Is it
T H A T
s i m p l e:
CHANGE YOUR WORDS
CHANGE YOUR WORLD
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm of the Day :
F I N D O U T
(say it differently)
USE FRESH WORDS
not to be heard
but experienced. . .
Who Cares - What Matters
Is it
T H A T
s i m p l e:
CHANGE YOUR WORDS
CHANGE YOUR WORLD
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm of the Day :
F I N D O U T
(say it differently)
USE FRESH WORDS
not to be heard
but experienced. . .
Are you The Christoper Columbus in Search of the lost Continent in you. . . ?
I love articles like this
because they imply something magical could happen to you
if you just followed
THE STEPS
THE GUIDELINES
THE MAP
THE PERSONAL GPS
THE. . .THE. . .THE. . .THE. . .THE. . .THE. . .THE. . .
Emily Pidgeon
Whether it was during a career aptitude test or in a heart-to-heart chat after getting laid off, chances are someone has talked to you about how to “find your calling.” It’s one of those phrases people toss about. But StoryCorps founder Dave Isay takes issue with it … specifically, the verb.
“Finding your calling — it’s not passive,” he says. “When people have found their calling, they’ve made tough decisions and sacrifices in order to do the work they were meant to do.”
In other words, you don’t just “find” your calling — you have to fight for it. And it’s worth the fight. “People who’ve found their calling have a fire about them,” says Isay, the winner of the 2015 TED Prize. “They’re the people who are dying to get up in the morning and go do their work.”
Over a decade of listening to StoryCorps interviews, Isay noticed that people often share the story of how they discovered their calling — and now, he’s collected dozens of great stories on the subject into a new book, Callings: The Purpose and Passion of Work. Below, he shares 7 takeaways from the hard-won fight to find the work you love.
1. Your calling is at the intersection of a Venn diagram of three things: doing something you’re good at, feeling appreciated, and believing your work is making people’s lives better. “When those three things line up, it’s like lightning,” Isay says. He doesn’t suggest that a person has to be a surgeon saving lives to feel like they have a calling; think of the diner waitress who talks to customers and makes them feel loved. How do you find this overlap? “You have to shut out all the chatter of what your friends are telling you to do, what your parents are telling you to do, what society is telling you to do,” Isay says, “and just go to that quiet place inside you that knows the truth.”
2. Your calling often comes out of difficult experiences. What lurks in that quiet place will be a defining experience — quite possibly a painful one. Isay points to an interview in Callings with 24-year-old teacher Ayodeji Ogunniyi. “He was studying to be a doctor when his father was murdered. He realized that what he was really meant to do was be a teacher,” says Isay. “He says that every time he walks into a classroom, his father is walking in with him.” This theme of people turning their hardest experiences into a new path runs throughout the book. “Having an experience that really shakes you and reminds you of your mortality can be a very clarifying event in people’s lives. Oftentimes, it leads to changes,” he says. “We spend a lot of time working, so it can really change your priorities in terms of work life.”
3. Calling often takes courage and ruffles feathers. Elsewhere in Callings, we hear about Wendell Scott, who became the first African-American NASCAR driver in 1952, and kept on driving despite threats against his life. From scientist Dorothy Warburton who dealt with extreme sexism as she conducted research to break the stigma around miscarriage. From Burnell Cotlon, who opened the first grocery store in the Lower 9th Ward after Hurricane Katrina because he wasn’t about to let his old neighborhood’s spirit fade. Calling, says Isay, very often starts with taking a stand against a status quo that simply isn’t acceptable, and then dedicating your work to changing it: “It’s work ignited by hope, love, or defiance — and stoked by purpose and persistence.”
4. Other people often nudge you toward calling. Sharon Long had worked odd jobs most of her life. As Isay tells it, “Her daughter was going to college, and as the bursar was helping them with financial aid forms, she said quietly to herself, ‘I wish I could’ve gone to college.’ The bursar responded, ‘It’s not too late.’” Sharon enrolled in an art program, and on her advisor’s suggestion, took forensic anthropology as her science. “The advisor suggested it for no other reason than he thought it was the easiest science course for the science requirement,” says Isay. “But the minute she sat in that class, it was boom — this is what she was meant to do.” Isay tells this story to illustrate how calling, while very personal, is also relational. “People bump you this way and that way,” he says, often without realizing it. “When people find their callings, they want to honor those people who helped them get there.”
