Showing posts with label wellness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wellness. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Halifax Nova Scotia Fall Foliage Cruise on Norwegian Majesty






Our Fall Foliage Cruise to New England/Canada on the Norwegian Majesty began in Philadelphia, Pa, heading first to Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Vacations are important for wellness. I learned this the hard way. I think I went nearly 10 years without a vacation. It's good to get away from everything, relax, get a different perspective and refresh yourself.
Every place we visited they said "It's rained the past two days, but today is perfect," and "this is the absolute PEAK of the fall leaves."



In Halifax, Nova Scotia, they are proud of their British heritage and also their Scottish heritage.







Do you recognize Theodore the Tugboat? He really guided us into the port and later we read about him at the Maritime Museum in Halifax, Nova Scotia.


EMAIL ME for a free mini-coaching session. Mention this offer. With the added stress we are all under these days, with the economic crisis, a coaching session can be very helpful.
Want to become a certifiec coach? I've trained and certified coaches all over the world. EMAIL ME to get started now. Reasonable fees, unreasonable results.


Add to My Yahoo!

Monday, November 12, 2007

It Starts with Getting Enough Sleep!

One of the most important things we can do for our health is to get enough sleep. This directly relates to emotional intelligence, because often it is worries and thoughts or leftover emotions that keep us tossing and turning at night - even if we get to bed at a reasonable time.

This article has some typos, but it's still good advice:

You Don't Have Time To Sleep? Think Again!
by Enrique

You wake up early in the morning, rushing to get the day started. When you arrive at school or work, you immediately plow into a busy schedule of activities that take you right through your day. [Same and even moreso if you're at at-home parent!] When you're finished, you look forward to engaging in the activities that you enjoy the most, and squeeze as many of those into your days he possibly can. A little time for dinner, a little relaxation, and off to bed you go so that you can do it all again tomorrow.

Sound familiar? It's the life so many of us lead. Sleep. Eat. Work. And maybe find some time to play in the middle. Keeping a balance of these activities helps us make sure that were doing okay and maintaining a healthy lifestyle.

What happens when we get out of balance? For many of us, the first thing to go when schedules get busy is sleep. Although it is so critically important, we tend to sacrifice sleep in place of doing things we enjoy or finishing things we must get done. The truth, however, is that most of us can't afford to lose much sleep. Many people don't get enough sleep as it is, and getting less sleep can have many negative facts on the other parts of our lives. The lack of sleep can have adverse effects on the physical, mental, and emotional parts of your life. The more obvious effects of sleep deprivation are the physical and mental problems that occur. Most people who are lacking sleep experience diminished alertness, reaction time, and memory.

What's not so obvious, though, are some of the long-term health problems that have been associated with sleep deprivation.Depression, heart problems and even obesity have been linked to the lack of sleep. The body does a lot of self – maintenance while sleeping. [Another thing that occurs during sleep is healing of any physical injuries, like strains and sprains.]

By releasing hormones like cortisol, it can combat circulatory diseases. The body also produces blood pressure and heart rate and the circulatory system is able to rest and recover in order to prepare for the next day. Lack of sleep can also affect the body's ability to produce white blood cells which are so important to fighting infections. Without sleep, the body also stops reacting properly to hunger. Leptin is a hormone that is created while sleeping and allows the body to properly sense when it has enough food. Without proper levels of leptin, people feel hungry and will eat more food than they need. This can lead to many other problems including obesity.

So how much that you really need? The number varies significantly for each and every person, but the national sleep foundation has come up with a basic set of guidelines to fit individuals in various stages of life. Most adults will find themselves needing between seven to nine hours of sleep per night. Teenagers, typically need 8 ½ to 9 ¼ hours of sleep per night, while school children will need 10 to 11 hours of sleep every night.

To read the rest of the article go here: http://www.isnare.com/html.php?aid=200165

About The Author: Enrique Padilla is an avid sleeper andcontributes a wide variety of articles to Foam Bed Advisor, http://www.foambedadvisor.com, which is full of informationabout memory foam beds, mattresses, pillows and mattresstoppers.

