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Articles from January 2010
Friday, January 29, 2010
having bipolar vs. being bipolar

excerpt from Facing Bipolar


You are much more than your bipolar disorder. You do not need to let it define you. You can attain success, happiness, fulfillment, and achievement in life despite having bipolar disorder. But at the same time, the bipolar experience is one that often sits at your core—in your brain, in your emotions, and consequently very much in your sense of who you are. It’s not in an elbow or a foot. Generally speaking, the experience of the disorder feels more like "being," as opposed to "having," yet you will hear people in normal conversation speak of both being bipolar and of having bipolar disorder.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Friday, January 29, 2010
Thursday, January 28, 2010
for you to know

excerpt from The Bipolar Workbook for Teens


A chronic condition like bipolar disorder can be so overwhelming that it seems like it defines who you are. But you are not bipolar disorder, and bipolar disorder isn't you! You're a lot more than just someone with bipolar disorder.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Thursday, January 28, 2010
Monday, January 25, 2010
youth have more mental health issues

by guest blogger Sheri Van Dijk, MSW, author of The Bipolar Workbook for Teens


I recently read an article about a study that compared high school and college students from 1938 to those in 2007, and concluded that mental health problems such as depression and anxiety are much more of a problem for modern-day students than they were in the past. It does seem that mental illness is affecting more and more people at a younger age – or perhaps we’re just more aware of these kinds of problems now. Regardless, there are things we can do to prepare kids better for the pressures they’ll be facing in life.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Monday, January 25, 2010
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
learning who you are

Excerpt from


At this time in your life you are most likely going through the challenging process of figuring out your identity or who you are while trying to be the person your friends and family want you to be. This is likely to cause you additional stress. The more you learn about who you truly are, who you want to be, and what is most important to you, the better equipped you will be to cope with stress that comes from trying to meet others’ expectations of you.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Friday, January 15, 2010
bringing it all together

excerpt from The Whole-Body Workbook for Cancer


Some of the best advice I can give anyone is to look for your "blind spots." Even if you're an avid diet and natural-food enthusiast, you may carry around a lot of judgment and attitude, and be unwilling to look at your emotional life.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Friday, January 15, 2010
Thursday, January 14, 2010
embracing consciousness as healer

Excerpt from Yoga for Anxiety


Anxiety causes a shrinking in consciousness and a reduction in your sense of self. Growing in consciousness expands your sense of self; as you learn more about yourself, you discover that there’s much more to you than you ever dreamed possible.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Thursday, January 14, 2010
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
wade morissette: my story

Excerpt from Transformative Yoga


My journey toward the healing effects of yoga began in 1993. At the time, I was seeking relief from emotional stress on both a conscious and an unconscious level. During my first year at college, I was a mess inside. I desperately lacked inner peace, although this wasn’t outwardly apparent.


My parents had recently gone bankrupt, so I was exhausted from working three jobs between high school and college to pay my tuition, and I continued to work part-time while in college. The daily grind was unfulfilling, to say the least. Meanwhile, my twin sister, Alanis Morissette, exploded onto the music scene with her groundbreaking album Jagged Little Pill, which went on to become the highest-selling debut album of all time. With her rapidly mounting success, I felt more emotionally and spiritually lost than ever before and longed to find my own identity and path in life.


I was studying to become an environmental lawyer, a vocation I had an interest in, but one that didn’t fully satisfy me. Deep down, I knew academic study wasn’t going to fulfill my quest for inner peace and happiness. Most of the books I was required to read focused on theory. I needed truth—an unwavering, blatant truth with no smoke and mirrors. In the end, I decided not to complete a degree in environmental law. Ironically, though, the time I spent at college led me in a different and unexpected direction: toward a new sense of spirituality.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Monday, January 11, 2010
new year’s resolutions for people with chronic pain or illness

by guest blogger Kelly McGonigal, Ph.D., author of


  1. There’s nothing wrong with hope.
  2. Make peace with your body.
  3. Give yourself permission to do something you’ve been putting off.
  4. Remove something from your self-improvement or to-do list.
  5. Ask for support.
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Posted By / 11:00 AM / Monday, January 11, 2010
Friday, January 08, 2010
five good minutes: set your intention

Excerpt from Five Good Minutes®


Setting an intention is a way of pointing yourself in a direction, toward an important value or goal. It is a way to identify a quality you wish to nurture in your life.


A skillful intention is more like a friendly guide. Acknowledge from the beginning that important changes take time. You, like everyone else, must make the effort to return repeatedly to the goal you seek.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Friday, January 08, 2010
Thursday, January 07, 2010
five good minutes: exercises & activities

Excerpt from Five Good Minutes®


You will work with a variety of approaches in your five good minutes. They include the following:


  • Mindfulness
  • Meditation
  • Imagery
  • Acting wholeheartedly
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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Thursday, January 07, 2010
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
embracing resistance to get real change

Ronald A. Alexander, Ph.D., author of Wise Mind, Open Mind,:

Its that time of year when we reflect on the past and plan for the future, and that means resolving to change those habits or circumstances that we've been unhappy with. For many of us, it also means making the same resolutions we've made—and haven't fulfilled—year after year. Even though we all desire or even need to make changes in our lives, whether we are aware of it or not many of us are resistant to letting go of old habits. When we make New Years resolutions we often have unrealistic ideas of how to overcome and stop these resistances from sabotaging our resolve to change. Then once again we find ourselves frustrated and unable to move forward. Instead of fighting and struggling with resistance learn to embrace and work with it so you can finally break its hold on you.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
five good minutes: learning by doing

Excerpt from Five Good Minutes®


As you experiment and practice with the five good minutes exercises, you will learn to apply consciously your attention, intention, and wholeheartedness. You will see for yourself the power of being present and acting with intention while doing specifically guided exercises. Beyond the exercises, you may even discover more ways to apply these same principles throughout your life.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Tuesday, January 05, 2010
Monday, January 04, 2010
what are five good minutes?

Excerpt from Five Good Minutes®


From our perspective, five minutes of clock time begins to change into something much more powerful and interesting when you are present (attention is in the present moment, and not lost in thoughts of past or future), when you set a clear intention for your actions, and when you act wholeheartedly. When you apply attention, intention, and wholeheartedness to the exercises in this book, which are aimed at cultivating peace and relaxation, deepening awareness and connection to life, enhancing relationships, and developing kindness and wisdom, then your five minutes truly becomes five good minutes.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Monday, January 04, 2010

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