Jennifer Ferguson

  • misiclenahas quoted2 years ago
    Now, I want you to conjure an imaginary situation in your mind in which you are experiencing the opposite, positive emotion in opposition to this negative one.
  • misiclenahas quoted2 years ago
    Now, I want you to conjure an imaginary situation in your mind in which you are experiencing the opposite, positive emotion in opposition to this negative one.
  • mashnicahas quoted2 years ago
    Happiness must be cultivated from within yourself
  • mashnicahas quoted2 years ago
    brain detects danger
  • mashnicahas quoted2 years ago
    adrenalin and cortisol
  • Rain Fwdhas quoted2 years ago
    Add to this pressure at work, family or relationship issues, fitting in time for friends and social obligations, and caring for children, and you begin to cultivate a perfect environment for too much stress that often leads to anxiety and even depression. Stress is also a contributing factor in many chronic diseases, including those which affect cardiovascular health. The pressure to keep up and be successful is compounded in our society by the social media we feed our brains every day which show people at their best, happiest and most successful on a daily basis. It is natural to look at people like this and feel that we are in some way not doing enough, not making enough money, not working out enough, not enough of anything. This is where the low self-esteem, anxiety and depression can sneak in. So, if the stress isn’t getting to you, the constant barrage of media telling you to do better in nearly every aspect of your life surely will.
  • VIDHI SINGHhas quotedlast year
    no scenarios in which the
  • Marija Roganovićhas quoted5 months ago
    emotions we read in other people and on their faces largely come from inside our own brains, just like every other representation of our world. We all see this world differently.
  • Marija Roganovićhas quoted5 months ago
    Once we understand that our emotions tend to hijack our brains before our thinking minds can rationally respond, we can create a plan of action to slowly begin to adjust these emotional reactions. Research shows that we can absolutely influence our emotional responses through changing our thought processes, and this is part of what mind hacking is all about.
  • Marija Roganovićhas quoted5 months ago
    —you can change your life, and neuroplasticity is a principle that every single person in the world can apply to do it.
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)