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"May we never let the things we don’t have spoil our enjoyment of the things we do have and can have. As we value our happiness, let us not forget it, for one of the greatest lessons in life is learning to be happy without the things we cannot or should not have." -- Richard L. Evans READ POST
"Do you know what exhausts us more than lack of sleep? Stress. Our worrying. Our focus on what might be wrong. Our lack of laughter. Our lack of energy. Our lack of exercise to blow off anxiety and boost that energy. The joy deprivation is worse than the sleep deprivation, hands down. We don't feel the physical effects of it the way we do when we've been woken up every hour all night. But the extra weight we carry is something we don't even realize we've taken on and assumed like excess baggage." -- Lu Hanessian READ POST
"Every time you complain, your irritability -- like a virus -- is neurologically picked up by every person who hears your voice or sees your face. So by all means, train your brain to be optimistic and positive because (according to 30+ years of longitudinal research conducted by Duke University and the Mayo Clinic), it will literally add years to your life." -- Mark Waldman READ POST
“You can complain because roses have thorns; or you can rejoice because thorns have roses”—Ziggy
"The opposite of complaining is gratitude. We should talk about things
we are thankful for rather than things we are unhappy about. Our minds
are like steering wheels, they take us in the direction we point them.
If we focus on negative things, we will notice and attract more
negative things in our life. If we focus on positive things, we will
move in the direction of greater happiness and more success." - AComplaintFreeWorld.org
Research
shows that when we listen to complaints of any kind, we get
demoralized. Whether we're making the complaints or listening to them,
our minds start on a cycle of negative thinking.
So why do we complain?
Sometimes to get attention or connect with others by commiserating.
Sometimes to avoid taking responsibility for something: It's not OUR fault! Sometimes simply because it's the story we tell about our lives. "You won't believe how awful my day (week, year, life) was."
Parents and kids often complain as a way to lobby each other to behave
differently. With parents, it could be called nagging. "I can't believe you left your jacket on the floor again!" With kids, it's an attempt to elicit parental intervention of some sort: "He's picking on me!" or "All the other kids' parents let them!"
Challenge your family to live this week complaint-free. Put a jar on
your counter. Every time anyone complains, that person has to put a
quarter in the jar, and express gratitude in place of the complaint.
"Not chicken again!" might become "I am so grateful we get to have a healthy, hearty dinner and that Mom cooked it for us!"
"I hate picking up the things you kids leave strewn around the house" might become
"Dinner will be ready in ten minutes. I'm so glad that you kids will
have all your things picked up first so I can feel peaceful as I serve everyone dinner... I love that everyone in this family is learning
to clean up his own messes."
"Can't you ever brush your hair?" might become "I love having such a beautiful daughter!"
"My boss did it again!" might become "I am grateful to have a job and a paycheck to feed my family."
At the end of the week, donate your quarters to charity. You'll be
amazed how much money you raise for your favorite charity as you
re-train yourself.
May your week be filled with the miracle of gratitude. READ POST
“The most successful people are good at Plan B” – James Yorke
READ POST
“I've come to the frightening conclusion that I am the decisive element. It's my daily mood that makes the weather. As a parent or teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make a child's life miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration. I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all situations, it is my response that decides whether a crisis will be escalated or de-escalated and a child humanized or de-humanized.” -- Dr. Haim Ginott READ POST


