever it was they thought they couldn't live without.  Maybe it's not such a sacrifice after all.

Regardless of your spiritual path or religious beliefs, I propose we all give up something that needs to be gone from our lives.  Overeating, bad attitudes, toxic relationships, smoking, drinking, caffeine, arguing and/or fighting, putting down people for the sake of feeling superior ourselves, doing too much of anything...all are examples of healthy sacrifices.  Choose one that will make the biggest impact on your life right now.  

Start today...even if it isn't Ash Wednesday when you read this.  Choose only that one thing you're determined to get rid of, count out 40 days on your calendar, mark the 40th day, and put a red "X" on every day you succeed.  If you trip up, start again, and again, and again if you have to.  Making a change is no doubt difficult, but the control over your success lies within you and you only. 

During this period of sacrifice, why not use your time to help others?  Giving to someone else makes us feel good, keeps our minds off of what we're giving up, and puts our own struggles into perspective.  Offer to tutor a classmate.  Clean out your closet and donate your no longer needed clothing to a charity.  Become a Big Brother or Big Sister to a kid who needs your time and guidance. Volunteer at a local hospital or the Animal Protective Foundation.  You get the point. 

At the end of the 40 days, you have two decisions to make:  1)  Will you continue giving up?  and 2)  Will you continue giving?

To show that I practice what I preach (so to speak), I'm giving up snacking after 8:00pm.  That's when I'm usually sitting in front of the TV with some kind of salty or sweet carb to munch on...even though I'm trying to lose a few pounds.  So, I'm gonna bite the bullet.  If I need something to nibble on, it will be before 8, and will be something healthy for me.  If I trip up (hey, I'm human too), then I will start back at Day 1 again.  Who knows...in 40 days I might be able to live without snacking after 8 completely. 

To keep myself motivated (yet distracted), I plan to use my time to clean out and organize my attic, and will donate anything I haven't used in a year to Goodwill.  Trust me...it will take at least 40 days to complete this task, but getting this done will a huge improvement and I will feel great.

Today is Day One, and Day 40 is marked on my calendar.  It'll be hard, but I can do this.  So can you.  Are you with me?










<Note:  All images obtained through Google Images unless otherwise noted>
(c) 2012 Robyn M. Posson

Turn and face the strain...Ch-ch-changes....



               [Couldn't resist...Love me some vintage Bowie!]


A common complaint I hear in my counseling office is that one person declares that all the problems in his/her life would be gone...if only another person would change.

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, this message bears repeating:  The only person who can change your happiness, success, circumstances, health and the direction of your life is Y.O.U.  And change is hard.


Miserable in a relationship?  Choose to do something about it--meet with a counselor who will help you strategize solutions that work for YOU.

Having trouble in your classes?  Choose to do something about it--meet with your professors during office hours, seek help in the Learning Center, request a tutor.

Hate your job?  Choose to do something about it--meet with someone in Career and Employment Services who will help jazz up your resume and show you how to search for another job.

Carrying around more weight than you'd like to?  Choose to do something about it--make an appointment with your general practitioner, have a complete physical and get on a healthy eating and exercise program that you're willing to do long-term.

What will you do?
See a pattern here?  "Choose to do something about it" is the secret.  It means the ball is always in your court--if you're willing to pick it up, that is. 

We all have choices whether to change or to stay the same.  It's as simple as that.  Making changes are often difficult, but consider this:  When you take control over your life and make good, healthy decisions to make it better, you will feel like you own the world.  It's empowering and encouraging to know that if you want something different than what you've got, you can make it happen.
 
(c)2012 Robyn M. Posson

I am grateful...

www.mindbodygreen.com

As the Thanksgiving holiday approaches, I am more mindful of what a wonderful life I have.  I try to live every day with a grateful heart, but it's sometimes difficult when the stressors of daily living loom large.  Can you relate?

Tokens of Gratitude
I've decided to "practice what I preach," so to speak; I will start (again) a gratitude list where I write down at least three things for which I am grateful every day.  Focusing on what's good in our lives makes us feel a helluva lot better, and makes the difficult times a little easier to tackle.  Changing how we think changes how we behave, and expressing gratitude does just that.  Some days are easier to identify our blessings, others not so much (one day I wrote "I'm grateful for hot water in the shower"...I was reaching on that one).