5. What comes after identifying your calling is what really matters. The old ‘finding your calling’ phraseology makes it sound like a calling is a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow — you find it, and the story’s over. But Isay stresses that your calling is an ongoing process. “Understanding what your calling is — that’s very different than the blood, sweat and tears of actually doing it,” he says. Pursuing a calling may require going back to school or apprenticing; it may require starting a business. Often, notes Isay, it leads a person into a line of work that’s in service of others. “This book is basically a love letter to nurses, teachers, social workers — the people who don’t often get celebrated for the work they do,” he says.
6. Age is irrelevant. Isay found his calling when he was 21 and interviewed a man who’d been part of the Stonewall riots. “The minute I hit record, I knew that being a journalist and interviewing people was what I was going to do for the rest of my life,” he says. “I feel very lucky that lightning struck when I was very young.” But collecting stories for the book reminded him that a calling can be discovered at any age. The book includes an interview with someone who knew they wanted to be an NBA referee at age 15, and another who worked as an accountant for 30 years before discovering his passion for slicing lox. “Doing the work you’re meant to do is one of the most satisfying, remarkable experiences that a person can have,” says Isay, “so never give up.”
7. Calling often doesn’t come with a big paycheck. Another trend Isay sees in stories of people who find their calling: they often involve leaving a high-paying job for one that’s lower-paying but more satisfying. “The message we send to young people is that you want to do as little work as you can to make as much money as you can — that’s the dream,” says Isay. “But the wisdom in the StoryCorps archive is that there’s another, much more rewarding dream of taking risks and working very hard to live with integrity.” In the end, that’s the lesson he took away from writing this book. “There are no millionaires, no billionaires, no celebrities, nobody with a big Twitter following,” he says. “Just stories can teach us a lot about lives fully lived.”
Even more powerful is this one single, revelation:
The DEBUNKING of one of the worst lies ever told to you,
made even more devastating because it’s told to you by people you love;
People you admire; look up to; respect. . .
YOU HAVE A PURPOSE. . .
(NO YOU DON’T)
YOU HAVE A MEANING. . .
(THAT’S A LIE)
YOU HAVE A DESTINY. . .
(THAT’S A BUNCH OF BUNK)
YOU HAVE A REASON. . .
(THAT’S A CROCK OF SOMETHING STANKY YOU DON’T WANT IN YOUR PANTRY)
T R U T H :
You don’t have a Purpose
You don’t have a Meaning
You don’t have a Destiny
You don’t have a Reason. . .
THEY ARE PLURAL. . .
Not SINGULAR
The Purpose
The Meaning
The Destiny
The Reason
Y O U
had as a infant wasn’t the one you had as a toddler or a pre-schooler or in junior high or when you graduated from high school, college, with your first full time job, when you got married, had kids, got divorced, remarried, more kids, another career, moved, had grandkids, retired. . .
F A C T :
You’ve had more Purposes,
You’ve had more Meanings,
You’ve had more Destinies,
You’ve had more Reasons
slip through your hands than you’ve ever taken advantage;
THEY ARE ENDLESS
and FOREVER CHURNING IN YOU
WHAT’S THE USE(S)
what indeed for
N O W
I always think it would be great to be bored. . .
until I have a moment to
D O
N O T H I N G
and then
B A M
Z I P
P R E S T O
I F E E L G U I L T Y
even book in the hand
head on the chest
10 minute-power-napping it
B U T
If you’re waiting for brilliance to strike, try getting bored first. That’s the takeaway of a study published recently in the journal Academy of Management Discoveries, which found that boredom can spark individual productivity and creativity.
Those findings are likely no surprise to Sandi Mann, a senior psychology lecturer at the University of Central Lancashire in the U.K. Mann is the author of The Upside of Downtime: Why Boredom Is Good, and a proponent of embracing the emotion, negative connotations and all.
Here’s why being bored can be a good thing for your mind, imagination and productivity, and how to do it right
At its core, boredom is “a search for neural stimulation that isn’t satisfied,” Mann says. “If we can’t find that, our mind will create it.” As demonstrated by the new study and plenty others before it, boredom can enable creativity and problem-solving by allowing the mind to wander and daydream. “There’s no other way of getting that stimulation, so you have to go into your head,” Mann says. You may be surprised by what you come up with when you do
Daydreaming can be “quite a respite” and provide a brief escape from day-to-day life, Mann says. But it’s also beneficial to simply step away from screens, work and other stressors long enough to feel bored. Studies have shown, for example, that modern tools including work emails, social media and dating apps can strain mental health — so taking a break can be a valuable opportunity to recharge.
