Κυριακή 3 Ιανουαρίου 2016

What to do when you cannot stop thinking about something bad

There are only two things you have true control over in life, your thoughts and your behavior. No one else can choose either one of those for you. But sometimes intrusive thoughts about unwanted events can flood your mind and it can feel like your thoughts are controlling you. Whether it is something that happened in the past such as a fight with your partner, or a future event you are worried about such as not having enough money to pay the rent or not doing well at the job interview, negative rumination robs you of your present moment well-being and over time can lead to serious problems like depression or anxiety.
So why do we keep replaying in our minds all these negative things?  
  • Sometimes you are trying to figure out a solution to a problem.
  • Sometimes you are expecting something to go wrong and you are trying to avoid an unfavorable outcome.
  • Sometimes it is just a bad habit you have.
  • Sometimes you keep asking yourself WHY this happened and  go back thinking what you could do to avoid it.
The problem with ruminating is that most often you are focused on things going wrong instead of how to generate the solutions to resolve the situation and make it go right. If your boss got angry with you at work, you may be ruminating on what you did, wishing you could have done it differently, and worrying that if you do it again there might be serious consequences like losing your job. You might replay the scene with your boss over and over in your head, or worry excessively about what would happen if the worst-case scenario did play itself out. This kind of thinking activates you fight flight response which actually shuts down your creative problem solving thought process. In order to find the resolution that will allow you to let go of the problem, you will need to disengage from the ruminative thought pattern. 
Stopping thought isn’t something we are good at. Psychologists refer to this as the white bear problem, because deliberate attempts to suppress thoughts can often make them more likely to resurface.1 If I say think of a white bear, then tell you to stop thinking about it, chances are the white bear image will still be in your mind.  The reason for this is that there is no off button in the brain. In order to stop any one thought you need to turn on or activate a different stream of thinking.
Below are 4 ways you can begin to regain control over your thoughts.
1) Engage in an activity that is on a different emotional frequency.
Feeling follows thought so negative rumination generates negative emotions. Worrying makes you feel anxious. However, psychologists know behavior can change emotions too. If you do something that you know generally makes you feel better like going for a run, calling a friend, going for a walk in the park, watching your favorite movie, meditating, you can raise your emotional frequency. When you are in a better mood you can think more clearly and will often gain a different perspective on the situation. Doing something that generates positive emotion also acts as a distraction task by simply giving you something else to focus your attention on.
2) Write down all the reasons why what you fear will NOT happen.
The majority of what you worry about never happens. That's because most of the time there are lots of valid reasons why what you worry about is unlikely. However, because our brain works on an activation/inhibition model,2 active thoughts about what could go wrong inhibit your brain from thinking of the reasons why these thoughts may not be rational. It requires a concentrated conscious effort to shift this train of thought and think of the reasons why your fear isn't likely to come about.
3) Write down all the reasons why even if the worst-case scenario did happen you would still be ok.
Many times we feel that if something unwanted happens it would be completely devastating, we wouldn’t be able to survive, or we will be forever unhappy. But the truth is difficult unwanted things happen all the time and people do survive, and sometimes even come out the better because of them. Our brains are extremely adaptive to our relative circumstances. Paraplegics, a year after their injury, report just as much happiness as lottery winners.3 How well you handle any situation depends largely on how your perception of your ability to cope with the situation. Instead of focusing on why you won't be ok, think of your strengths, the difficult things you have already overcome in life, why you are resourceful enough to get through other challenges.
4) Create an action oriented solution-focused re-frame.
When you have a resolution to the situation you will have both reduced the need for your brain to ruminate and you will have given yourself something constructive to focus on instead, which replaces the ruminative thoughts. Asking yourself a few simple questions can help you move you towards generating a solution.
a. What do I believe this situation means for me? Because we can only move forward in time we tend to think of events that happen to us in terms of what they mean for us in the future. If you have an argument with your boss, you worry about what it will mean for your future e.g., the relationship with my boss might be damaged, I might not get a promotion. If something bad happened but it had absolutely no bearing on your life going forward, it wouldn’t bother you much.
b. What do I want to happen? I would like to repair the relationship with my boss. Clarity about what you want is a prerequisite to developing a solution to any problem.
c. What can I do that is likely to bring that about? I can ask to meet with my boss and discuss the situation, I can make sure to keep my temper in check in the future, I can continue to interact in a positive way, I can make an effort to show my value. A plan to deal with a problem causes you to see the situation differently and reduces your anxiety and the need to ruminate.
Source: www.psychologytoday.com

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Παρασκευή 1 Ιανουαρίου 2016

A little bit of our lives


Twelve years ago, I met a young boy. A very sweet young boy in his twenties. His friends called him ‘SpeedFreak’ and ‘Motorhead’. You see, this sweet boy was (and still is) a great fan of this band called ‘Motorhead’. And he loved the lead singer Mr. Ian Fraser Kilmister or as he is known ‘Lemmy’. This young boy was very funny and I liked him a lot. I was a little bit older than him and I think he liked me too. We were having so much fun and he was making me laugh, all day long. 