The bottom line on emotional intelligence is always WELLNESS. Keeping the balance in your life, and attending to your emotional, mental, physical and spiritual health. I begin coaching sessions with the EQ Checkin (tm): "How are you feeling emotionally, mentally, physically and mentally." I've found that people who are sleep-deprived start with "physical."

As the holidays approach, take care of your self - mentally, emotionally, physically and spiritually. I will be available for consultation all through the holidays, and one-time sessions are fine.

Add to My Yahoo!

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Argue in a Way that Improves Your Health

The reason I chose to specialize in emotional intelligence is because it is the bottom line in WELLNESS.

As the article on yahoo says, "How to Argue ... and Actually Improve Your Health."

But you have to know how to argue right. If you have concerns, takes my EQ COURSE, it is all about anger management, AND YOUR HEALTH.

From the article:

Authentic.
When couples argue, they tend to get caught up in the "who, what, when, and why" of the argument, rather than truly expressing what the argument really makes them feel. Instead, couples should be more descriptive of their feelings, because that's the crux of the issue. For instance, rather than "I can't believe you were late for dinner and didn't call me! This is just like last month when you [insert past indiscretion here]." A better way to truly express your real feelings about your partner's lack of punctuality would be to say, "It makes me sad when you are late and I don't know where you are. I get worried and feel sick to my stomach."

For the rest of the article go here:
How to Argue...and Actually Improve Your Health - The Art of Intimacy on Yahoo! Health

Sunday, July 01, 2007

What personal life coaching can do for you

Add to My Yahoo!





Susan Dunn Personal Coaching

When you're ready for Dunn personal coaching, you're ready to make some serious changes in your life. Coaching isn't just for pro sports figures, and CEOs making 6 figures -- it's for anyone who wants success, in professional or personal life.

With Susan Dunn Personal Life Coaching you can make the strides you've been eager to. Now is the time. But just like sports training and working out, you have to have the right equipment and the right team backing you all the way. That's why there's Susan Dunn's Personal Life coaching.


You can achieve more than you thought possible when you have the right combination going for you. It's like a body makeover, you'll discover muscles you never had and build strength where you really need it. It doesn't matter where you live, we have coached clients worldwide (just to name a few - India Singapore, all over the US, Scotland, Wales, the UK, Malaysia, the Phillipines, China and more).


WHAT CAN YOU EXPECT


A clear path and strategy
Importan feedback
The support and resources you need
Email support at your finger tips, Internet and phone
No contract
Unlike trying to do this on your own, you get the feedback that makes the difference
You might not be a celebrity -- yet -- but you can treat yourself like one.
You don't have to waste your time in traffic - enjoy all the benefits from the privacy of your own home of office

Sign up now. Call for a personal consultation to see if Personal Life Coaching with Susan Dunn is for you. Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc or call (817) 734-1471.


Susan's website is: http://www.susandunn.cc/ .


Susan's company provides personal life coaching - career and personal life, emotional intelligence, resilience, wholeness, wellness, balance, parenting -- worldwide, at your convenience. Give it a try.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Forgiveness - Emotional Intelligence

Add to My Yahoo!

EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE COMPETENCY: To be adamantly and relentlessly self-forgiving.
From this, you can forgive others.

What is forgiveness? From "A Moment to Remember"



Remember that you forgive for yourself. Otherwise you become the skeleton at the feast.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

To Know How to Grow Old



Add to My Yahoo!

TO KNOW HOW TO GROW OLD ...

"To know how to grow old,” wrote Henry Frederic Amiel , “is the master work of wisdom, one of the most difficult chapters in the great art of living."

One of the most important things you can do to assist in this process, is to work on your emotional intelligence. It includes competencies such as flexibility and resilience.

Want to see how it works?