Mann says it’s important not to conflate boredom with relaxation. A purposefully tranquil activity, such as yoga or meditation, likely doesn’t meet the definition of trying and failing to find stimulation.
It’s also crucial to unplug during this time, Mann says. Our cultural attachment to our phones, she says, is paradoxically both destroying our ability to be bored, and preventing us from ever being truly entertained.
“We’re trying to swipe and scroll the boredom away, but in doing that, we’re actually making ourselves more prone to boredom, because every time we get our phone out we’re not allowing our mind to wander and to solve our own boredom problems,” Mann says, adding that people can become addicted to the constant dopamine hit of new and novel content that phones provide. “Our tolerance for boredom just changes completely, and we need more and more to stop being bored.”
Next time you find yourself in line at the grocery store, in a tedious meeting or killing time in a waiting room, resist the urge to scroll. You’re bound to get bored — and your brain, mood and work performance just might improve. . .
Ohhhhhhhh to be bored
until you have
just a single-solitary-moment
to be even slightly disinterested
and then we do everything we can
even if
especially if
it’s because of our own
self-imposed-guilt
DO IT
FIGHT THE URGE
GET YOUR BOREDOM ON
(just a little)
Being a True C A R I N G C A T A L Y S T
means that Compassion and Love
need no Legislation or Policing and
Obliterates THEM and THEY
or I and YOU
and only is known abundantly as
US and WE. . .
T I S S U E
A T i s s u e. . .
Simple request, huh. . .
I was visiting them
for just a routine visit;
One month. . .
A month ago he was power washing his deck
buying a new car
going to a clam bake
and being diagnosed for the first time
with advance pancreatic cancer. . .
A Month Ago
isn’t a very long time. . .
a mere 744 hours
a mere 44,640 minutes
a mere 2,678,4000 seconds
. . .a month
and now he’s just literally moments away from dying. . .
My Charting very sterilely states:
I provided supportive presence via active listening/validation of feelings/comments, life/faith/family review; I shared scripture/prayer/blessing/healing touch; the pt was never fully awake/responsive during visit but appears comfortable/managed; pt is showing s/s of actively dying with his breathing pattern and the mottling of his skin on his hands, lips and feet up to his knees; the family expressed thanks for my visit and for all services/interventions/support shown; when sharing that the he was our patient and they are our concern, I asked if I could be of any other service or if I could bring them anything; pt’s wife responded: “TISSUE.” Can you bring us a softer tissue?” I left room and acquired a softer box of tissues from the supply room. . . .”
Paint a picture
Just the facts
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
. . .as abrasive as a cheap, non-brand tissue. . .
He died shortly after I left for the day
and now I think of him
o f t e n
with every tissue I see
and I seem to be seeing them
e v e r y w h e r e
The word C O M P A S S I O N
comes from Greek word
which literally translates:
S U F F E R I N G W I T H
and it’s never the S U F F E R I N G
that’s emphasized so much as
THE WITH
R E A L C H A N G E
never really is the JINGLE
in your pocket
so much as the recognition
IT IS THE ONLY THING CONSTANT
in our lives
and often something we have little control. . .
A Month isn’t a very long time
A Tissue isn’t very much of a request in a world of
W A N T S
We’re not called to be millionaires
We’re not called to be Fixers
We’re not called to be Healers
We’re not called to be Nurses
We’re not called to be Doctors
We’re not called to be Chaplains
We’re not called to be Nursing Assistants
We’re not called to be Counselors
We’re called to be Compassionate People
The WHERE
THE WHEN
THE HOW
is inconsequential
to the T H A T
WE ARE COMPASSIONATE
WE ARE KIND
WE ARE EMPATHETIC
WE ARE SYMPATHETIC
WE ARE CARING CATALYSTS
IS IT TOO MUCH TO ASK. . .
IS IT TOO MUCH EXPECT. . .
IS IT TOO MUCH FEEL. . .
IF WE FAIL. . .
CAN IT BE IN EXHAUSTING EVERY EFFORT
TO L O V E. . .
l e t s f i n d o u t
even if it’s just
a softer t i s s u e. . .