I used to tease him for his ‘Motorhead’ love, for his ‘Lemmy’ love and the fact that he knew each and every one song of this band, even the unknown ones that rarely anyone knew. He was head banging every time a song started (he still does believe me) and as I’ve already said he was very funny. Don’t get me wrong, I am a rock chick too. My first love was Joan Jett. Back in the 80’s Joan Jett was my Goddess! I felt so honored when I met her in a concert, I was 13 years young then. It was my first concert, my father took me there and waited for me up to the end. I was so happy because I had the chance to see my favorite singer, I loved her so much, I was dressed like her, I had my hair done like her and my make up too (even though my mum was furious, I was only 13 for God’s sake). So, I knew someone who knew someone and somehow I ended backstage. And there she was, young, beautiful and PERFECT! I was speechless, really I mean speechless without a voice not able to say a fucking word speechless. She came to me and I was still speechless, only tears pouring down my eyes. She looked at me, and then she hugged me (I almost died that day from happiness) and she told me that I was very beautiful and she was so glad that I liked her and dressed like her (I mean it when I say I almost died that day). But, let’s go back to that ‘Motorhead’ sweet boy. I like Lemmy too, I respect him, he was very talented, he was a crazy person and even though I didn’t have the chance to meet him personally, I think he was a very good (awesomely good) man. After all, he lived his life to the fullest as he wanted it. I liked his music very much too, after all I knew it so well…. Two years later, that sweet young boy became a father. The father of our first child (I told you I was a bit older but he really liked me) and two years after that he also became the father of our second child. He went to every ‘Motorhead’ concert two-three-four times per year. And I let him.
He kept head banging every time a song came up anywhere we went, and that was still so sweet and funny, and I let him. When I was pregnant to our second child Mr. Ian Fraser Kilmister came to our town for a concert, and of course the sweet boy went there and I let him. Then they all went out and did some crazy stuff (there is proof somewhere in my digital camera but I cannot find it) and I let him. Our first child is a boy (we didn’t name him Lemmy though, not even Ian, although I know the sweet boy secretly wanted to and I would let him if he asked) but we dressed him in ‘Motorhead’ clothing and listened to ‘Motorhead’ music almost every day. Ten years later on December 28th, 2015 Mr. Ian Fraser Kilmister died. The sweet young boy, a very sweet man now, is very sad. And I let him. Because ‘Lemmy’ deserves it. I am very sad too, and although some people think it’s ridiculous to be sad for someone you never knew that well, they are wrong. Because ‘Lemmy’, was in our house every day, was in that boy’s heart and ears every day since he was a little boy and music brings out some very strong feelings doesn’t it? Remember my story with Joan Jett? She loved Lemmy too. We loved Lemmy too.

Mr. Ian Fraser Kilmister, thank you for everything, thank you for this sweet young boy that I’ve met, thank you for making so fucking great music all these years. Rest In Piece (you’re so crazy that I’m hearing bass chords up there, you know how to wake them all up) and for all of you who think that being sad for loosing someone that isn’t a relative or a ‘friend’ is ridiculous, it’s ok… After all, people can tell you to keep your mouth shut, but that doesn't stop you from having your own opinion.

My greatest Respects,
Happy New Year, 2016
A.V.


Τετάρτη 1 Ιουλίου 2015

Back to Creative Writing School


BACK TO CREATIVE WRITING SCHOOL isn’t a manual on marketing or a guide to finding a publisher. There are other books – good books – that can help with that. It’s about using 30 imaginative writing exercises to experiment with new ideas. It’s about defeating the blank page. It’s about producing the best kind of writing you can achieve. Written with passion, authority and gentle humor, it’s recommended by bestselling authors, creative writing lecturers and students. 
152 pages

Σάββατο 16 Μαΐου 2015

Anti-Social Media


Constance Anderson is a scriptwriter… without a script. This wasn’t a problem until by random stroke of fate the mega-famous Hollywood diva Jennifer Roberts announces on American primetime television that Constance is writing her next movie. But this is news to Constance; how the hell did that happen? She is jettisoned to fame overnight and faces a race against time to write the script. With the help of an unscrupulous ‘agent’ and a hostile ghost writer, Constance battles her way to Hollywood through the onslaught of social media, trolls, a philandering boyfriend, and leaked naked photographs… Social media paves the way for an unknown scriptwriter in a comedy of misunderstandings and miscreants, and finally an ounce of good luck. 
181 pages

