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Sideshow Rob



Last Updated: 11/29/2009

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Status: Single
City: AUSTIN
State: Texas
Country: US
Signup Date: 5/30/2007

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008 

Current mood:  grateful
Category: Life
(repost from Jason Mraz)

Finally, some research reports coming in on the power of Saying Thank You. This is from today's pages of USA Today.

Stepping up the gratitude
Giving thanks year-round can make you healthier

Your Health By Kim Painter

Thursday, in between the cheese ball appetizers and the pumpkin pie desserts, most of us will indulge in something proven to have powerful health benefits.

No, it's not that extra serving of stuffing. It's the expression of gratitude — the simple act of thanking God, thanking others or just counting your blessings. Saying thanks, it turns out, isn't just pious or polite. It's good for you.

But there's a catch: You have to do it even when the calendar does not say "Thanksgiving."

"It doesn't really work if you do it only once a year," says Sonja Lyubomirsky, professor of psychology at the University of California-Riverside.

Practicing gratitude is like exercising, says Robert Emmons, professor of psychology at the University of California-Davis: Use it, and you won't lose it, even when times are tough, as they are for many folks right now.

Lyubomirsky and Emmons are among researchers who have studied the power of gratitude and learned, for example, that:

•People with high blood pressure not only lower their blood pressure, but they feel less hostile and are more likely to quit smoking and lose weight when they practice gratitude. This was demonstrated by calling a research hotline once a week to report on the things that make them grateful.

•People who care for relatives with Alzheimer's disease feel less stress and depression when they keep daily gratitude journals, listing the positive things in their lives.

•Those who maintain a thankful attitude through life appear to have lower risks of several disorders, including depression, phobias, bulimia and alcoholism.

•Most people can lift their mood simply by writing a letter of thanks to someone. Hand-deliver the letter, and the boost in happiness can last weeks or months.

Practicing gratitude in these systematic ways changes people by changing brains that "are wired for negativity, for noticing gaps and omissions," Emmons says. "When you express a feeling, you amplify it. When you express anger, you get angrier; when you express gratitude, you become more grateful."

And grateful people, he says, don't focus so much on pain and problems. They also are quicker to realize they have friends, families and communities to assist them in times of need. They see how they can help others in distress as well, he says.

After 9/11, many people reported increased feelings of gratitude, says Chris Peterson, a professor of psychology at the University of Michigan.

It's too soon for studies on the influence of the nation's financial meltdown, but Peterson says he hears a lot of people counting their blessing these days. "There are people who say 'It could be worse, and I'm glad I have my health.' "

Gratitude won't get those people new jobs or replenish their retirement accounts, but it could give them the energy to tackle their challenges, Peterson says:

"It can only help."

Page 6D
Currently listening:
We Sing, We Dance, We Steal Things
By Jason Mraz
Release date: 2008-05-13
♥RhEaGaNoMiCs♥
Rheagan Ortega

 
gotta love the Mraz =) It was a great artice none the less
 
Posted by ♥RhEaGaNoMiCs♥ on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 9:04 PM
[Reply to this
rthr

 
thank you. I'm grateful today to have the time to read thought provoking writings of people I've met...whose faces I can remember. Faces of people I "know" continue on that traverse planes and look up alot. I'm grateful for my sleeping bag when it's in the high teens here now some nights and so grateful for all the magic I've witnessed and can hardly believe myself...so I keep going forward into the mystic where all the magic is...forward...ahead...calling us...saying: write, sing, communicate...tell us your dreams...we're listening. I'm so grateful that despite my poor hearing I still can hear these whispers and be moved by them...
 
Posted by rthr on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 11:33 PM
[Reply to this
CLewless

 
I love Jason Mraz's blog...and I love you too, Rob! See you soon...
 
Posted by CLewless on Thursday, November 27, 2008 - 12:31 AM
[Reply to this
Christopher

 
Good article and very true! The last quote on this article is exactly how I feel about faith and religion. "It can only help.
"

Great comment left by BlackShepherd too! I also suffer from hearing loss and it really hit home reading her comment.
Thanks to you for that!
 
Posted by Christopher on Saturday, November 29, 2008 - 10:20 PM
[Reply to this