Being a True C A R I N G C A T A L Y S T
means that Compassion and Love
need no Legislation or Policing and
Obliterates THEM and THEY
or I and YOU
and only is known abundantly as
US and WE. . .
Keeping a positive outlook doesn’t always come naturally. But optimism is like a muscle — you just have to train it, says Tchiki Davis, a psychologist and founder of The Berkeley Well-Being Institute.
And learning to see the glass half full has its perks: It can improve the quality of your life and may even increase lifespan, she says. When Harvard researchers studied 70,000 women over an eight-year period, the most optimistic quartile had an almost 30% lower risk of dying from several major causes of death compared with women in the least optimistic quartile.
If you’re looking to reap the benefits of a happier, healthier and more positive life, here’s what experts recommend you do.
The first step in approaching a negative situation with an optimistic outlook is to accept what you can’t change, says Karen Reivich, a psychologist and author of The Resilience Factor: 7 Keys To Finding Your Inner Strength And Overcoming Life’s Hurdles
Once you’ve done that, you have two options: reframe or divert, says Dana Lightman, a psychotherapist and author of POWER Optimism: Enjoy the Life You Have…Create the Success You Want. Both will help you to instantly feel more positive, as they draw your attention (and thus, your emotions) away from the negative.
Reframing the situation involves looking for opportunity instead of ruminating on the loss. “When you’re going through something problematic, ask yourself, ‘What potential things could I gain from this?’” Lightman recommends. For example, people going through difficult breakups may find that they’ll gain the time to understand themselves. A rejection from graduate school may lead to a beneficial year of work experience in order to better prepare for higher education down the line, says Lightman.
Priming yourself to notice opportunities in the future instantly lifts you from a downward spiral of negative thoughts, Lightman explains.
Sometimes, raw, overly emotional negatives can’t be reframed immediately, she says, and in those cases, it’s best to divert your attention elsewhere. “Shift your focus to something else,” Lightman says. That could be something as simple as watching a funny video, calling a friend or taking a walk.
We’re really good at dwelling on the not-so-great, Davis says. But when we experience something positive — like a compliment from a friend or a beautiful day outside — we tend to let it pass without even noticing. Savoring or holding onto those pleasant moments and thinking, Wow, this is really great can actually strengthen positive emotions, she explains.
Lightman suggests taking it a step further by writing down your positive experiences. Keep these notes in a jar, box or container. When you start to feel down, you’ll have a flow of positive thoughts and memories to read, she says.
You wouldn’t expect yourself to remember important tasks without writing them down on your to-do list, would you? Well, the same is true about positivity, says Davis. Write yourself a message on a sticky note and attach it to your computer screen at work, Lightman says. You might write down an inspirational quote you like, a reminder to smile or something you have to be thankful for. Small reminders help keep positivity front and center in your life, she says.
One of the fastest, most effective ways to feel happier is to show someone kindness, according to Davis. “In America, we’re so individualistic, that we think, ‘Oh I have this problem, I should focus on me and fix me,’” says Davis. “But really, the more we focus on other people, the more effective we are in terms of positivity.” In a 2017 study by Oxford University, researchers found that performing acts of kindness for just seven days had a measurable, positive effect on well-being and positive social emotion.
Phone a friend
Most optimists have strong, supportive relationships, according to Reivich. “You don’t have to have a lot of them,” she says. “But you have to have people in your life where you feel like they’re there for you and you’re there for them.”
Optimists are also more likely than pessimists to use their support networks. “An optimistic thinker is more likely to say, ‘This is hard. Who do I need to call? What help do I need?’” Reivich explains. Negative thinkers tend to isolate themselves in tough situations, she says, which can breed more negative thoughts.
The comfort of knowing your own strengths and knowing you don’t have to do everything by yourself contributes to long-term happiness, according to Reivich.
Thinking about what you’re grateful for can instantly improve your mood, and as you begin to make gratitude a habit, you’ll see lasting benefits, Davis says.
It works because our interpretation of events influences our emotions more than the events themselves, Lightman explains. In negative experiences, gratitude is one of the most effective tools, as it can change the emotions you feel, she says.
Consider writing down three good things that happen to you every day — research has linked this act to increased happiness and fewer symptoms of depression.
Being grateful for the lessons learned in a negative situation, in spite of what led you to the lessons, will help you walk away from negative experiences with something gained. “If you don’t fall, you can’t learn to get back up,” Lightman says.
