• Home
  • Music
  • About
  • Contact
  • CreativeTherapyTools.com

RichardbBrunner

~ creative arts therapist

RichardbBrunner

Author Archives: RichardB

Image

dew

15 Sunday May 2022

Tags

My Photos

Posted by RichardB | Filed under My Photos

≈ Comments Off on dew

Image

Colorado Hairstreak Coloring Page

14 Saturday May 2022

Tags

Colorado Hairstreak, Coloring Page

CPBF-Colorado Hairstreak-TR.jpg

Posted by RichardB | Filed under Coloring Pages

≈ Comments Off on Colorado Hairstreak Coloring Page

What It’s Like To Be a War Refugee | Zarlasht Halaimzai | TED Talks

13 Friday May 2022

Posted by RichardB in Truth

≈ Comments Off on What It’s Like To Be a War Refugee | Zarlasht Halaimzai | TED Talks

Tags

story, trauma, War. Refugee

Habit myths

12 Thursday May 2022

Posted by RichardB in Creative Therapy Tools, Handout

≈ Comments Off on Habit myths

Tags

habits, myths

DESPITE our best intentions for the new year, the reality is that gym memberships will lapse, chocolate will replace carrots and Candy Crush will edge out Moby Dick.

It’s not (only) that we’re undisciplined slugs. It’s that much of what we know — or think we know — about habits is wrong. Here’s a primer that might help keep you off the couch and on the treadmill.

MYTH 1 We fail to change our habits — or start good new ones — because we lack willpower.

Not really, said Wendy Wood, a professor of psychology and business at the University of Southern California. Willpower, she said, is more about looking at those yummy chocolate chip cookies and refusing them. A good habit ensures you’re rarely around those chocolate chip cookies in the first place.

To create or change a habit, you might consider thinking much more about altering your environment and patterns of living than work on steeling your mind, Professor Wood said, because “behavior is very much a product of environment.”

Habits — at least good ones — exist so we don’t have to resist temptation all the time. Imagine if every morning you had a debate with yourself about eating cake or cereal for breakfast. Instead, most of us form the habit of eating something relatively healthy for breakfast, which bypasses the lure of the cake altogether.

That’s why it’s sometimes easiest to start or break a habit during a major transition. This may sound counterintuitive, but a new house, job or relationship breaks old patterns, said Gretchen Rubin, author of the forthcoming book, “Better Than Before: Mastering the Habits of Our Everyday Lives.”

“People say wait a few days to get settled, but don’t,” she said. “Start right away.”

MYTH 2 We fall back on bad habits when stressed. In fact, good habits persist even in times of high anxiety, Professor Wood said. A study of which Professor Wood was one of the co-authors found that students who already had unhealthy diets would eat junk food when stressed, but those who already had the habit of eating well — or of reading a newspaper or of going to the gym — were just as likely to do that.

MYTH 3 It takes about 21 days to break or make a habit.

That number seems to have cropped up in the 1960s and somehow became “fact” with no real proof. But in 2009, researchers in Britain decided to take a deeper look by studying how long it took participants to learn new habits, such as eating fruit daily or going jogging. The average was 66 days.

But individuals’ times varied greatly, from 18 days to 245 days, depending on temperament and, of course, the task involved. It will most likely take far less time to get into the habit of eating an apple every afternoon than of practicing the piano for an hour a day.

MYTH 4 You need positive thinking to break or make a habit.

“We find positive fantasy is not helpful and may even be hurtful when trying to reach a desired future or fulfill a wish,” said Gabriele Oettingen, a professor of psychology at New York University and the University of Hamburg.

Over years of research, she discovered that people need to pair optimistic daydreams about the future with identifying and imagining the obstacles that prevent them from reaching that goal — something she calls mental contrasting.

Say you want to stop being a procrastinator. The first step is easy. Imagine how it will feel if your work is completed with plenty of time to spare, if you can sleep instead of pulling an all-nighter, said Professor Oettingen, author of “Rethinking Positive Thinking.”

But don’t just resolve to stop procrastinating. The second step is to identify what holds you back from changing yourself. Is it fear that you won’t succeed? Is it the adrenaline rush of frantically working at the last minute? Is it because of negative feelings toward a boss or teacher?

