Jun 9

Building core strength with situps

Posted in Tools

I’m partway through the Two Hundred Situps challenge at the moment. It’s a nicely laid-out program to build up your core strength. I think they started out with a site called Hundred Pushups (and I’ve got my eye on that for the next challenge).

The idea is that they give you a graded series of exercises – you do five sets, three times a week, with the number gradually increasing. There are six weeks in the program altogether. At certain points you monitor your progress with “exhaustion tests”, doing as many situps as you can.

I’m tracking my progress using the third-party site pushupslogger.com, which has been set upĀ  for that purpose, and it shows me that I’ve already almost doubled the number of situps I can do after completing two of the six weeks. (Over a period of three weeks, I have to say, because of, you know, life.) At the time of writing the logging site is running very slowly, but hopefully these issues are temporary.

I’m not sure how they figure out the numbers exactly, but it seems to be working for me. There’s an iPhone app, or you can do what I did and print out and fold the PocketMod booklet so that you don’t have to go back to the website all the time.

I’ll post again when I’m finished – that’ll help to motivate me.

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Mar 23

The Sleeper’s Checklist: 24 tips

Posted in Techniques, Tools

I have a client coming tonight to work on insomnia.

Because I’m a hypnotherapist and health coach, I don’t just do hypnotherapy but also offer practical lifestyle advice. Here are two dozen tips which I’ve put together as a one-page good sleep checklist to give to my client:

Insomnia
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The Sleep Environment

1. Is your bed comfortable?
2. Is your room quiet?
3. Is your room dark?
4. Is your room comfortably cool?
5. Do you refrain from mentally stimulating activities there?
6. Do you keep to the same sleep/wake cycle all week?

Sleep Aids

1. Do you get enough exercise?
2. Do you use relaxing teas such as camomile, lemon balm or valerian at night?
3. Do you have a carbohydrate/tryptophan/calcium snack (peanuts, sunflower seeds, wholegrain cereal, oatmeal and raisin cookie, peanut butter sandwich) or drink such as warm milk about an hour before going to bed?
4. Is your evening meal light, low-fat, high-carb, and medium- to low-protein?
5. Do you leave a digestive space of 2-3 hours between meal and bed?
6. If your feet are cold, do you use socks to warm them up?

I'm so tired
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Preparing for Sleep

1. Do you have a wind-down ritual before bed?
2. Do you avoid stimulating activities (TV, computer, work, study) in the hour before bed?
3. Do you use relaxing activities like a hot bath, meditation, quiet music, recreational reading before bed?
4. Do you make sure your exercise is finished 3 to 6 hours prior?
5. Do you avoid alcohol and nicotine before bed?
6. Do you avoid caffeine in the afternoon and evening?

Worry Management

1. Do you have a notebook by the bed to write down things you think of, so that you’re not worried about forgetting them?
2. Do you plan what you’re going to do the next day before going to bed so that you’re not lying in bed planning?
3. Do you know how to calm your body down with deep breathing?
4. Do you know how to calm your mind down with meditation, self-hypnosis or “anchoring“?
5. Do you know how to “let go” of thoughts and feelings?
6. Do you get up when you can’t sleep, so that you stop associating being in bed with being wakeful?

punch drunk
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Sources: Some of these are adapted from my earlier post (7 tips for a better night’s sleep), and some are from Vreni Gurd. The information on what to eat before bed is sourced from Ask Dr Sears.

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Feb 4

Positive Psychology: “Four Statements to Happier”

Posted in Tools
This entry is part 2 of 5 in the series Positive Psychology

Continuing my Positive Psychology series, where better to look for material than the blog Positive Psychology News Daily? And there we find Dave Shearon’s post “Four Statements to Happier“, a simple outline of what he’s learned about what makes us happy.

His statement goes like this:

“Hi. My name is ________. I want to be happier. I am willing to work at it.”

If there’s one thing I’ve learned it’s that simple doesn’t mean easy (or trivial). Built into these four straightforward sentences is most of what you need to know about improving your life.

2005_048_03
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“Hi.” Because your life is not a solitary life. Your life is lived, inevitably, in a social context, and by greeting and welcoming that social context – even if you dislike parts of it; by engaging with it, and by making use of it in a positive way, you’re able to improve your life.

There is really no such thing as “self-help”. Think about it. When you buy a self-help book, who is helping you? Yourself, obviously, because without application the book does nothing, but also the author, and everyone the author has learned from.

So, “Hi.”

Sourcing Focus badges
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“My name is __________.” We all know what our names are, but how many of us know who we are? Knowing something about who you are is an important first step to change. And change is how we become who we are.

If that sounds like nonsense, it isn’t. Most of us cover over who we are because we’re afraid that, if we told other people who we really are, nobody would want to know us. Freeing ourselves from that fear is part of the journey to happiness.

Welcome 2008!!! / Bienvenido 2008!!!
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“I want to be happier.” You may think, well, everyone wants to be happier, so what? But if everyone wants to be happier – why are so many people unhappy? Why are so many people doing nothing to become happier? Do you really want to be happier? Do you have a powerful desire for happiness that draws you forward past obstacles and challenges? Do you want to be happier more than you want to be safe? Because sometimes that’s the choice.

Do you want to be happier more than you want to not work at it?

Laborer
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“I am willing to work at it.” That’s what changes “I want to be happier” from an idle dream to a plan. Happiness, for most of us, doesn’t fall off the tree into our hand. We have to climb.

In the rest of the series I’ll look at some of the techniques that are around for improving our happiness, but for now, contemplate those four statements:

“Hi. My name is ________. I want to be happier. I am willing to work at it.”

How far through the four statements can you get and mean it?

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