Are you Positive. . . ?
You’re just one kind act away
and then another
and then another
and then another. . .
to absolutely
P O S I T I V E L Y
l i v i n g
Y E S
We can’t LEGISLATE LOVE
or outlaw H A T E
. . .b u t
You
I
US
WE
can make a difference
H I S T O R Y
proves that as well. . .
We know that
Compassion and Kindness
Loving and Caring
DO NOT
stop bullets or halt bombings
or roadblock rented Home Depot Trucks
from running up on sidewalks and
killing people
b u t
Loving and Caring
Compassion and Kindness
don’t pull trigger or light fuses or press on excelerators, either. . .
The Random Acts of Kindness Foundation, was founded in Denver, Colorado, in response to the city’s “Summer of Violence” in 1993, when dozens of people were killed in gang-related shootings, including several children. One victim of stray gunfire was just 10 months old.
The organisation borrowed the writer Ann Herbert’s call for people to “practice random acts of kindness, and senseless acts of beauty”.
The phrase has since been popularised on doormats and bumper stickers across the US and encourages Americans to surprise one another with good deeds.
Kelsey Gryniewicz, a director at the foundation, advocates activities such as anonymously leaving hampers of food on neighbours’ doorsteps and paying for the person queuing behind you at a coffee shop.
“It’s not just about single acts, though,” she says. “It’s about changing your mentality from day to day.”
The World Kindness Movement represents the work of organisations from 23 different countries. “It has gone way past the level of community endeavour,” says its secretary general Michael Lloyd-White.
Would you buy a “suspended coffee” for someone in need?
But measuring the impact of these groups is not easy.
Each year, the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) publishes a World Giving Index, which attempts to track certain types of giving behaviour in 146 countries across the globe.
The data is extracted from an annual poll conducted by research firm Gallup and ranks countries according to the proportion of people who have volunteered, helped strangers at random, or donated money to charity in a typical month.
In first position last year was Australia, where a third of the population volunteers each month and two-thirds claim to have helped a stranger and donated money to charity.
Lisa Grinham, from CAF’s Australian branch, says that the rise is due to the flooding that hit Queensland and Victoria the year before, pointing out that figures tend to rise in times of national hardship.
In the US, which dropped from first to fifth place in the global index last year, a team of academics is working on a programme of compassion education in schools to try to reverse the decline.
Richard J Davidson from the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison thinks that the level of kindness in society can be improved if children are taught to be more empathetic from an early age.
“Compassion should be regarded as a skill that can be cultivated through training,” he says.
The kindness curriculum is currently being taught in 10 schools across Wisconsin. The project is still at the research stage, but “the early signs are promising”, he says.
Not everybody is convinced that focussing on compassion in this way is helpful, however.
“We have made altruism a sacred object, so we’ve been blinded to its deleterious effects,” says Barbara Oakley from the University of Oakland, Michigan.
In a new book called Pathological Altruism, she argues against what she sees as a cultural obsession with the notion of kindness.
“There’s a misguided view that empathy is a universal solvent. Helping others is often about your own narcissism. What you think people need is often not actually what they need.”
Kelsey Gryniewicz doesn’t think that the American kindness movement is guilty of that charge, arguing that there are tangible, practical benefits to the activities they recommend.
“It doesn’t have to be about cradling people in a bubble of kindness,” she says.
In Singapore, William Wan takes a more reflective view. “We must be realistic. We mustn’t be naive. Kindness movements can’t solve all our problems, but if they can solve some of our problems, why not use them?”
Truth:
Love
Compassion
Kindness
Caring
are only WORDS. . .
They only become
MASS WEAPONS OF CONSTRUCTION
when we decide to let those very
a c t i o n s
possess us with all of their force
Love
Compassion
Kindness
Caring are only WORDS
Until SomeONE
gives them Meaning. . .
Are
Y O U
That Some One. . .
It’s November 14
. . .in just 8 days
We will be celebrating
T H A N K S G I V I N G
NO MATTER WHAT
. . .Hopefully we’ll understand
Before November 22
and way past it
That G R A C E
is not just a prayer
we say before
a meal. . .
It’s a L I F E S T Y L E
The ultimate Question
and even more Significant Answer:
IS IT YOURS ?
It’s really the neverending
S E A S O N
For You
I
Us
WE
To continue being an arsenal
in the armory
of the assembling
of the Greatest
Assortment of
MASS WEAPONS OF CONSTRUCTION
THIS IS NOT A POLITICAL STATEMENT. . .