The mental contrasting needs to be in the right order. It’s important to “experience our dreams, then switch gears and mentally face reality,” Professor Oettingen said.

Doing it the opposite way — imagining the obstacles and then fantasizing about changing habits — doesn’t seem to work as well, research shows.

MYTH 5 Doing things by rote, or habit, isn’t good in most cases. It’s better to be mindful of everything we do.

Research shows that most people repeat about 40 percent of their activities almost every day.

“We only have so much room in our brain,” said Ian Newby-Clark, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Guelph in Canada. “It would be incredibly taxing if we had to mindfully plan every step of our day.” Habits free us up so we can think about other things.

And while some habits are objectively bad — smoking, say, or being consistently late — most are subjective. “Habits are only good or bad to the extent they’re consistent or inconsistent with your goals,” Professor Wood of U.S.C. said. It’s a bad habit when “it starts interfering with other goals you have.”

For example, many people said their resolution this year was to cut down the time they spend online.

But why? Because it’s an inherently bad thing to do? Or is it an obstacle to spending more time reading books or riding a bike or learning to knit?

After thinking about it, you may choose to spend less time on your computer or phone. Or you might decide it’s not so terrible in limited doses and shed the habit of feeling guilty about it.

MYTH 6 Everything in moderation.

“There’s a real difference among people about how easily they adapt to habits,” Ms. Rubin said. Some see habits as liberating; some see them as a trap. Some prefer to make a huge change all at once; others proceed step by step.

“I’m in the small minority that loves habits,” Ms. Rubin said, adding that she tends to find it easier to abstain from certain things altogether. For example, she eats no carbohydrates.

“People said I was doomed to failure, but it’s not true,” she said. But, she noted, “it’s a mistake to think the abstainer is more disciplined. For me it’s easier to be an abstainer than have to deliberate each time whether I can eat something or not. Others would go nuts if they abstain.”

That’s why you shouldn’t listen to people who tell you you’re doing it wrong if it works for you, she said.

Also, people shouldn’t fear that their habit will dissolve if they don’t practice it daily.

“If you lapse once or twice, you’re not ruined,” Professor Wood said. “That’s a misconception.”

And that leads to …

MYTH 7 Shame and guilt keep you on track.

No. People need to be kinder to themselves, showing self-compassion if they lapse, Ms. Rubin said. But it’s a fine balance between treating yourself kindly and making endless rationalizations and excuses.

“I might mindfully make an exception,” she said, such as choosing to eat a traditional Christmas cake every year. “But I’m not making excuses in the moment: I’ll hurt the hostesses’ feelings. You only live once. It’s the holidays.”

One last piece of advice: If you want to be in better shape, get a dog. Professor Wood said studies show dog owners have lower body mass indexes. But here’s the catch: That’s only true if you walk ’em.

Top Songs I listened to in 2021: 宇多田ヒカル『One Last Kiss』(Hikaru Utada)

09 Monday May 2022

Posted by RichardB in Music

≈ Comments Off on Top Songs I listened to in 2021: 宇多田ヒカル『One Last Kiss』(Hikaru Utada)

Tags

Hikaru Utada, music

Image

CL Trees

08 Sunday May 2022

Tags

My Photos, trees

Posted by RichardB | Filed under My Photos

≈ Comments Off on CL Trees

Image

American Short hair Coloring Page

07 Saturday May 2022

Tags

Black American Short hair, Coloring Page

CPCT-Black American Short hair-TR.jpg

Posted by RichardB | Filed under Coloring Pages

≈ Comments Off on American Short hair Coloring Page

Saving abused animals – Dog rescue in Turkey | DW Documentary

06 Friday May 2022

Posted by RichardB in dogs

≈ Comments Off on Saving abused animals – Dog rescue in Turkey | DW Documentary

Tags

dogs, rescue

Wade on the water

04 Wednesday May 2022

Posted by RichardB in Community, Dance Movement Therapy, Ritual

≈ Comments Off on Wade on the water

Tags

chronic, healing, ritual

Illness that is of a chronic nature has a huge impact on individuals separately, as well as within the context of family systems. Health care systems, being “systems”, have an inability to care for patients on an individual basis. While systems managed health care, impersonal by nature is promoted as cost effective, it increases costs in the long run by not holistically treating the client. Impersonal health care adds to the disassociation waterrockspatients often experience; for the ill body/mind and subsequent new family/life dynamic, the medical profession, and the possibilities of wellness.

