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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

moody tuesday

Top Ten Ways to Raise Your Mood*
*From Moodraiser, an excellent blog that gives tips for good mental health.




1. Respond to good news enthusiastically. It's called "capitalizing." If your spouse tells you some good news, how do you respond?

Four possible ways to respond are:
a) enthusiastically,
b) negatively,
c) positively but subdued, or
d) uninterested.


Studies show when you respond enthusiastically, as opposed to any of the other ways, it makes a big difference in how satisfied your spouse is in your marriage, how committed s/he is, and how in love s/he is with you. And, of course, if your spouse is more satisfied with your marriage, is more committed to you, and more in love with you, that will really raise your mood, too.




2. Look at personal photos. Listening to music and eating chocolate (what?!?)didn't really change experimental subjects' moods very much. Alcohol and TV each gave people a 1% rise in their happiness score. But the clear winner was looking at personal photos. It gave people, on average, an 11% rise in their mood.





3. Experiment with your posture. Someone who feels down tends to slump. Someone who is happy tends to sit up straighter, walk more upright with the head held up, looking ahead instead of down. If you have been paying attention, you know this already. Posture tends to be a reflection of mood.
What you might not have realized is that it goes the other way too: You can change your posture and it will influence your mood. Experiment with your posture while you're walking or sitting. Do more of what makes you feel better, and less of what doesn't.



4. Compare your situation to something worse. Think of something you are unhappy about. Now notice that the reason it makes you unhappy is that you are comparing your situation to something better. You're comparing your situation to something more ideal.


But try this: Think of someone in this world who would take your situation over theirs in a heartbeat. Or imagine your own situation was much worse than it is. Whatever you are unhappy about, you can easily find a worse situation to compare it to. And from that perspective, you are lucky to have the problem you have, even though it is obviously not ideal. Who says the ideal is a legitimate thing to use as a comparison anyway? Something worse is at least as legitimate, and has a benefit too: You feel better.




5. Pretend the universe is in a conspiracy to make you happy. When something bad happens, pretend the universe is in a conspiracy to make you happy and it gave you this bad thing as the perfect way for you to learn something — a lesson that will ultimately make you happy. This way of reframing a setback will improve your mood in the moment, and will raise your mood in the long run. It'll help you learn and improve what you do in the future. It will help you make the most of whatever happens. What unpleasant situation do you have? Is it teaching you something valuable? Could it, if you looked at it that way? Your ongoing mood has a lot to do with how things look to you. And how things look to you has a lot to do with how you look at things. Use this to your advantage by using this reframe.




6. Think of something you're grateful for. It is surprisingly easy to think of something you're grateful for. It only takes a few moments. And as soon as you think of something, you feel noticeably better. If the first thing you think of doesn't raise your mood enough, ask yourself what else you're grateful for. We naturally have our attention on our goals and what we'd like to attain in the future, and the mind naturally compares what we have with what we want to have. That's motivating sometimes, but it can also make you feel demoralized or frustrated. It is equally legitimate — and ought to get equal billing — to think about what you have (compared to others or compared to your past), or what you have gained, or what you are just plain glad about. Try it the next time you feel discouraged or frustrated. Ask yourself, "What am I grateful for?"




7. Take some time and sit still quietly. Simply sitting and thinking can raise your mood consistently. All you have to do is sit still without doing anything. How often do you do that? You always have lots to do, and if you're not doing something, you're watching a movie or listening to music. Your mind is almost continually engaged. When you sit still, after about fifteen minutes, your mind seems to go into a defrag mode. Unresolved issues bubble up and get resolved. Your mind seems to naturally sort itself out. It feels almost as if you had things you needed to think about that were pushed to the back of your mind, waiting for an opportunity. Sit still and let your mind think for a half-hour to an hour. I think you'll be surprised at how clear-headed and peaceful you become.




8. Do some exercise. Exercise beats depression, but even if you're not depressed, a little exercise usually raises your mood. It's an all-purpose mood-raiser that just about anyone can use. If you haven't exercised in the last couple days and you're not feeling as good as you would like, try doing some exercise today and see if that helps. It probably will.




