800 Muses Home About Us Categories eNewsletter Contact Us
Art and Design
Beauty
Career
Enrichment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Fitness
Food
Health
Home
Law
Marketing
Relationships
Technology
Travel

This Site is Sponsored by:

PDXWriter.com

Fresh ideas in
professional writing

 

 

Muses Rosemary (left) & Phyllis (right)
Specialty:  Family Counseling
Phyllis Goldberg, Ph.D. & Rosemary Lichtman, Ph.D., are co-founders of HerMentorCenter, publish a free monthly newsletter, Stepping Stones and blog at NourishingRelationships. Co-authors of a forthcoming book about women and family relationships, they are psychotherapists with 40 years of collective experience in private practice.
  See all Family Muses >>

Rosemary & Phyllis are Muses whose casual relationshp has turned into a deep friendship. (Isn't it great when that happens?!)

How Boomers Can Sing Rock & Roll ...
Instead of the Blues

The new Pew Research Center Social and Demographic Trends survey measured dissatisfaction and pessimism in close to 2500 participants. The data indicates that Baby Boomers worry more than any other generation. And a recent study from the University of Chicago suggests that the boomer generation has never really been happy. One hypothesis is that they grew up wanting to make the world a better place - and it's not.

No one could deny that the national conversation has become depressing. Some find it hard to get up in the morning, when all they hear about is tumbling home prices, the war in Afghanistan or Iraq and record oil prices. Pundits exclaim that the American dream is dying on the vine and we are all suffering from bankrupt spirits.

But are things really that bad? What's happening may be a natural change in the seasons of life. Cultural pain is normal in crises and perhaps the Baby Boomers just haven't been adversity-tested.

Follow some of these suggestions as you develop your inner strength and resiliency:

1. Become more emotionally fit. Discover your usual emotional pattern and start a training program. In addition to nutritious eating and regular exercise, practice noticing the negative concerns that get your attention, how you end up feeling and what active steps you can take to change your thoughts.

2. Rather than seeing the glass half empty, turn your challenges into opportunities. Release your mind from worries, most of which never happen anyway. Take it one day at a time and accomplish what you can without dwelling on the 'what ifs.' Worrying takes a lot of time and energy - it's counterproductive and destroys your peace of mind.

3. Free yourself from resentment and practice how to forgive. If you hold on to grudges toward your business partner or past hurts from your friends, you're the only one who will be miserable. Let go of feeling sorry for yourself and you'll make room for more positive experiences. As your attitude changes, your day-to-day life will become more pleasant.

4. Embrace simplicity and appreciate what you have. Enjoy your family and colleagues. Step outside on a cloudless night and look at the beautiful sky. Take a family camping weekend and roast marshmallows over the fire. Eat sandwiches on a park bench with a co-worker as you visit during lunch hour. Volunteer at a local homeless shelter or a boys and girls club.

5. Connect with friends. If you're feeling gloomy in these rollercoaster times, invite friends over for a potluck dinner and have everyone bring their signature dish. Turn the conversation into a supportive revival of the spirit. Discuss innovative ways to save on groceries, to use less gas, to network for a new job.

6. Don't expect so much. Unrealistic expectations about things and people lead to disappointment. Built-in obsolescence makes you a slave to the latest style and the next upgrade. It never ends, and leaves you dissatisfied with what you have. In some situations try not to expect anything, and whatever comes your way will be a blessing.

It is true that, as financial crises go, this one is very personal. But perception doesn't always match reality. According to the Pew Research results, the boomer generation enjoys the highest incomes of any age group surveyed. They are less likely to have been laid off and less likely to have trouble paying for medical care or housing. In fact, fewer of them said that someone in their household had to go to work in the past year or take on an extra job to make ends meet.
Home prices will stabilize, oil prices could stop going up and the global economy may prove itself to be resilient. The bottom line is that contentment is elusive for some people. In the end, it's important to realize that fulfillment isn't to be achieved as a goal in itself, but rather as the result of living a good life.

Other Articles by Rosemary & Phyllis:

Launching your "Kidult"
Caring for an Aging Parent with Dementia, Alzheimers, Stroke
Taking a Staycation
Michael Jackson and the High Cost of Fame
Survive the New Economy with Shared Housing
What We Can Learn from Ted Kennedy

 

Phyllis Goldberg, Ph.D. and Rosemary Lichtman, Ph.D.

www.HerMentorCenter.com
Blog: www.NourishingRelationships.blogspot.com
Los Angeles, California

 

Copyright Protection and Reprint Rights: This article and accompanying tips are fully copyrighted by the author, but can be reprinted without permission provided the article links back to this page: http://www.800Muses.com/muse-profiles/muses-rosemary-and-phyllis2.htm

  Bookmark and Share

Resiliency Tips

1. Pay attention to your emotional fitness; put it on a training program.

2. Turn challenges into opportunities.

3. Practice forgiveness.

4. Embrace simplicity.

5. Connect with friends .

6. Don't expect so much.

 

Recommended Reading
 

The 7 Principles for Making Marriage Work

 

 

You're Wearing That?

 

 
Inventing the Rest of Our Lives