I have a client who is sure if he retires, he will die. He’s a physician and has been working those long hours since he was in his 20s. His father worked as a physician practically until the day he died, so this man has no role models. You know other people never count, it’s the ones close to you – if your solipsistic, and anyone who thinks they will die if they retire has that sort of narrow-minded, rigid thinking.

I have a female client who is having trouble with the changes in her appearance. While the doctor’s sense of self resides in his profession, this woman’s sense of self and self-esteem resided in her beauty. She is convinced she is no longer beautiful.

Both of these clients are lacking in the emotional intelligence skills that can ease any transition – for this is just another of the transitions in life.

After all, they’re saying that “60” is the new “40” and so forth. We are all living longer, and living in better health, so doesn’t it make sense to prepare for all stages?

You are going to “grow old,” everyone does, unless you don’t get to – and who ever thought of learning how to do it? Well what we want to learn how to do, is how to do it WELL.

One of the keys is a competency we call Resilience. It means being able to bounce back from rejections, losses, setbacks, and adversity, while remaining bouyant and optimistic about the future.

Adversity can hit at any age. Divorce is a hard thing to go through, and people go through it at many different ages. Youth are known to be more “resilient,” and to move through it faster. If you want an example, go to a singles groups for 20 years old, and then a singles group for 60 years old. Most of the people involved in both groups have been divorced, but oh what a different in attitude and outlook. Group #1 is already looking to the future, and eager to meet someone new. Group #2 is spending a lot of time talking about the past.

The mind, you see can get into ruts and run in circles all too easily if we allow it to. When you study emotional intelligence (at least if you take a good course that goes beyond the surface fluff which is usually about how your thinking brain shuts down when you get angry), you will learn a lot about the brain. We form neural connections when we learn things, and while we stop at some point to make new brain cells, it is available to us for – well, maybe forever – to make new connections. And how do you do this? By learning new things.

The more radically new, the better. That means if you’re an engineer, going on a getting your Ph.D. is nice, but it would benefit the resilience of your brain to learn opera or water skiing. If you’re a musician, it would be super to learn a new instrument, but would be far more beneficial, in this respect, to learn how to grow roses, or take up physics.

What should you learn? Something that scares the heck out of you. Something you know nothing about. Something where, when you sit down, you feel LOST. (How long has it been since you felt that way.) You’ll almost feel the wheels grinding as you grope around. I describe it as there’s no skeleton to hang the stuff off of.

I’ve worked with a number of EQ clients who have started into something radically new and they report great results. “My memory’s coming back,” one of them told me. “I thought it was gone.”

Another client, whose professions is ponderous and full of responsibilities, where he is the expert and the one everyone turns to, says it is “fun” to sit in the back of the room and know nothing, and to have to keep raising his hand. I must add that at first he did not, it took come coaching. At first he resented knowing nothing, and being “ignorant.” I encouraged him to continue, “just to see,” and pretty soon the results took over and became his own motivation. He opened up in many other new areas. He is now willing to travel, which he did not want to do before.

You can get in a box, especially if you’ve worked in the same career field your entire life. It seems foreign, or simply impossible, to take up something new. It doesn’t even seem interesting.

And that’s another way to become resilient as you age. You know how they saw if you find people boring, it’s because you are boring, or bored, and what you need to do is GET interested. Being bored by people, by life or by occupation is a habit of thinking after all, and the way you GET out of it is the same way you GOT into it. By going through the motions.

Instead of shutting down when you meet someone who bores you, that you think you know all about, or you disagree with them politically, or they come from another place in life, stop and enforce upon yourself the concept of “curious.” Force yourself – yes, force yourself, that’s how it begins – to say, “Really? And why do you think ____ is a bad candidate?”

Almost beside yourself, you will learn interesting things, and regain some joy that’s been lost in your life.

If you walk past a rose garden every day and either don’t see it, or think the person is ignorant to be growing roses, change your attitude BY FORCE and approach it differently.

