The Power of Suggestion - Subliminal Adverstising

A new supermarket opened in Topeka , KS ...
It has an automatic water mister to keep the produce fresh.
Just before it goes on, you hear the sound of distant
thunder and the smell of fresh rain.
 
When you pass the milk cases, you hear cows mooing and you
experience the scent of fresh mown hay.
 
In the meat department
there is the
aroma of charcoal
grilled steaks with onions.
 
When you approach the egg case, you hear hens cluck and
cackle, and the air is filled with the pleasing aroma of
bacon and eggs frying.
 
The bread department features the tantalizing smell of
fresh baked bread and cookies.
 

I don't buy toilet paper there any more.

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Reining and Dressage

Riding lessons for life #12

A Clear Round


A Clear Round

 

 

Last week I took a student to our biggest, most competitive horse show to date.  My student was competing at an international level at a show that had 2500 horses in attendance and 60 in his class alone! To put that into perspective most of the shows we attend locally have 60 people TOTAL! As someone who is fairly young in the business it could have been an intimidating experience. I was coaching my student while standing next to a former Gold Medalist coaching his students that were in the same class as my rider! Now I have not yet achieved Olympic stature and my student’s horse was not an imported European Warmblood.  But we found out that it doesn’t really matter.  After my student would do his round, I’d watch the other riders in his class compete.  Oh of course there would be the beautiful, really fancy high end horses and riders, but I’d have to smile when a fat backyard looking pony and a determined little girl would grit their teeth and do just as well as the big boys! It doesn’t matter where you’ve come from, with determination, hard work, and daily practice you can jump just as high as anyone else!

This all made me think about the excuses people use in life that keep them static.  People will use excuses in order to explain away why they haven’t gotten as far as someone in life.   I am not convinced  things like that matter.  The world is loaded with examples of people who “came from nothing,” had a terrible family situation, or even a physical disability and achieved great things. This is because these people had a vision they were passionate about and they had the tenacity to stick with it, even when there were bumps in the road.  If there is something in life you really want to accomplish or achieve, you first need to let all your excuses of why you CAN’T do it go.

These “I can’t” thoughts will manifest themselves so that, guess what, you won’t be able to do it.  Start by listing the reasons you can do this, the reasons you want to do this, the things that make you passionate about this.  This will get your brain thinking positively about the situation.  Then you can start to take steps towards this goal.  It will be a long process, a journey to be enjoyed!  You will find in the end that you CAN jump just as high as anyone else!

Claire Affleck
Claire Affleck Training website

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'Eco-Therapy' for Environmental Depression

'Eco-Therapy' for Environmental Depression

ecotherapy

Depressed people often need someone to hug. On occasion, that someone may just be a tree.

A new and growing group of psychologists believes that many of our modern-day mental problems, including depression, stress and anxiety, can be traced in part to society's increasing alienation from nature. The solution? Get outside and enjoy it.

(See the top 10 odd environmental ideas.)

While traditional psychotherapists focus their treatments on the patient's interior — whether through pharmaceuticals like Prozac, mindfulness practices like meditation, or old-fashioned couch-bound therapy by the hour — practitioners of the burgeoning field of eco-therapy believe that patient care must include time spent in the great outdoors. "It's psychotherapy — as if nature really mattered," says Linda Buzzell-Saltzman, a psychologist and the founder of the International Association for Ecotherapy, which currently lists slightly more than 100 official members.

Eco-therapists point out that human beings have evolved in synchrony with nature for millions of years and that we are hard-wired to interact with our environment — with the air, water, plants, other animals. But in the past two centuries, beginning with the Industrial Revolution, people have been steadily removed from the natural world, our lives regulated not by the sun or moon but instead by the factory clock. Recently it's gotten worse, with the rise of the Internet and other technologies, like iPhones and BlackBerrys, that dominate our lives, pushing us even further from any appreciation of our natural surroundings.

(See the best iPhone applications.)

"We began to get the impression that we were somehow above and separate from nature," says Craig Chalquist, an instructor at John F. Kennedy University in San Francisco and co-editor with Buzzell-Saltzman of the new book Ecotherapy: Healing with Nature in Mind.

Today, more than half of the world's population lives in cities, and many people barely ever get a glimpse of green. At the same time, human beings appear to be doing their best to destroy what remains of the earth by contributing to climate change — a problem that in itself causes some people deep anxiety. But what the average person feels as stress or depression, eco-therapists suggest, is a longing for our natural home. "People were embedded in nature once," says Buzzell-Saltzman. "We've lost that, and we're paying the price."

Getting it back doesn't have to be difficult, according to eco-therapists, most of whom, unsurprisingly, practice in California. Patients' treatment typically begins with starting a nature journal, in which they record how much time they spend outside. The results can often be shocking, says Buzzell-Saltzman. "Some patients find they spend less than 15 to 30 minutes a day outside, other than walking to and from their cars," she says. Eco-therapists counsel patients to slow down and reconnect with nature by hiking, gardening or simply taking walks outdoors. Therapy sessions may also take place outdoors — in a park, for example — rather than inside yet another office. "We can use the natural world to be part of the healing process," says Chalquist. "We have to acknowledge that we're part of this, not the master of it."

(See the top 10 green ideas of 2008.)

If such prescriptions sound a little simplistic, consider this: A 2007 study by researchers at the University of Essex in England found that a daily dose of walking outside could be as effective as taking antidepressant drugs for treating mild to moderate depression. Of course, it's no secret that regular exercise is a powerful mood enhancer — although researchers noted that a similar regimen of walking in a crowded shopping mall did not have the same impact — and the boost in vitamin D production in people who spent more time outside in the sun surely helped as well.

It may be that eco-therapy is less a practical psychological treatment than a timely philosophy that connects common feelings of isolation and stress with the fact that the world in which we live is slowly becoming something it shouldn't be. And with worsening climate change and a relentless drumbeat of bad news about our endangered environment, it seems our eco-anxiety may be far from being cured. "Ultimately, what we need to do is change human behavior," says Buzzell-Saltzman — a commonsense recommendation for humans as well as the environment.


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