It is an invitation for a
Personal Inventory to
REALIZING BY
BEING A DIFFERENCE
i s
MAKING A DIFFERENCE
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm of the DAY:
Sometimes. . .
M A K I N G A D I F F E R E N C E
I S J U S T B E I N G T H E D I F F E R E N C E
Psssssssssssssssssssssssssst of the Day:
When your Plan A fails
WORK YOUR PLAN B
like it’s your Plan A +
. . .the quicker you adapt;
get OVER
YOUR PLAN A
and embrace your PLAN B
the more successful
and even better
the a s s u r a n c e
there’ll never be a
P L A N C
THAT HUGS. . .
or at least talks about HUGS. . .
If you hate being hugged, the world can be a challenging place. You never know when someone you’re meeting for a quick coffee will approach you, arms open wide, coming in for an embrace.
Your options are limited: you can awkwardly dodge the gesture, stick out your hand for a handshake, or submit to the unwanted bear hug.
Regardless of whether you are pro or anti-embrace, here’s everything to know about the human behavior of hugging:
So why is it that some people love a good hug, while others abhor them? According to experts, it may have something to do with how you were raised.
“Our tendency to engage in physical touch—whether hugging, a pat on the back, or linking arms with a friend—is often a product of our early childhood experiences,” says Suzanne Degges-White, a professor of Counseling and Counselor Education at Northern Illinois University. A 2012 study published in Comprehensive Psychology found that people who were raised by parents who were frequent huggers were more likely to be huggers in adulthood. The study concluded that, “hugging is an important element in a child’s emotional upbringing.”
Conversely, Degges-White says, for people raised by devout non-huggers, the very thought of hugging might make them uncomfortable. “In a family that was not typically physically demonstrative, children may grow up and follow that same pattern with their own kids,” she says.
Still, she notes instances when growing up without physical touchcan actually have the opposite effect. “Some children grow up and feel ‘starved’ for touch and become social huggers that can’t greet a friend without an embrace or a touch on the shoulder,” Degges-White says.
Whether you grew up in a family that was always hugging or was brought up in an environment that lacked touch—these factors can leave a lasting physiological impact.
Darcia Narvaez, a professor of psychology at University of Notre Dame, says that there are two main ways that not being touched can affect a growing body: it can lead to an underdeveloped vagus nerve, a bundle of nerves that runs from the spinal cord to the abdomen, which research shows can decrease people’s ability to be intimate or compassionate, and can lead to an underdeveloped oxytocin system, the glands which release the oxytocin hormone that can help humans form bonds with other people.
As proof, Narvaez points to a group of Romanian orphans, who were at the center of a 2014 study on the lasting impact of neglect on developing minds. Romanian orphans who were adopted had malfunctioning oxytocin systems, according to the study. “They were hardly touched in the orphanage and so did not display the rise in oxytocin— ‘the cuddle hormone’—well-cared-for children have when sitting on their parent’s lap,” Narvaez says.
Without this hormone, it can be harder to pick up on social cuesand even be more sociable. So hugging and touch are incredibly important for youngsters—even if you don’t particularly like them as an adult.
Self-esteem and body issues may also play a role in someone’s hugging predilections. “People who are more open to physical touch with others typically have higher levels of self-confidence,” says Degges-White. “People who have higher levels of social anxiety, in general, may be hesitant to engage in affectionate touches with others, including friends.” And the fear of someone ‘reaching out’—literally and figuratively—can make that discomfort even worse, she warns.
There’s also a cultural component to being hug avoidant. People in the U.S. and England hug and touch way less often than people in France or Puerto Rico, according to a 2010 study by the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley.
The Emily Post Institute, which carries on the work of the eponymous doyenne of etiquette, suggests skipping the hug altogether unless you are closely acquainted with someone. The reason is simple: while you might be comfortable with it, “not everyone else—even those who might go along with it quietly—are,” the institute wrote in a blog post.
The manners maven also encouraged huggers to take note of body language: when someone proffers their hand instead of going in for a bear hug for example, recognize the signal, and then shake on it. The body language of non-huggers is hard to miss, too: If you’re going in for a hug and notice a grimace or a look of horror in the person’s eyes, you might consider aborting the mission.