Πέμπτη 14 Μαΐου 2015

Henry Hartman’s Crisis Management


An Amazon exclusive download! Three previously published Henry Hartman tales, bundled together! Contains: “Henry Hartman’s Holiday Crisis” — Dumped by the ex-husband she put through dental school, Syd vows to never get married again. That’s a challenge Henry can’t leave alone. Raised by a family of women, Henry is a sentimental rogue, even more so at the holidays. But he’s not about to leave his job as an FBI agent behind, even if it means fooling the Hartman ladies. Taking Syd along for the wild ride, they’re in serious trouble when the Christmas celebration collides head on with a killer determined to take out his target. Too bad Syd doesn’t know her ex-husband has mob connections.The federal agent crosses the wrong guy and ends up being used for batting practice — it’s up to Syd to get the injured man to Bethlehem, New Hampshire in time for the family reunion. Will there be a Christmas wedding, or will Blackie Walsh’s gang succeed in eliminating Henry and Syd? “Henry Hartman’s Boondoggle Crisis” — On the run from the Boston mob, the couple flees. hiding out as best they can, trying to solve the dirty, little secret that has the Boyle family hiring a series of hit men. Blackie Walsh, the ruthless gangster on trial, is determined to force Tom Boyle to fork over his $2 million, but the money’s evaporated. That financial business that used to help fund IRA activities is now struggling after the bottom fell out of the money market. As the action heats up, Syd is forced to face her biggest fears in a gator-laden lagoon, on a dark, chilly night in South Carolina…and again, when a deadly package keeps showing up on her doorstep, courtesy of a very determined hit man. When the finale finally arrives, it will leave you breathless, thanks to a killer out to use the Boston mob for cover for a very sinister game of intrigue. “Henry Hartman’s Fall Guy Crisis” — Poor Syd finds herself dragged into a counterintelligence investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. Unable to clear him on theft charges, NCIS leaves the former sailor dangling on the hook. Henry Hartman, that wily FBI agent whose specialty is “off-the-books” investigations that impact national security, reaches out to an old Navy buddy, now a rear admiral, He’s determined to get to the bottom of this mystery, and he needs his wife’s cooperation to get it done. Helping “Bigfoot” get back on his feet after some bad luck is one thing, but does Henry have to insist Syd hire the man as her assistant?….Especially when he says the most outrageous things to her newest client, Martha Stenkill….And that Rottweiler of his could turn out to be a work site danger when “Fang” unexpectedly plays protector for her master. How can Syd control this hot mess that just keeps getting hotter? Just when she thinks things can’t get any more complicated, there’s a break-in at the Hartman home by a pair of baby-toting robbers….“Don’t let them put my baby in foster care! I’m a good mother! I only did it to save her!”….What does that mean? Syd finds herself roped into serving as foster mom after the tearful plea from a desperate mother. Good thing Syd and Henry have the Hartman ladies to help them….Prudence and Charity take on babysitting duties, while former Department of Justice prosecutor Faith insists on serving as the baby’s legal protector. When little Sonia’s father turns out to be a member of Harvey’s old Navy crew, the FBI agent knows there’s more to this tale of woe than meets the eye. 
565 pages

Παρασκευή 17 Απριλίου 2015

The Diary Of An Expectant Father (Diary of a Father #1)

by Pete Sortwell

Not only is Graham Peterson unlucky in his choice of careers, he’s also been terrible with women throughout his adult life. That changes when he meets Alison on a work night out. Unfortunately for Graham, however, things change so drastically that within a month of dating Alison he gets the news that he’s about to become a father for the first time.
'The Diary of an Expectant Father' charts the months leading up to what should be the happiest day of a young couple's life, but with a relationship so new and a career so bad, can Graham keep everything together for the sake of his unborn child?
With all the pitfalls and worries of an expectant father charted, this book is for all those who have been through pregnancy or just want to know how a man deals with all these things internally.
'Expectant Father' is the first in a series of diaries by Graham Peterson, who sometimes thinks he’s writing to an Alien Warlord from the future. The next in the series, ‘The Diary of a Hapless Father: Months 1-3’, charts those first three terrifying months of parenthood.


My review: I've listened to the audiobook version and I was laughing out loud almost all the way. The story is similar to most of us parents and very helpful to all those who aren't (yet). A 'must' read by Pete Sortwell!