9. Get a little done on a purpose you care about. Think of one small goal you really want. And it's really important you think of something you want. You could do things you should do all day long, completing task after task, but if there's no juice in it, all that accomplishment won't raise your mood.


For real enjoyment, you need:
a) something you want to accomplish, that
b) you enjoy accomplishing.

Do a little of your joyful purpose today, or if the day is almost done, then start tomorrow. Think of something you really want to do that you really like to do, and get a little of it done.



10. Reframe a circumstance that makes you feel bad. "Reframing" means interpreting the situation differently. When something happens, you interpret it a certain way, and your mind usually does it automatically. The situation just seems a certain way to you, and you have feelings appropriate to the way you look at it. When you reframe a circumstance that makes you feel bad, you won't feel bad any more. Nothing has changed except how you're looking at it, but that's enough to change your feelings.


To reframe something, all you have to do is:

a) notice some circumstance is bringing you down, and

b) ask yourself if there is some other way to look at it than the way you automatically look at it.




What's on your top 10 list for lifting your mood?

15 comments:

laurie said...

the advice is great and makes sense, but all those happy jumping pictures you found are a real hoot!

Anonymous said...

I actually employ several of those mood lifters already, but there are some there I should be trying to do. Great info! Thanks for sharing.

Queers United said...

never knew about the posture thing, im gonna work on that and see if it makes a difference =)

Jenn @ Juggling Life said...

I rarely ever get in a bad mood and I think it's because I practice gratefulness on a daily basis.

Each night when I snuggle into bed I reflect on how blessed my life is--I'm thankful for both big and little things.

Dr. Deb said...

I use many of these listed. Great post!!

JCK said...

I loved these!

So many good ones. I find it really helps to imagine a worse scenario. I did that this past weekend when I had 2 car accident type things in a row. I just felt so grateful that no one was hurt and I wasn't alone the 2nd time.

Thanks for sharing these.

And..I have to confess, chocolate saves me. But, hugs help, too.

shrink on the couch said...

laurie - thanks, I had fun finding those

onebrick - there are a few I hadn't tried, too ... can never be enough good ideas on this topic

queers - I do find the posture thing works, AND, making myself smile when I'm feeling down

jenn - grateful is a good one, I agree. I often use this when I'm lieing in bed, esp when worry is pushing my insomnia buttons

deb - thanks! though again, I have to give moodraiser blog the credit. I just added fun pictures.

jck - worse case scenerio is one I frequently use. it really helps with the small stuff, especially - as in "don't sweat the small stuff"

Mary said...

Thanks so much for sharing this.

Counting my blessings does it every time for me!

Radical Reminders said...

I jump up and attempt to photograph it... apparently that has shows to elevate mood ;)

HP said...

Who took that photo of me and Practical Man in our lounge room (first photo)? :)

I love this post. So many good ideas for boosting mood..I'll probably continue to procrastinate about number 8 though..

A favourite mood booster for me? In winter, my daughter and I have a 'bed-date'. We grab hot water bottles, hot chocolate, movie snacks and The Emperor's New Groove and veg out.

Not very exciting, not very healthy, not very inspiring but a whole lot of laughter and together time.

PS Poor Practical Man gets relegated to the football downstairs.

HP said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

I LOVE this!!! ( Your list was great. Here's mine...)

1. GO to the used Bookstore and browse.
2. Re-read funny stories I keep in my teacher journal
3. Fix a martini
4. Take my daughters for coffee
5. Have a quickie in the bathroom with my fella

let's see......

anyway, the pictures you found were a pick me up, as well!!!

Stacie said...

I love this list...it's wonderful. There's only one problem for me here. The one about thinking of others that would love to be in the situation you're in because they are so bad off. I do this a lot and and of course I am grateful immediately but then I feel guilty for feeling overwhelmed by my problem...I think this a Catholic thingy..

Anonymous said...

1. Listening to music.
2. Watching my favorite old movies and fastforwarding to my favorite parts.
3. Buying a chick lit book. Luv! it! Snuggle down in a bath, burn some incense and really relax!

Andrea Frazer said...

That's awesome. Thank you.