Of course it’s up to you. Certainly nobody is going to MAKE you do this if you don’t want to, but I throw it out as a challenge. After all, someone famous said that when things become old (and the world can become old, yes, if you are rigid and brittle), then what you need is NEW EYES, and that’s part of what EQ is all about.

Knowing how to grow old is demanding, but not any moreso than learning how to be an adult, for heaven’s sake, and take your first job. You went after that, didn’t you? Well, here we go again. An emotional intelligence course can really open your eyes. Why not give it a try? You might like it so much you might want to go on an become a coach yourself. It’s a great profession for someone with some wisdom!

©Susan Dunn, EQ and professional life coach, www.susandunn.cc . Career, relationships, retirement and other transitions. Individual coaching is available by phone or email, no contract required. Pay as you go.

BECOME A COACH. Susan trains and certifies coaches worldwide in a program that’s all long-distance, fast, affordable and effective. She is a founding member of CoachVille and has a master’s in clinical psychology. For free ezine mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc and write “ezine” for subject line. And be sure and check out her ebook, “Speak on a Cruise and Travel the World for Pennies.” Email for info.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Learn How to Make Your Workplace Happier and More Productive


Learn about the 7 Key Steps to Make Your Workplace Happier and More Productive

THE MAJOR KEY IS WELLNESS ... being in top shape physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. Emotions effect our wellness - as Candace Pert, Ph.D. says, our emotions are in every cell of our body. Try ARBONNE for feeling your best. You cannot follow any of the 7 steps unless you are robust, energetic and healthy. Shop safely online with me at MyArbonne. I use only their products, cosmetics, supplements, lotions (they are PURE) and I haven't missed a day of work (or fun) in 4 years. Have you? What you put on your skin is absorbed into your bloodstream.
________________________________________________________
What's the key to a great workplace?

Emotional Intelligence ... according to Dr. Steven Stein, who studies emotional intelligence, or EQ, these are the 7 keys from his new book:

THE 7 KEYS (Go HERE to read the whole article.)

1. Hire capable people who love the work they do and show how they contribute to the bigger picture.

2. Compensate people fairly.

3. Don't overwork (or under work) people.

4. Build strong teams with shared purpose and viable goals.

5. Make sure managers can manage.

6. Treat people with respect and leverage their unique talents.

7. Be proactively responsible by doing the right things to win the hearts and minds of your people.

All of these are signs that the workplace has a high EQ or emotional intelligence. "Happy" people ar emore productive, and one thing we learn from studying emotional intelligence, which I like to combine with the StrengthsFinder assessment (because it is NOT all about "emotions") is that what makes one person "happy" in the workplace, does not make another person "happy."

Look around in an average office these days and you will find all ages, cultures, backgrounds, etc. I was observing one alpha male today. The office is under a huge crunch, and many are wearing down. This man absolutely LOVES to work and "churn it out." He gets HAPPIER as the pressure builds, more cheerful as the day progresses, and I find hi absolutely energizing. Why? Because emotions are contagious. There's nothing like a leader who can smile when the going gets rough, and can show what I call "grace under pressure."

Want to know more about it? Take the EQ course.

It's all about GRACE UNDER PRESSURE.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Surgery Blurs Life and Death









The Miracle on Ice - 1 - MSN Health & Fitness

NEW SURGERY BLURS LIFE AND DEATH . . . ABOUT OUR UNSUNG HEROES

Have your heart attack in Wake County North Carolina, is one of the useful items this msn columnist found in researching a new procedure that blurs life and death. Emergency teams in Wake County are the first to have mandatory hypothermic treatment for victims.

Yes, there's a new-OLD procedure for treating strokes that involves cooling the body for not just minutes, but hours -- or maybe just a gutsy enough surgeon willing to go with his common sense. I'm not mentioning his name, for a reason. He's the SUNG hero, but there's an UNSUNG hero in this story.

20 years ago induced hypothermia, as its called, was only used as a last resort, when there was really nothing to lose, like surgery on a stopped heart. The body would be chilled down to 18°C (about 64°F), scary, as there are potentially serious side-effects such as frostbite, shock, pneumonia, death.

