How to be Happy I

How to be Happy Part 1

Do you know someone who is happy?  Perhaps you are that happy person.  What ‘happy’ means to me may differ to how you would define it.  There are possibly as many definitions of ‘happiness’ as there are people.

Various factors impact and contribute to our overall sense of happiness from involvement in our communities to celebrations, weather, finances, family etc. I don’t have enough space here to examine influences on or definitions of happiness but in my experience, everyone wants to be happy.

Ask yourself ‘Do I want to be happy?  If the answer is ‘yes’ put a plan of action into place. We all know that life is not fair but being happy requires an investment of your time and effort because happy people work at being happy.

If you want to be happy follow these tips:

Accept yourself completely – just as you are AND accept your reality. This means you accept your family, house, appearance, birthplace, strengths/limitations, history etc. Acceptance is the key to happiness. (This is not easy but it is vital).

Learn something new – how to put up a shelf, knit, sew, bake a sponge cake – keep your brain active with new knowledge and skills.

Forgive yourself for mistakes you have made. Forgive others for theirs. Let go of resentments – it is difficult to be happy with a heavy heart.

Engage in activities. Start a new hobby such as yoga or Bridge. Join a club or start one e.g. a book club or dinner club with your neighbours/friends.

Spend time with people that make you feel good, ideally positive people. Avoid people who stress you out or drain your energies.

Have a sense of purpose. Happy people have something to do or somewhere to go (even if it is just to the shop for milk).

Do things you are good at, that you enjoy, that are fun or make you feel good. Do them often.

Say NO. If you don’t want to do something don’t do it. If you do, then do so without complaint.

Acknowledge that you are not responsible for other people’s reactions, you are only responsible for yours.

Find your voice and say when you are unhappy about something. (Say I feel x when y because z)

Nurture a loving relationship with YOU. Happy people give themselves breaks and let themselves off the hook. They learn how to relax and how to manage anxieties/stresses.

Set short-term achievable goals. Don’t set yourself up for failure by setting unattainable goals! Set a goal, achieve it, acknowledge the achievement then set new goals!

Invest time in others. Make time for your partner, children, friends, neighbours or strangers.

Watch your language. I don’t mean swear words I mean self-talk. Say only positive things and use only positive words particularly when talking about you.

Help others because it makes us feel happy. Help willingly. Volunteer in your community or to do something nice for a neighbour.

Your brain believes you must be happy if you are smiling, it immediately raises your mood. Smiles are contagious.

Treat your body as well as you can. Eat well, hydrate, keep moving and breathe slowly.

Be kind and gentle, forgiving and compassionate with YOU and others.

www.carolinecrotty.ie

Health Anxiety

Health Anxiety

Health anxiety is when your mind wanders from one health crisis to the next.  Constantly checking or scanning your body for something wrong can be quite stressful.  Searching on line for symptoms makes you feel worse and the more anxious you are the more anxious you become.  Some signs and symptoms of health anxiety include:

You think you are going to die or have a disease the doctor missed.

You had your bloods checked but believe you have an undiagnosed illness.

You go to the doctor hoping to be given an explanation for your symptoms.  Your GP can’t find anything wrong and suggests that what you are experiencing may be as a result of stress.  You leave the surgery feeling happy that the GP knows best but after a day or two niggling doubts return and the cycle of uncertainty begins again and you are convinced you are very unwell.

You have a dull headache which you try to ignore.  You tell your doctor who reassures you that you are well.  You begin to think the headache is a brain tumour.  You check on line and find evidence that you have the symptoms of a tumour and think your GP must have missed something.  You return to your GP who says your headache is because you have been working/training hard and are dehydrated.  You are reassured and leave the GP’s surgery feeling happy. Later that night you question why your GP didn’t refer you for a scan – you cannot be certain you don’t have a brain tumour without a scan and decide you need a second opinion.

What Caroline Crotty can do for you

I can help you to identify whether you have health anxiety.  If you do, together we can devise a plan to help you relax and regain control over your thoughts, feelings and behaviours.  I can help you to learn how to reassure yourself that you are well, safe and healthy so that you no longer experience fear of death/illness.  Through therapy you gain perspective and learn how to successfully overcome unwanted thoughts and you also gain insight – why do you think the way you think.

www.carolinecrotty.ie

Caroline Crotty
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