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Tuesday, September 08, 2009
The Gray: in which Lucy straggles along, albeit not quite keeping her head up

Excerpt from Biting Anorexia

 

That’s it. That’s it. My hair is stuck to my cheeks with tears. A whole part of me has finished. A feeling of heady liberation and utter redundancy. Speech night: over. School: over. My speech as head prefect to two thousand parents and girls and teachers: over. To all those who failed to support me, who told me to just give up and drop out of school to save myself the effort, who cared more about asking me to “pull up my socks” than how I was, as I stumbled, bone-thin and gray, down school corridors… this speech was as much for them as it was for anyone else.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Tuesday, September 08, 2009
Friday, September 04, 2009
Some Thoughts on Multitasking

Excerpt from The Well-Ordered Home

 

Multitasking is that wonderful ability to per form several tasks at once. It’s a key skill in house-hold and life management. There are examples every where—some good, some not so good. Talking on the phone while at the gym. Putting on makeup while driving. While it is an effective technique, like any thing, it can be over done. Here are two types of multitasking.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Friday, September 04, 2009
Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Re-Focusing Strategies

Excerpt from Staying Focused in the Age of Distraction

 
We think you will agree that the challenge is not to stretch even further to take in more information, but, rather, to be mindful and discriminating about where our attention is focused. How can we minimize distractions and overlook things that don’t matter. We all know what it’s like to try to pay attention to something when we are distracted by something else. Suppose we are feeling emotional pain, and we don’t want to focus on the negative. We can direct ourselves away from unpleasant thoughts and feelings. We can do this by mindfully attending to our breathing and being in the present moment. The additional strategies below can also help.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Using Grief as a Teacher

Excerpt from Grieving Mindfully

 

Suffering can bring you to a place of profound mindfulness about your relationships and your spiritual beliefs.  In the context of grief, the person, and by extension the relationship, can be your spiritual teacher. Being aware of how your loved one lived, what his or her role was in your life, and how you are experiencing the loss of that person can turn your grief journey into a vehicle for your spiritual growth. Without this person's presence in and loss from your life, you would not have this unique opportunity to appreciate life and love, and seek out personal growth.


Using the pain of loss as a spiritual teacher, you begin to cultivate a sense of gratitude toward what you are feeling and experiencing. The intense emotional pain of your grief may still hurt. However, as you experience grief mindfully, allowing yourself to feel the twists and turns of the spiral staircase, the triggers and changes in your relationships, and your own personal development, you may eventually come to realize, mentally, emotionally, spiritually, perhaps even physically, that your capacity to grieve - and your capacity to love - are interconnected.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Disturbing Trends in the Modern Diet

Excerpt from The Binge Eating & Compulsive Overeating Workbook

 

Two disturbing trends in the modern diet are also contributing to our culture’s food issues: our reliance on packaged prepared foods high in partially hydrogenated fats and the extensive use of high fructose corn syrup. These trends, along with a lack of physical exercise, have resulted in the current obesity epidemic in our country.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Thursday, August 20, 2009
What Is Bipolar Disorder? (pt. 3)

Excerpt from Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Bipolar Disorder

 

In my work with people with bipolar disorder, I have found it quite common that they know very little about their illness. Often this is because receiving such a diagnosis can be overwhelming, and people frequently don’t know what questions to ask to best help themselves....

On the other hand, perhaps you are a person who accepts the diagnosis, but you don’t have an accurate understanding of what it means. You might be unsure about what bipolar symptoms are, what might be symptoms of a separate, co-occurring disorder such as anxiety, and what is “normal” and completely unrelated to any disorder. This knowledge is extremely important in order for you to learn what you need to do to prevent relapses (the recurrence of symptoms) and to cope with manic, hypomanic, and depressive episodes. To help you understand what form of the illness you have, I have outlined the current categories of the illness below, as defined by the DSM.


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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Thursday, August 20, 2009
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
What Is Bipolar Disorder? (pt.2)

Excerpt from Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Bipolar Disorder

 

Part 2 answers:

  • What Is Depression?

  • What Is Mania?

  • What Is Hypomania?

  • What Is a Mixed Episode?

  • What Is Psychosis?
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Posted By / 12:57 AM / Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Rage: An Overview of Explosive Anger

Excerpt from Rage: A Step-by-Step Guide to Overcoming Explosive Anger by Ronald T. Potter-Efron, MSW, Ph.D.

  • Rage is an experience of excessive anger.
  • Rage is a transformative experience.
  • For every total rage, you probably have several partial rages.
  • You may often have near-rage episodes as well.
  • Not all rages look alike.
  • Another way to divide rages is by the threat that each rage addresses.
  • If you are a rager, you aren’t the only one in the world with this problem.
  • Rages can be prevented.
  • Each kind of rage needs to be treated a little differently.


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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Thursday, August 13, 2009
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Biting Anorexia: Preamble

Excerpt from Biting Anorexia: A Firsthand Account of an Internal War by Lucy Howard-Taylor.

My name is Lucy Howard-Taylor. I am eighteen years old. I have starved myself silent. I have slipped through people and out of sight, into black. Rigid at night from fear, curled against another day, I fell: unmoved by the landing.

But this is not the exposé of an individual. This is a chronicle. Of anorexia. Of depression. Of you and me, perhaps. And a stumble back into the light.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Is It Emotional or Physical Hunger? How to Tell the Difference

Excerpt from 50 Ways to Soothe Yourself Without Food: Mindful Practices for Finding Relief, Comfort & Calm

 

If you aren’t sure whether you want to eat because you’re truly hungry or because your emotions need calming and soothing, do a quick self-check before starting to eat. Ask yourself if any of the following statements describe your hunger. Then add up how many times you agree with these statements. Observe whether you agree with more statements under emotional hunger or belly hunger.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Tuesday, August 04, 2009
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