In 1990 I worked with Bear, a 38 year old womyn who had a late stage mastectomy. She was dealing with issues of an altered body, of thoughts of death, her children being motherless, things left undone. During a 10 day group movement based expressive arts residential retreat, she took the opportunity to explore some of these issues. One of her expressions was in the form of a healing ritual. Most of the group stood on one side of a pond, singing the gospel hymn, “Wade on the water”. On the other side, Bear was carried down to the waters edge, wrapped in a blanket, and left there, standing, still wrapped. She slowly undid the blanket and waded into the water, slowly swimming to the other side, where, like a chorus of angels we waited, still singing.

Bear engaged in a method of emotional healing that falls, far, from the “systems” method of health care. Her methodology embraced her needs, hopes and fears in a manner that can only be facilitated in an open, accepting, creative and supportive atmosphere. The waves that she stirred that day in the pond are still going, still rippling outwards, deeply and profoundly on all those who witnessed her wade in the water.

Top Songs I listened to in 2021: Lake Street Dive – Feels Like the Last Time

02 Monday May 2022

Posted by RichardB in Music

≈ Comments Off on Top Songs I listened to in 2021: Lake Street Dive – Feels Like the Last Time

Tags

music

Image

BW tree

01 Sunday May 2022

Tags

My Photos, trees

Posted by RichardB | Filed under My Photos

≈ Comments Off on BW tree

Image

Yellow jacket Coloring Page

30 Saturday Apr 2022

Tags

Coloring Page, Yellow jacket

CPIT-Yellow jacket-TR.jpg

Posted by RichardB | Filed under Coloring Pages

≈ Comments Off on Yellow jacket Coloring Page

The New Yorker – How a Legendary Cartoonist Cast Light in Dark Times

29 Friday Apr 2022

Posted by RichardB in Humans

≈ Comments Off on The New Yorker – How a Legendary Cartoonist Cast Light in Dark Times

Tags

cartoon, cartoonist

UCSF – Groundbreaking Innovations in Mental Health at

27 Wednesday Apr 2022

Posted by RichardB in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on UCSF – Groundbreaking Innovations in Mental Health at

Top Songs I listened to in 2021: Lake Street Dive – Hypotheticals 

25 Monday Apr 2022

Posted by RichardB in Music

≈ Comments Off on Top Songs I listened to in 2021: Lake Street Dive – Hypotheticals 

Tags

music

Image

BW tree and clouds

24 Sunday Apr 2022

Tags

My Photos

Posted by RichardB | Filed under My Photos

≈ Comments Off on BW tree and clouds

Image

Basset Hound Coloring Page

23 Saturday Apr 2022

Tags

Basset Hound, Coloring Page

CPDG-Basset Hound-TR.jpg

Posted by RichardB | Filed under Coloring Pages

≈ Comments Off on Basset Hound Coloring Page

FRONTLINE – Chasing Heroin

22 Friday Apr 2022

Posted by RichardB in Addiction, Heroin

≈ Comments Off on FRONTLINE – Chasing Heroin

Tags

Addiction

Dance/Movement Therapy & Mental Illness

20 Wednesday Apr 2022

Posted by RichardB in Dance Movement Therapy, Mental illness, YouTube

≈ Comments Off on Dance/Movement Therapy & Mental Illness

Tags

Mental Health, youtube

Top Songs I listened to in 2021: 宇多田ヒカル『PINK BLOOD』

18 Monday Apr 2022

Posted by RichardB in Music

≈ Comments Off on Top Songs I listened to in 2021: 宇多田ヒカル『PINK BLOOD』

Tags

music

← Older posts
Newer posts →

instagram

Follow RichardbBrunner on WordPress.com
  • Tumblr
  • YouTube

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • RichardbBrunner
    • Join 492 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • RichardbBrunner
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...