One of my favourite books to help people understand the importance of their physical and emotional limitations is by a local Vancouver doctor, Gabor Mate MD. This book outlines several different personality types that end up having certain chronic diseases. It’s quite fascinating as Dr Mate brings a lot of clinical experience to his writing.

As our bodies start to breakdown, stress hormones like cortisol are produced to try and control inflammation, however these hormones overtime actually do our bodies more harm than good.

One of the key ways to reduce cortisol is to reduce stress in our lives and one of the simplest ways of doing that is to recognize that we need to rest and to reduce the amount of demand on our bodies, especially dealing with trivial things like feeling obligated to help other people when we are sick. Emotional exertion can be exhausting to an already exhausted person and when our bodies start to physically breakdown this is a sign that enough is enough.

It is an important lesson for anyone with a chronic disease to learn. Sometimes we just need to be able to say no!

The following article eludes to this point and I think it’s worth a read.

How to Say No: Research Reveals the Best Way

Posted on October 03, 2013 by Dr. Mercola

Learning how to say no could easily be described as one of the best-kept secrets to happiness. If you become overburdened with commitments, it’s virtually impossible to find the time to devote to the things that matter most to you.

And, spreading yourself too thin, whether for work or pleasure, is a surefire recipe for burnout. Saying no is a single strategy that can have endless benefits to your stress levels and well-being, including:

  • Boosting your productivity
  • Giving you time for rest and relaxation
  • Eliminating distractions
  • Improving your focus
  • Allowing you to achieve your personal goals

The Power of Words: How You Say No Matters

Research published in the Journal of Consumer Research shows that simply saying “no” is not the most effective strategy. Neither is saying “I can’t.” Instead, just by changing one word you may be able to dramatically improve your success.

The word to use, according to a series of two studies? “Don’t.” The first study compared two groups of students saying either “I can’t” or “I don’t” when faced with a temptation, such as eating ice cream.

After repeating the phrases, the students were then offered a candy bar or a healthier treat when they left the study room. Those in the “I can’t” group chose the candy bar 61 percent of the time, compared to 36 percent of the time for the “I don’t” group, which suggests the change in terminology helped the students make healthier choices.

The next study was even more revealing. It involved three groups of women who focused on a long-term health goal. One group was told to “just say no” when they felt tempted to lapse on their goal, the second group was told to say “I can’t” and the third group said “I don’t.” After 10 days, the number of women who persisted with their goals was drastically different:

  • “Just say no” group: 3 out of 10 persisted with their goals
  • “I can’t” group: 1 out of 10 persisted with their goals
  • “I don’t” group: 8 out of 10 persisted with their goals

Saying “I Don’t” is an Empowering Choice …

And therein lies the secret to its success. As Heidi Grant Halvorson, the director of the Motivation Science Center at Columbia University, told Lifehacker:

“I don’t” is experienced as a choice, so it feels empowering. It’s an affirmation of your determination and willpower. “I can’t” isn’t a choice. It’s a restriction; it’s being imposed upon you. So thinking “I can’t” undermines your sense of power and personal agency.”

This is an incredibly powerful strategy that you can implement in your own life immediately. Erase the phrase “I can’t” from your vocabulary and replace it with “I don’t” when you’re trying to avoid potentially self-defeating habits, temptations or obligations. For instance:

  • “I don’t skip workouts.”
  • “I don’t eat artificial sweeteners.”
  • “I don’t make evening plans during the week.”
  • “I don’t take phone calls from 9 am to noon.”

You can also put a positive spin on this, which may also be empowering for you, by instead saying:

  • “I always exercise on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.”
  • “I only eat foods with real ingredients.”
  • “I stay home with my family on weeknights.”
  • “I return phone calls after noon.”

Creating a Positive Feedback Loop Can Help You Overcome Bad Habits

When you use empowering words like “don’t” instead of “can’t” it can help to reprogram the way you think and ultimately help you to make more positive life choices. This strategy works for short-term, immediate circumstances, such as helping you keep your schedule manageable, as well as for reaching your long-term goals. This is the power of your words!

No matter what your goal or purpose, make sure you use words that affirm your abilities and power rather than those that highlight your limitations. Lifehacker reported:

“ …the words that you use create a feedback loop in your brain that impacts your future behaviors. For example, every time you tell yourself “I can’t,” you’re creating a feedback loop that’s a reminder of your limitations.

This terminology indicates that you’re forcing yourself to do something you don’t want to do. In comparison, when you tell yourself “I don’t,” you’re creating a feedback loop that reminds you of your control and power over the situation. It’s a phrase that can propel you towards breaking your bad habits and following your good ones.”

By choosing your words carefully, you can, quite literally, change your outlook on life and the success you have at reaching your goals and, ultimately, living a happy life. As Leonardo da Vinci said:  “One can have no smaller or greater mastery than mastery of oneself.”

A Simple Way to Keep Your Internal Focus for Increased Happiness

When you’re able to effectively say no, it allows you to weed out the distractions in life that are keeping you from doing what you love. In short, it helps you keep your external focus on what matters most. A more inward, mental practice of this is mindfulness, which helps you to keep your internal focus. Practicing “mindfulness” means that you’re actively paying attention to the moment you’re in right now.

Rather than letting your mind wander, when you’re mindful you’re living in the moment and letting distracting thoughts pass through your mind without getting caught up in their emotional implications. In a study of college students who took either a mindfulness class or a nutrition class for two weeks, those who took the mindfulness class improved reading-comprehension test scores and working-memory capacity, as well as experienced fewer distracting thoughts.

Mindfulness can also help to reduce stress-induced inflammation, and it’s another example of how you can harness your own sense of power and control to achieve what you want in life, similar to swapping the word “don’t” for “can’t.” Simple techniques such as the following can help you to become more mindful:

  • Pay focused attention to an aspect of sensory experience, such as the sound of your own breathing
  • Distinguish between simple thoughts and those that are elaborated with emotion (such as “I have a test tomorrow” versus “What if I fail my test tomorrow and flunk my entire class?”)
  • Reframe emotional thoughts as simply “mental projections” so your mind can rest

Remember to Say YES Sometimes Too!

Part of living life to the fullest is taking the time to indulge your passions and inspirations. So while it’s important to say “no” to activities that will drain your physical or emotional energy, it’s equally important to say “yes” to those that you enjoy. Writing down the things that bring you a sense of pleasure and happiness, and reviewing your list on a regular basis, can help you remember to carve out the time to do those simple activities that reinforce your belief that life is indeed good.

 

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