Month: March 2020

Go Deeper! Change Your Emotions and Find Happiness After 60

Find Happiness After 60

We all know how it feels to be happy. Feel good chemicals like serotonin, oxytocin, dopamine, and endorphins surge into your bloodstream and literally give you a rush of joy. It makes you feel powerful and in control. This is a state you want to experience again and again. But it’s an elusive sensation.

On other days the wonderful feeling of elation may have gone. You feel the opposite, miserable, anxious, angry and sad. Happiness seems impossible to maintain. Like many people, you may believe that emotions just are. They just happen to us, and we have no power over how we feel.

Emotions are complex, and have been studied for many decades. Psychologists have tracked their origin, and some have concluded that the thoughts you have, not the circumstances of your life, cause an emotion to form. In other words, a thought always precedes an emotion. To put it more simply, your emotions are caused by your thoughts.

Control Your Thoughts to Control Your Emotions

The idea that thoughts control your emotions has led to a belief system in psychology that encourages people to be conscious of negative thoughts and to switch them to positive ones the minute they are detected. With practise, it can be done, but close to impossible to maintain.

To make things worse, controlling your emotions by controlling your negative thoughts may have an opposite effect. By suppressing sadness, you are bound to suppress other, more positive emotions, as well. So by trying to control your emotions you may actually become more anxious and depressed.

Sometimes, people who attempt this practice do succeed. However, trying to control thoughts and emotions eventually becomes too difficult. People find they are denying their feelings, stuffing them down, and not acknowledging them. This can be a dangerous thing to do, and may have deeper and unhealthy psychological consequences.

Accept Your Negative Thoughts and Emotions

Instead of trying to control negative emotions, some psychologists suggest simply accepting them. This involves changing them through the passage of time, or through lengthy therapy. In this approach, you try not to focus on your flaws. Instead, you learn to accept yourself, with all your faults and imperfections, and try to be less critical of yourself when your thoughts go wrong.

Negative emotions may follow. However, with practise, you may be able to let them go more easily, hoping that more positive thoughts may come in their wake. This practise develops your understanding of yourself. It may be helpful, but most people become impatient with such a passive approach. They have difficulty with it, especially if their lives are deeply affected by negative thinking and personal difficulties.

Change Your Life in Order to Change Your Emotions

On the surface, this is a sensible, practical approach. It is strongly advocated by some psychologists. It requires that you change your day to day activities in order to improve your life and feel better. In this way, you can deal with negative thoughts by distracting yourself through actions you consciously take.

Here are some of the suggestions for changing your lifestyle by establishing new behaviors. You can become more social. You can get active – by taking up a sport or going to the gym. Other ideas include traveling to unfamiliar places, volunteering or tackling a daunting task. Why not take up a creative pursuit, learn a new game or take up a hobby.

These are all healthy, positive measures. It is important to recognize that they are methods of distracting ourselves in the hope that they will change our lives and make us happier. These are methods that encourage you to work on your emotions from the outside in.

They will take you into new directions that may lead to making friends and becoming healthier and more fit. They will temporarily relieve your anxiety and unhappiness. But most people, after trying them for a while, find their enthusiasm waning, and revert to their previous habits.

Choosing Your Emotions

A new body of research suggests that there are scientific explanations for why we become mired in negative thought. It says that the brain is wired to scout for danger. Detecting what’s bad in our environment is a ploy to keep us safe. This explains why we seem to have a negativity bias and why we are attracted to bad news rather than good. This doesn’t mean we are stuck with feeling bad.

Two other experimental studies suggest that by simply trying to be happier by making changes in how you act and think, you can alter your level of happiness. They give several ideas. First, they suggest you examine your beliefs and values, be grateful and forgive everybody. In addition, treasure your relationships, savour the present moment and become mindful.

It’s important, in trying to be happier, that we don’t deny our emotions. Life can be hard, and we frequently respond to our difficulties with feelings of anger, frustration, and sadness. It’s all part of being human. What we also do, as humans, is try to make the most of the good things in life, and minimize the bad experiences we have. Having genuine feelings, negative and positive, is what makes us who we are.

Biochemist turned Buddhist monk Matthieu Ricard puts it this way: “Happiness is a deep sense of flourishing, not a mere pleasurable feeling or fleeting emotion but an optimal state of being.”

All this points to the premise that to truly attain a level of lasting happiness, you need to go much deeper, and become much more comfortable about what is inside.

Have you ever tried to limit your negative thoughts in an attempt to be happier? Did you find that easy or hard to do? Do you think it was a helpful exercise? What other measures have you taken to increase your level of happiness?

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The Best Multifunctional Palettes That Contain Literally Everything You Need

It’s easy to feel tempted to invest in every new and alluring palette launch, thanks to new color schemes and luxe—often themed—packaging. However, just how practical is it to own multiple palettes that just contain only one category? This takes up much-needed space in your vanity area, and let’s face it: how often than not do we end up just using or two shades in a 20-pan palette? Fortunately, there are plenty of all-in-one makeup palettes that cover the gamut with almost everything you need, including setting powders, blushes, bronzers, contours and lip colors.

Not only are they a great way to streamline your makeup routine (and cut down on the clutter and expired products you’ve been holding on to), but they’re also amazing for traveling as well. These multi-purpose sets allow for quick and fool-proof application, whether you’re in front of your mirror at home or on the go. Plus, they also allow you to experiment with textures and shades and allow for a ton of versatility to help you achieve a wide range of different looks. Ahead, check out of multi-purpose palettes.