Samantha Hess—a “professional cuddler” and founder of a Portland, Oregon-based service that teaches people how to enjoy platonic touch—says it’s important to be mindful of other people’s cues. “Everyone has the right to control what happens to their body,” she says. “Many of our clients aren’t comfortable with even a handshake when they first arrive.”
Hess adds that it can take weeks or even months for her clients to feel comfortable enough to enjoy a good old-fashioned embrace—if they ever get there at all.
There is a very real reason to try hugging: it may make you less likely to get sick.
In a 2015 study, researchers from Carnegie Mellon University looked at the effects that hugs and other forms of affection can have on the immune system. Specifically, researchers wanted to know if the people who felt loved were less susceptible to the common cold—and they were: 32% of that immune boost came from the stress-alleviating effects of hugging.
“Those who receive more hugs are somewhat more protected from infection,” the study concluded.
But if anti-huggers are still unconvinced, they may want to make note of a 2014 study published in the American Journal of Infection Control that found that fist bumping is the most hygienic form of greeting—an alternative that requires minimal contact.
While no one should ever feel obligated to hug someone, if you want to overcome your hug aversion, Hess’s company has a carefully laid out plan for helping people overcome their distaste for the embrace. “We go over consent and boundaries prior to any touch and reassure them they are always welcome to change their mind,” she explains. “We have 78 cuddle poses we can guide people through so we can find something for just about any comfort level.”
And for those who don’t mind physical touch, but still aren’t sold on hugging, Degges-White suggests pushing through the temporary unease and go for the embrace. “You may very well find yourself overcome with relief, gratitude, surprise, acceptance and even regret for having closed yourself off from your own self for so long,” she says.
I have shown this dozens of times in several different settings and it always seems to begin conversations and foster even deeper thoughts and feelings. . .
After last week’s series of pipe bomb mails,
Grocery Store
Synagogue Shootings
and a unplanned, profound discussion with friend about
G E T T I N G I T
I’ve repeatedly had just
One Question?
What Props are you holding on to that keep you being truly
freely
being
y o u. . .
Well. . .
?
Mini-manifestoes
. . .we have millions of them;
most unpublished
and nearly all
never shared
especially when it comes to
our own deaths
. . .the little, unnoticed, never-talked-about-or-even-recognized-deaths
that culminate and lead to
THE BIG ONE
. . .many times they lead to
too-sacred-to-speak-of-sabbaths
Sometimes. . .
we get them from others
unaware
unintentional
but more real
than the ever-changing Seasons. . .
Eugene Peterson gave me one this past week. . .
He died
He was the author of many books but his masterpiece was his rewriting of the Bible entitled, THE MESSAGE. . .
I remember reading this when it came out in 2011;
it was his Mini-Manifesto. . .
When I heard of his death on October 22, I re-read it again
and underlined new passages. . .
did I not read them before. . .
did they not spark a little ember in me that they now have. . .
the take-aways
this time
settled into a deeper place
where roots will soon follow:
TWO QUOTES:
“I think that the dying pray at the last not “Please” but “thank-you.”
–Annie Dillard
“Only where graves are is there resurrection.”
–Karl Barth
and this story:
“while visiting a Benedictine monastery, Christ in the Desert, in New Mexico, one of the Brothers was leading us on a path from prayers in the chapel in the refectory where we would have lunch. The path led through the cemetery. We passed an open grave. Jen, my wife asked, “Oh, did one of the Brothers just die?” and the reply was powerfully, impactfully short, “No, this is for the next one.”
My Mini-Manifesto has me celebrating 24 years of doing hospice work as of October 31–Halloween. . .
part of THAT manifesto
is not being taught how to die
BUT HOW TO LIVE
. . .again and again and again and again and again and again and again
the greatest beams of light
find their ways past the griminess of our not-so-hallowed-panes. . .
m i n i- m a n i f e s t o
ALL
of Life is sacred. . .
the roots that grow the deepest
are never fully seen
or known
but they most assuredly exist
and they
n o u r i s h
m i n i – m a n i f e s t o
we grow in the most unsuspecting and unusual places
m i n i – m a n i f e s t o
we are puddles of mud slushed together with the most hallowed of water
m i n i – m a n i f e s t o
the only holy
the only sacred
you need to not only step
wade
splash around in
a b i d e
is your own
m i n i – m a n i f e s t o
it doesn’t need
published
shared
just lived
exclusively
d a i l y
more than the mere dust we are. . .