The Gratitude List
So, here I go...I am grateful for:
1.  my adorable house
2.  family who is healthy, safe and thriving
3.  my two jobs I love so much
4.  my car, Trixie, who gets me where I need to go
5.  the people who read my blog







That felt really good.  I suggest you join in the feel-good revolution, and not only on the third Thursday of November.

Enjoy your Thanksgiving holiday.

QUESTION:  What are you grateful for?



(c)Robyn King 2012-2015.  All Rights Reserved.

Soft Skills Hack: Taking Personal Responsibility

Did you ever stop to think that everything you are or ever will be is completely up to you? That you are where you are because of who you are?  Truth is, everything that exists in your adult life exists because of you, your behavior, words, decisions and actions.  For example, you are a college student because you made the decision to pursue a degree, filled out the application, ordered your transcripts, registered for classes, and choose to go to those classes.  Nobody made this happen but you.

We all have freedom of choice, and because you have chosen each and every circumstance of your adult life, you are completely responsible for all of your successes and failures, your happiness and unhappiness, your present and future.  A really important lesson adults can learn is that no one else can make you succeed or fail, or feel happy or unhappy, empty or fulfilled.
The acceptance of personal responsibility is what separates the adult from the child. Children have neither the ability nor the freedom to make such high-level decisions.  But as adults, it’s the great leap forward into maturity. Responsibility is the hallmark of the fully-integrated, fully-functioning human being.  Which. Is. Good.


Responsibility goes hand-in-hand with success, achievement, motivation, happiness and self-actualization (reaching your greatest potential). It’s the absolute minimum requirement for accomplishing everything you could ever really want in life. Accepting that you’re completely responsible for yourself and realizing that no one is coming to the rescue is the beginning of peak performance.

The opposite of accepting responsibility is making excuses and blaming people, things and circumstances for what’s going on in your life. When people get into the habit of making excuses, they get into the habit of side-stepping responsibility at the same time.

Irresponsible people have a catch-all excuse they use whenever challenged with a difficult task or one that requires more self-discipline and persistence than they had thought.  As soon as things start to go poorly, they pull out their excuse and let themselves off the hook. And there they stay...with a goal that is left unfulfilled, and stuck in the belief that they are incapable of doing anything different or better.
When you take personal responsibility, you will:

* Acknowledge that you are solely responsible for the choices in your life.
* Accept that you are responsible for what you choose to feel or think and how you behave.
* Accept that you choose the direction for your life.
* Accept that you cannot blame others for the choices you have made.
* Hold the rational belief that you are responsible for determining who you are, and how your choices affect your life.
* Accept responsibility for the consequences of your actions.
* Admit when you make a mistake and have the desire to do better next time.
* Own up when you achieve something wonderful, without saying, "Oh, it was nothing" or "Anyone could do what I did."
* Realize that you determine your feelings about any events or actions addressed to you, no matter how negative they seem.
* Recognize that you are your best cheerleader; it is not reasonable or healthy to define yourself based on what other people think of you.
* Recognize that as you enter adulthood and maturity, you determine how your self-esteem will develop.
* Not feel sorry for the "bum deal" you have been handed but taking hold of your life and give it direction and meaning.
* Let go of your sense of over-responsibility for others.
* Protect and nurture your health and emotional well being.
* Structure your life with time management, stress management, confront fears and burnout prevention.
* Take an honest inventory of your strengths, abilities, talents, virtues and positive points.
* Develop positive, self-affirming, self-talk scripts to enhance your personal development and growth.
* Let go of blame and anger toward those in your past who did the best they could, given the limitations of their knowledge, background and awareness.
* Work out and let go of the anger, hostility, pessimism and depression over past hurts, pains, abuse, mistreatment and misdirection...then move forward with a new, healthier perspective.


Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/14698-accepting-personal-responsibility/#ixzz1ZLrQnYKD


(c) 2011-2016 Robyn King.  All Rights Reserved.






















When the glass is half-full: The benefits of living with a positive attitude

"Attitude is a little thing that makes a big difference."  (Winston Churchill)
Attending college is an awesome and wonderful experience, yet it causes a lot of anxiety and worry for many students.  You may worry about being able to cut it, whether you've got what it takes to see it all the way through to graduation (let alone to the end of the semester).  In a nutshell...


Having a positive attitude helps you to cope more easily with the rigors and responsibilities of college and the daily affairs of your personal life. Being positive brings optimism into your experience, and makes it easier to avoid worry and negative thinking. If you adopt it as a way of thinking and behaving, a positive attitude will bring constructive changes into your life, and make them happier, brighter and more successful. With a positive attitude you see the bright side of life, become optimistic and expect the best to happen. It is certainly a state of mind that is well worth developing and strengthening.



A positive attitude manifests in the following ways: 
  • Positive thinking.
  • Constructive thinking.
  • Creative thinking.
  • Expecting success.
  • Optimism.
  • Motivation to accomplish your goals.
  • Being inspired.
  • Choosing happiness.
  • Not giving up.
  • Looking at failure and problems as blessings in disguise.
  • Believing in yourself and in your abilities.
  • Displaying self-esteem and confidence.
  • Looking for solutions.
  • Seeing opportunities.
A positive attitude leads to happiness and success and can change your whole life. If you look at the bright side of life, it will impact everything you do. This affects not only you and the way you look at the world, but your whole environment and the people around you...it becomes contagious.

"Yeah, right.  What's in it for me?"
  • Helps achieving goals and attaining success.
  • Success achieved faster and more easily.
  • More happiness.
  • More energy.
  • Greater inner power and strength.
  • The ability to inspire and motivate yourself and others.
  • Fewer difficulties encountered along the way.
  • The ability to overcome any difficulty.
  • Life smiles at you.
  • People respect you.
A negative attitude says: you cannot achieve success.  A positive attitude says: You can.
If you've been struggling with a negative attitude, expecting (and experiencing) failure and difficulties, it's now time to change the way you think. You can get rid of negative thoughts and behavior and replace them with ones that are positive and hopeful. You can start today.  Right now.  (If you have tried before and failed, try again.)


Where do you start?
  • Choose to be happy.
  • Make a list of everything you're good at.  Practice telling other people about your many talents!
  • Make a list of all of your accomplishments and feel proud!
  • Look at the bright side of life.  What have you got going for you?
  • Choose to be and stay optimistic.
  • Find reasons to smile more often. (Added benefit:  less wrinkles when you smile!)
  • Have faith in yourself...focus on what you can do!
  • Surround yourself with happy, hopeful and positive people.  Keep away from people who put you down and don't believe in you.
  • Read inspiring stories.  (Start here.)
  • Read inspiring quotes.  (Try some of these.)
  • Repeat affirmations that inspire and motivate you.  (Dr. Wayne Dyer is awesome.)
  • Visualize only those positive goals and dreams you want to happen. (Make a Vision Board.)
  • Learn to control your thoughts.  Say (to yourself and out loud) "I can..." and "I will..."
  • Learn concentration and meditation.
Start with baby steps.  One day at a time.  Celebrate your small successes in the process.  Following even only one of the above suggestions will bring you a bit closer to a glass that's half-full.
(c) 2011 Robyn M Posson

Improving Self-Esteem

“No one can make you feel inferior without your permission.”- Eleanor Roosevelt


Self-esteem is how you feel about yourself, how confident you are, how accomplished you feel. It reflects whether a person loves, accepts, and believes in who they are. For some of us, it can go up and down. One day you might feel really on top of everything, great about yourself, unafraid to try anything. The next day, you’re just as likely to feel completely at the bottom, unsure of yourself, afraid to say or do anything.  Then the day after that, you're back on top.

Image:  Google Images
 There are some folks, however, who feel really badly about themselves most of the time.  In addition to having a generally negative view of yourself, having chronic, long-term low self-esteem takes an enormous toll on the quality of your life:
·         You take fewer risks, which limits your opportunities, both personally and professionally. 
·         You’re reluctant to voice or even acknowledge your own needs and always put others’ before yours.
·         You are probably also haunted by past mistakes and worry about making future ones. 
·         You question everything you say and do, and over-analyze interactions with others because you fear you’ve screwed up or embarrassed yourself. 
·         You are uncomfortable when someone gives you a compliment. 
·         You focus on what you’re lacking or missing in yourself and your life. 
·         You worry a lot about what other people think of you. 


Image:  Google Images


Because of how horribly they feel, many people with low self-esteem are reluctant to work on gaining high self-esteem for fear that people will think they are “stuck up” or “think they’re all that.”  Don’t confuse high self-esteem with arrogance.  Having high self-esteem means that you love, accept and believe in yourself as you are; arrogance means that you think you're better than everyone else.  Two different things.  Self-esteem is good; arrogance, not so much. 


So where does one start to improve how one thinks and feels?  Building high self-esteem is a process, not something you can develop overnight.  It takes time, energy, persistence and patience to change old ways of thinking and behaving.  It isn’t necessarily comfortable or easy, either.  As you begin to think and behave differently, other people may not like it and may give you a difficult time.  You may feel uneasy, scared and a little stressed, also, because you're doing new and different things, and you may find yourself in a position to need to give up things and people you're accustomed to having around you.  Changing for the better can, in all honesty, suck.  Big time.  These are NOT good reasons to stop improving yourself and go back to the "stinkin' thinkin'" mentality, however.  When you ride out the discomfort and learn new, positive ways of thinking and behaving, the end result will be absolutely worth the changes you've made.


Image:  Google Images

Here are some ideas to help you improve your self-esteem:
Stop comparing yourself with other people.  Your importance, value and worth are not dependent on what others do, have or achieve.  There will always be some people who have more than you, and some who have less.

Stop criticizing yourself.  Some people have a bad habit of putting themselves down regularly.  They say negative things to themselves like, “I’m so stupid!” or “I’m late again” or “I hate how I look.”  Get in the new habit of catching yourself when you say critical things about yourself and learn to stop the criticisms.  Instead, say something positive about yourself or something you've accomplished.

Forgive and move on.  Humans make mistakes, even when they try their best.  Constantly thinking about all the ways others have hurt or wronged you in the past is a waste of your time and energy.  So is beating yourself up for hurting someone else or making a decision that didn’t turn out how you had hoped.  The past is gone.  If someone else hurt you, forgive them for making that mistake.  If you are feeling badly about how you treated someone, forgive yourself.  Then move on...put it behind you.  Make a mental note to do better next time.


Surround yourself with your Dream Team.  The Real You is a wonderful, unique person with enormous potential and capacity for loving yourself and sharing your love with others.  Keeping company with people who are positive and supportive has a way of rubbing off on you.  It’s nearly impossible to think badly about yourself when you spend time with people who think you’re fabulous and capable of achieving whatever you set your mind to.  There is no room in your life for individuals who consistently put you down, stomp on your dreams, and treat you like a doormat.  Delete their numbers on your cell phone, and unfriend them on Facebook.


Get involved in work and activities you love.  It’s hard to feel good about yourself when you’re at a job you hate.  Your self-esteem will rise dramatically when you’re involved in work and activities that you enjoy and make you feel valuable.  Even if you’re not able to quit your job right away, you can still spend some of your leisure time doing your favorite hobbies and activities.


To thine own self be true.  Live your own life, and not the life someone else decided was best for you.  If you’re making decisions based on getting approval from family and friends, you’re not being true to yourself.  You’re the only one living in your sneakers, and no one else knows what’s better for you than YOU.  Stand up for what you want, and take the steps to get it.


Stop blaming yourself for past mistakes.  There are very few things in life that are in our control.  People with low self-esteem tend to take the blame whenever something goes wrong.  Instead, learn how to be proud of your efforts and give yourself credit for the things you have done well.


Recognize and honor your personal strengths.  Ever hear the expression, "if you don't toot your own horn, nobody else will"?  Sometimes you have to take a new inventory about what you LIKE about yourself:  your looks, smile, health, personality, character strengths.  Don’t sell yourself short.  There are many wonderful things about you, and it isn’t wrong or egotistical to praise yourself for what you’ve got going for you.


Quit overanalyzing.  Sometimes the real problem isn’t self-esteem at all, but a tendency toward overthinking everything.  When you find yourself doing this, redirect your focus to positive things.  Give your mind a rest.


Image:  Google Images
Accept all compliments by saying “Thank You.”  Don’t dismiss or ignore the nice things people say about you.  When you do this, you tell yourself that you don’t deserve or aren’t worthy of praise (a by-product of low-self esteem).  Practice saying “thank you” to every kind word someone says to you or about you, and realize that others have no trouble seeing how wonderful and valuable you really are...because they're right!


Volunteer your time and talents.  When you offer to help others in need, it will take your focus off of yourself and will naturally make you feel good.  And when you are thanked for what you’ve done, don’t dismiss it; practice saying, “You’re welcome.”

Take care of your whole self.  Getting adequate sleep, regular exercise, learning how to relax, scheduling fun activities into your life and eating healthy help your body to release hormones called endorphins, which are the “feel-good” chemicals.

Invest the time and energy it will take to improve how you feel about yourself...you are so worth it. 


(c) 2011 Robyn M. Posson