How did we discover the use of this procedure?

It was thanks to Raul Busto, a research assistant at the University of Miami.

The wonder of this story is that the person who wrote the article found this tidbit, and thought to include it in his article. Raul didn't get to write an article about his finding for the glorious JAMA; he didn't get to speak to the convention of neurosurgeons; didn't get a promotion to head the department or have a chair at auniversity medical center named after him. I don't know the facts but he probably didn't even get a raise.

Busto, observant guy that he is, simply noticed that even when bloodflow was cut off to a section of the brain in certain rats, they didn't have a stroke, and this in rats whose body temps were only a few degrees below normal.

There are people who lack the credentials, by choice, by chance, or by lack of opportunity, who are making tremendous contributions to our lives all the time. The diagnosis by the grandmother down the street, the perceptive comment of the nail technician, a caring neighbor who just notices something, the mechanic tinkering in his garage or the nascent genius in the computer or medical lab.

New systems are suggested by such people, difficult diagnoses are made, procedures thought up, and lifes are changed all the time by the unsung hero -- the person with high EQ (which includes observation, focus and common sense).

It's a shame that we have a system set up where only the Ph.D.s and M.D.s get the recognition -- and are granted the veracity. I consult in offices and I often find the quiet suggestions of the smaller players are ignored and not listened to. Why should a lawyer listen to his secretary when she says they're getting milked by the website designer? No credentials. Why should the CEO listen to the marketing person who predicts a trend that is clearly going to effect future profits. Not her field. Why should the "suits" in Miami listen to a coach who says that cruise passengers would attend lectures on self-help, astrology or engineering? Because everyone in Miami "knows" that all ALL cruise passengers want to drink and gamble ... except for the coach who cruises a lot and listens to the actual people on a cruise ship, wondering about the ship's engines, the stars they see on the romantic nights, and, yes, Virginia, they do not leave their problems at home when they cruise -- they come right along with them, sometimes in person, sometimes in their thoughts and hearts and Nancy Fenn's self-help lecture drew 30 people. (If you want to lecture on a cruise ship, by my ebook - www.webstrategies.cc/ebooklibrary.html )

The first thing I did when I was sent to a troubled apartment complex, back in my property management days, was to interview the people who actually worked on the property daily, so were forced to apply common sense to the problems at-hand. The leasing agent, the maintenance man, even the mailman could tell me the simple truth, from their EQ and observations, that told me what the problems AND THE SOLUTIONS were. They made me look good. I had the credentials, but thank you Mildred Mannigan for greeting me at the door of Concord Square Apartments with, "If they would simply ____, this apt. complex would be full tomorrow. Will you please TELL someone." If you're the 'they' -- listen.

All sing the unsung hero. Wherever you are, Raul Busto, thank you. Thank you for all the lives that will be saved because of you. And thanks to the "suit" that listened to Raul when he told what he knew.

Now go out and apply this!

Study EQ with me - www.susandunn.cc/EQcourse.htm .

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Wired to Connect

WHAT IS BETTER THAN A TRUE FRIEND??
public weblog('jaysen naidoo')

Yes, our brains are wired to connect. Connections, of the good sort, help eliminate or alleviate stress, help us cope better, emotional intelligence is built on a good support system and network, and we are wired to connect with other humans and also mammals. Many people's best buddy is a dog!

Studies show that ISOLATION is harder on our health than smoking, overweight, stress all combined. Think of that!

Emotional intelligence shows you how to work with this natural ability and need to connect with others at a meaningful level. We are our emotions ... if you aren't connecting with others emotionally, you can be alone in a crowd.

Must as I am ambivalent about cell phones, I always think of the connection. The cell phones start ringing at work around 5, and people start to wind down their days, and long for connection with their loved ones. Lovers call each other on the cell all day long, ot txt msg, and it makes them happy.

Stay connected!