Practical Strategies to Boost Your Happiness & Longevity March 2009
In This Issue
3 Ways To Bounce Back From Life's Hard Times
A New Reason To Get Up Sunday Morning!
Quick Links

 
Yesterday, my husband, daughter and I went "tubing" in the snow-filled local mountains. While we were throwing snowballs in the chilly afternoon, just an hour away at our home, it was 80 degrees and sunny! Gotta love it.

But life it's always so carefree. We all face hard times -- whether it's a layoff or a health problem or a relationship break-up. So how do you get up when life knocks you down?

That question is the topic of this month's article on resilience -- the art of bouncing back.
 
Warmly,

 
Dr. Darlene Mininni
Oprah Winfrey

3 Ways To Bounce Back
From
Life's Hard Times


No matter how charmed your life may be, we all face hard times. That just comes with the territory of living. So how do you get up when life knocks you down? How can you become more resilient?

Lance Armstrong and Oprah Winfrey are two examples of resilient people. Despite Lance's health setbacks and Oprah's difficult childhood, both found ways to move forward in the face of adversity. How do they and other resilient people do it? Here are three tips that resilient people use to bounce back faster.

3 TIPS TO BOUNCE BACK FASTER:

1. Don't Obsess. Resilient people feel bad when life's hard times come, but they don't obsess. You're obsessing if you often think, "If only..." like "If only I had quit smoking sooner," or "If only I had tried harder." Although those thoughts are understandable, too many of them can keep you stuck in the past. Resilient people stay focused on the present.

2. Don't Blame Others. You're blaming if you think, "Things would be great if it wasn't for (fill in the blank) my boss, my sister, the stock market." Although it's logical to blame others, doing this will prevent you from being resilient because you're giving your power to those you're blaming instead of keeping it for yourself.

3. Do Take Action. People who feel they have some control over what happens to them, are more resilient than those who don't. So find something you can control in your situation. If your mate is sick, get more information on the disease, or if your parent is aging, talk about your options. One woman lists 5 things she can do to handle her difficult situations, then she picks one and does it.

Discover The 7 Tools
To Live Your Happiest Life

Based on her popular UCLA course, The Emotional Toolkit gives you 7 proven strategies to boost your happiness and lots of great advice to manage the ups and downs of your life.

"The skills in The Emotional Toolkit are just what this doctor ordered..."
                                  - Christiane Northrup, MD, bestselling author  
                                    
Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom

LEARN MORE
 
A New Reason To Get Up
Sunday Morning!


Would you like to be more optimistic and resilient? And even reverse your physical age up to 16 years in the process? Then listen to "The Dr. Darlene Mininni Show" Sundays 8:30 - 9am PST.

Radio  --  KTLK AM1150 Los Angeles
Online --  KTLK.com, Keyword Dr. Darlene

Get more info

About Dr. Darlene Mininni

Dr. Darlene Mininni is the host of The Dr. Darlene Mininni Show on KTLK AM1150 in Los Angeles and author of The Emotional Toolkit. She's also a contributing feature host of Here's What's in My Emotional Toolkit on XM-Radio's Pink Channel and the creator of UCLA's acclaimed emotional education course.

Dr. Mininni has a PhD in Clinical Psychology and a Masters degree in Public Health. Through her speaking, writing and radio broadcasts, she teaches people of all ages proven strategies to boost their happiness and longevity. Woman's World Magazine describes her emotional toolkit as "Cutting-edge advice...that really works."

She's appeared on CNN, NPR and PBS and been quoted in SELF, COSMO, Woman's Day, Marie Claire, Ladies Home Journal and Prevention. She's also a guest blogger for Intent.com. Dr. Mininni lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter.