Saturday, March 28, 2009

"Can Exercise and proper Eating help you Manage stress Twice as Fast"


I recently read a study performed that regular Healthful Exercise and Eating does help with managing stress
- they suggest it has something to do with those brain chemicals called endorphins

16 Habits of Effective Life Stress Managers

Alter one or more of the causes if possible
Find reasons to be thankful
Celebrate life everyday
Talk to someone about your worries
Seek support from your friends and or family
Do something you have been procrastinating about
Get organized and clean up clutter
Take a time management course
Be more flexible and go with the flow
Come up with ways to say no to excessive demands on your time
Make room in your life for more fun activities
Listen to music that makes you feel good at home or during the commute to and from work
Take a relaxing hot bath
Turn off your phone

These are great life management solutions and tools. Health and Fitness Experts, including personal trainers and dietitians, are well trained to provide advice and solutions to client's issues. Sadly enough, for many people even though they know what they should do, they don't do it. Instead of craeting that lack mindset let's get you into an intentional readiness mindset. Have a happy and healthy day!

Sincerely Yours In Health and Fitness,

By,Natalie pyles

Author, NASN Speaker, NASN CPT,NASN Licensed Sports Nutritionist,ACSM Licensed
Wellness Coach


Call Me For Your FREE Consultation Today! 1-800-681-9894 or 480-212-1947 or e-mail fitnesselementsassociates@yahoo.com

Friday, March 27, 2009

Are you happy?











'The Art of Applying Happiness'


Beware Happiness is contagious in social networks


(CNN) -- If you're feeling great today, you may end up inadvertently spreading the joy to someone you don't even know.
This network from 2000, colored for average mood, shows yellow as happy, blue as sad, and green as in-between.

This network from 2000, colored for average mood, shows yellow as happy, blue as sad, and green as in-between.

New research shows that in a social network, happiness spreads among people up to three degrees removed from one another. That means when you feel happy, a friend of a friend of a friend has a slightly higher likelihood of feeling happy too.

The lesson is that taking control of your own happiness can positively affect others, says James Fowler, co-author of the study and professor of political science at the University of California in San Diego.

"We get this chain reaction in happiness that I think increases the stakes in terms of us trying to shape our own moods to make sure we have a positive impact on people we know and love," he said. Video Watch more on how happiness spreads »

Sadness also spreads in a network, but not as quickly, the researchers found. Each happy friend increases your own chance of being happy by 9 percent, whereas each unhappy friend decreases it by 7 percent. This reflects the total effect of all social contacts.

When framing the question differently, the study found that you are 15 percent more likely to be happy if a direct connection is happy, 10 percent if the friend of a friend is happy, and 6 percent if it's a friend of a friend of a friend.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal, used data from the Framingham Heart Study to recreate a network of 4,739. Fowler and co-author Dr. Nicholas Christakis of Harvard Medical School charted friends, spouses and siblings in the network, and used their self-reported happiness ratings from 1983 to 2003.
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* How to increase your attention span

Daniel Gilbert, professor of psychology at Harvard University and author of "Stumbling on Happiness," called the study "a stunning paper by two of the most respected scientists in the field" in a statement he e-mailed to CNN.

"We've known for some time that social relationships are the best predictor of human happiness, and this paper shows that the effect is much more powerful than anyone realized," Gilbert said. "It is sometimes said that you can't be happier than your least happy child. It is truly amazing to discover that when you replace the word 'child' with 'best friend's neighbor's uncle,' the sentence is still true."

If you are the hub of a large network of people -- that is, if you have a lot of connected friends or a wide social circle -- you are more likely to become happy, the study found.

But the reverse is not true.

"You might only have one friend or two friends or something like that, and if you become happy, you're not going to try to get more friends. You're probably going to stick with what worked in the first place," Fowler said.

The researchers are also looking at the phenomenon on Facebook, which has more than 120 million active users. This study, which has not yet been published, looked at who smiles in their profile pictures who doesn't, and whether their connections also smile or not, Fowler said.

"We find smiling profiles cluster in much the same way as happiness is clustering in the Framingham Heart Study," he said.
Health Library

* MayoClinic.com: Health Library

It's not just happiness that spreads in a social network. Fowler and Christakis have also looked at trends in cigarette smoking and obesity using the parts of the heart study network.

They found that when someone quits, a friend's likelihood of quitting smoking was 36 percent. Moreover, clusters of people who may not know one another gave up smoking around the same time, the authors showed in a New England Journal of Medicine article in May.

Social ties also affect obesity. A person's likelihood of becoming obese increased by 57 percent if he or she had a friend who became obese in a given time period, Fowler and Christakis showed in a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine in July 2007.
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And, like happiness, both smoking behavior and obesity seem to spread within three degrees of separation in a social network, Fowler said. Beyond three, things get fuzzier.

"Eventually you get out far enough in the social network that you're competing with all these other cascades of happiness and unhappiness that are sort of duking it out," he said. "Happiness on average wins, but once you get far enough away from someone in a social network, it's not possible to detect their effect anymore."

Forwarded By, Natalie Pyles

Fitness & Nutritional Expert, Author, Speaker

Call Me For Your FREE Consultation Today! 1-800-681-9894 or 480-212-1947 or fax 623-399-4199 or e-mail fitnesselementsassociates@yahoo.com

Thursday, March 12, 2009

'How Harp Music is Soothing Hospital Patients'

Mind-Body-Spirit News:

A harp musician provides live bedside music to soothe patients and support a healing atmosphere at Loyola University Hospital in Maywood, Illinois. The practice of musicians providing therapeutic music in hospitals, hospices and other clinical settings is gaining broader acceptance. In fact, it is becoming so prevalent that musicians can now earn certification as practitioners of music for healing.

The harpist, Linda Fisher, is a medical doctor and an assistant professor in internal medicine/pediatrics at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine. She took up playing the harp 12 years ago to ease the stress of patient care. “I thought [playing to patients] was something I could do because I’m used to working with patients and I thought this would be another aspect of healing. It’s like Loyola’s motto, ‘We also treat the human spirit.’ This program does make a difference. Putting people in a better spirit or better state of mind is an important part of healing.”


References: Shirley Archer, JD MA

Forwarded By, Natalie Pyles

Fitness & Nutritional Expert, Author, Speaker

Call Me For Your FREE Consultation Today! 1-800-681-9894 or 480-212-1947 e-mail fitnesselementsassociates@yahoo.com