Our mission at STYLECASTER is to bring style to the people, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission of the sale and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

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Hannah Ann Sluss’ Purple Floral Top

Hannah Ann Sluss’ Purple Floral Top on Instagram

The Bachelor Instagram Fashion 2020

Hannah Ann Sluss’ purple floral top (that before you bash us for reporting on right now, she evidently wore just to take a quick pic outside while still social distancing) is super cute. And if you agree, we highly recommend that you scroll on down and click “add to bag” right this second before it completes the very unacceptable act of going out (of stock).

Fashionably,

Faryn

Hannah Ann Sluss’ Purple Floral Top

Click Here to Shop Her ASTR The Label Top

Click Here For Additional Stock

Photo: @HannahAnn

Originally posted at: Hannah Ann Sluss’ Purple Floral Top

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Kenya Moore’s White Caftan

Kenya Moore’s White Caftan in Greece

Real Housewives of Atlanta Season 12 Episode 19 Fashion

Kenya Moore looked like an absolute goddess—yes I’m using that term a lot in posts about last night’s episode because it’s so applicable—in her white caftan in Greece at Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club, somewhere that I really never imagined I would see the Real Housewives of Atlanta.  And while you pretty much have to be close to some sort of royalty to afford looks by the designer of it, we’ll just take inspo from Kenya’s long, wavy hair, pair it with a Style Stealer and hit the beaches of Lake Michigan the Aegean Sea like a real life Real Housewife.

 

The Realest Housewife,

Big Blonde Hair

 

Kenya Moore's White Caftan

Tom Ford Open Side Caftan Sold Out at Bergdorf Goodman

Originally posted at: Kenya Moore’s White Caftan

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3 Fun Ways to Combat Coronavirus with Laughter

3 Fun Ways to Combat Coronavirus with Laughter

You may
be in a funk because of the coronavirus, but, according to Certified Humor
Therapist and Laughter for the Health of It presenter Roberta Gold,
there’s no situation so dire you can’t find something funny in it.

Maybe
while self-quarantining you’re passing the time alphabetizing your spices.
Maybe you’re obsessively watching YouTube tutorials on converting cat food tins
to candle holders. Or maybe, like me, you’re manically cleaning out your
garage, a chore I’d expertly managed to avoid for over a decade.

See,
you’re laughing already! The tension is flowing out of you and you feel better
able to cope. According to Roberta, “Seeing the funny side makes one more
optimistic and helps create a positive mindset.”

Finding Fun in Life’s Absurdities

Roberta Gold is a member
of the Association
for Applied and Therapeutic Humor. This organization defines therapeutic humor
as “any intervention that promotes health and wellness by stimulating a
playful discovery, expression, or appreciation of the absurdity or incongruity
of life’s situations.”

Roberta says life is an
attitude and she is an attitude adjustment
coach. “Although we can often neither change a situation we find
ourselves in, nor can we change another person’s behavior, we have complete
control over the way we look at life.”

Stress Is Real but Laughter Can Defeat It

Still,
there’s no denying that the pandemic is creating stress, and stress is mentally
exhausting and even disease producing. Here’s where laughter really proves its
mettle.

“Laughter
appears to cause all the reciprocal, or opposite, effects of stress,” says Dr.
Lee Berk, associate professor at Loma Linda University, who studies the way a
good laugh impacts your brain and body.

“Laughter
shuts down the release of stress hormones like cortisol. It also triggers the
production of feel-good neurochemicals like dopamine, which have all kinds of
calming, anti-anxiety benefits. Think of laughter as the yin to stress’s yang.”

Humor Is Therapeutic

People
have always known about the mind-body connection. Look no further than the
Bible, which states, “A merry heart doeth good like a medicine, but a broken
spirit drieth the bones.”

Ancient
Greek physicians, who used humor as an adjunct to other therapies, ordered
their patients to visit the hall of comedians as an important part of the
recovery process.

Along
the same lines, Native American shamans utilized the powerful impact of humor
in healing by bringing in their version of clowns. And so on through the ages
and around the world.

Fight Quarantine Effects with Laughter

All
of which brings us back to 2020 and back to you. Chances are you are
quarantined with at least one other person, and tempers can flare when the days
are long and the distance between one another is short.

Once
again laughter comes to the rescue. Nothing diffuses anger and conflict faster
than a shared guffaw or even a chuckle.

Since
we can be so critical of one another, Roberta Gold recommends that you
consciously look for three positive traits in your partner, spouse, or roommate.
This will help you ride out the temporary confinement in greater peace and
harmony.

How
can you keep up your spirits while on virtual lockdown? According to Roberta,
there are three concrete steps you can take:

Find Fun Things to Do

In
order to take your mind off the virus, play Monopoly, cook up s’mores, or create
a masterpiece with your grandchildren’s play dough.

Practice Your Aha’s

Say
“ah,” then “ha,” then “aha,” and start laughing. As Dr. Berk said, there will
be a chemical reaction in your brain. The amazing thing is, according to other scientific
researchers, laughter works even when it’s forced.

Reframe the Situation

Picture
the virus as Jell-O or pillows of cotton or something else ridiculous like that.
This visual image will help you cut down on the fear factor. Then you can take
a deep breath and start to change your perception of the risks you are facing.

To
sum up, laughter can help you get through crises, present and future, so now
that you have some time on your hands, you might as well spend it finding your
“humor bone.” It will pay big dividends.

Can
you see why it is said that, “Laughter is the best medicine?” Do you try to
find the funny side of life? When has laughter helped you through a difficult
situation? Please share your stories with our sisters!

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