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FibroFoggyKaty1 | |
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Date Posted:07-10-2016 6:20 PM When you first become chronically ill you go through a mourning processes of what you can no longer do which is very normally. This can take months and for some even a couple years. We all deal with things differently and there is no set amount of time this should take. But when you get “Stuck” in this mourning processes for an extended period of time it can become very debilitating emotionally and physically (Because the mind and body are connected). In fact, it can become more debilitating than your chronic illness itself. The research is summarized in Robert Emmons’ book Thanks!: How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier (Houghton Mifflin, 2007). Emmons and his colleagues at the University of California at Davis are among the pioneers in research on gratitude, part of a larger movement called positive psychology. Positive psychology, instead of focusing on illness and emotional problems, studies health-promoting behavior and the pleasurable parts of life. Emmons’ book reports on several studies. In the first, he and his colleagues divided participants into three groups, each of which made weekly entries in a journal. One group wrote five things they were grateful for. Another group described five daily hassles and a control group listed five events that had affected them in some way. Those in the gratitude group felt better about their lives overall, were more optimistic about the future, and reported fewer health problems than the other participants. Results from a second study suggested that daily writing led to a greater increase in gratitude than weekly practice. A third study reproduced the results among a group of people suffering from various neuromuscular diseases, including post-polio syndrome, which has symptoms similar to those in CFS. People using daily gratitude journals reported more satisfaction with their lives and were more optimistic about the future than the control group. Interestingly, the gratitude group also reported getting more sleep, spending less time awake before falling asleep and feeling more refreshed in the morning. In a related study, researchers at the University of Connecticut found that gratitude can have a protective effect against heart attacks. Studying people who had experienced one heart attack, the researchers found that those patients who saw benefits and gains from their heart attack, such as becoming more appreciative of life, experienced a lower risk of having another heart attack. Focusing on our When we start to focus on what we can do and find pleasure in new things we might have once thought we would have never done, it stimulates the mind and keeps us in a place of emotionally wellbeing. Let’s use an example. If you were once a runner and that was your passion and you feel anger and resentment that you can no longer run, you might want to look into coaching runners or volunteering at a local marathon! Help register the runners or pass out water to the runners. Although you are not running, you are still participating in something you once loved and feel appreciated for your passion by helping others accomplish their goals of running and this is just one example. Here is a list of things that many people with chronic illness have found pleasure in.
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