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Now This Is What I Call "Stress Reduction"

Yes, economy is on our mind, and that means, bills, food, shelter, and disease, lack of energy, depression, fear, and phobia. anxiety a total combination of stress; I know how I usually use stress reduction when I am in one of these situations... for some physical activities can be helpful, and we all know that exercise is a great way to reduce stress. effective exercise releases chemicals in our body, and these chemicals are our natural relaxant hormone, the we the hypnotherapist teach our expected mom during natural child birth...It is called "endorphins" the one we help mothers to activate releasing this hormone during surges, what it does, it makes expected mother and us human feel happier and much more relaxed. but there are other ways to activate the "endorphins", such as hypnosis, but the most affective one is laughter, not only the body and mind is relaxed, you also get a total fitness tune up... have you ever notices how your stomach muscles tighten up, and when you stop, it relaxes... exactly the same way as doing seat ups, tense and relaxation... ...seriously laughter can boost the alpha-interferon levels of the immune system, the one that fight illness and increase health.
Laughter help pain, yes, one you laugh, you forget about your pain, since endorphins is in play now... It is a total stress reduction to our mind, body and soul... good for our lungs, for our blood pressure, heart condition and oxygen to our brain... so if you can't make yourself laugh... watch this video... no way you can't loosen up, you can try, but I guarantee you, that you will feel better....

Diabetes

A study in Japan shows that laughter lowers blood sugar after a meal. Keiko Hayashi, Ph. D., R.N, of the University of Tsukubain Ibaraki, Japan, and his team performed a study of 19 people with type 2 diabetes. They collected the patients blood before and two hours after a meal. The patients attended a boring 40 minute lecture after dinner on the first night of the study. On the second night, the patients attend a 40 minute comedy show. The patients blood sugar went up after the comedy show, but much less than it did after the lecture. The study found that even when patients without diabetes did the same testing, a similar result was found. Scientists conclude that laughter is good for people with diabetes. They suggest that chemical messengers made during laughter may help the body compensate for the disease.

Blood flow
Studies at the University of Maryland found that when a group of people were shown a comedy, after the screening their blood vessels performed normally, whereas when they watched a drama, after the screening their blood vessels tended to tense up and restricted the blood flow. WebMD 2006

Immune response
Studies show stress decreases the immune system. “Some studies have shown that humor may raise infection-fighting antibodies in the body and boost the levels of immune cells.” Web MD 2006“When we laugh, natural killer cells which destroy tumors and viruses increase, along with Gamma-interferon (a disease-fighting protein), T cells (important for our immune system) and B cells (which make disease-fighting antibodies). As well as lowering blood pressure, laughter increases oxygen in the blood, which also encourages healing.” Discover Health 2004

Anxiety & children
According to an article of WebMD, studies have shown that children who have a clown present prior to surgery along with their parents and medical staff had less anxiety than children who just had their parents and medical staff present. High levels of anxiety prior to surgery leads to a higher risk of complications following surgeries in children. According to researchers, about 60% of children suffer from anxiety before surgery.

The study involved 40 children ages 5 to 12 who were about to have minor surgery. Half had a clown present in addition to their parents and medical staff, the other half only had their parents and medical staff present. The results of the study showed that the children who had a clown present had significantly less pre-surgery anxiety.WebMD 2005

Relaxation & sleep“
The focus on the benefits of laughter really began with Norman Cousin’s memoir, Anatomy of an Illness. Cousins, who was diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis, a painful spine condition, found that a diet of comedies, like Marx Brothers films and episodes of Candid Camera, helped him feel better. He said that ten minutes of laughter allowed him two hours of pain-free sleep.” WebMD 2006

Physical fitness
It has been estimated by scientists that laughing 100 times equals the same physical exertion as a 10 minute workout on a rowing machine or 15 minutes on a stationary exercise bike. Laughing works out the diaphragm, abdominal, respiratory, facial, leg, and back muscles. Cool Quiz 2006

However, William Fry, a pioneer on laughter research, in an article for WebMd was said to indicate that it “took ten minutes on a rowing machine for his heart rate to reach the level it would after just one minute of hearty laughter.” WebMD 2006

Asthma
Nearly 2/3 of people with asthma reported having asthma attacks that were triggered by laughter, according to a study presented at the American Thoracic Society annual meeting in 2005. It did not seem to matter how deep of a laugh the laughter entailed, whether it be a giggle, chuckle, or belly laugh, says Stuart Garay, M.D., clinical professor of medicine at New York University Medical Center in New York.

Patients were part of an 18 month long program who were evaluated for a list of asthma triggers. The patients did not have any major differences in age, duration of asthma, or family history of asthma. However, exercise-induced asthma was more frequently found in patients who also had laughter-induced asthma, according to the study. 61% of laughter induced asthma also reported exercise as a trigger, as opposed to only 35% without laughter-induced asthma. Andrew Ries, M.D. indicates that “it probably involves both movements in the airways as well as an emotional reaction.” WebMD 2005


Strengthening muscles
In addition to helping in many other ways, laughing is also clinically proven to strengthen the abdomen. Jared B. Cohen, Ph.D has run many experiments on laughing at his laboratory in Newark, New Jersey and says "Laughing not only helps your heart, but it also helps you look good for the beach". Although some think it is impossible that something as simple and painless as laughing can strengthen ones abdomens, 14 out of every 15 of Cohen's patients said that laughing was a better, and more humorous workout than sit-ups or crunches. To make laughing a truly effective workout, one must laugh for at least 30 seconds until they feel a small burning sensation. Although laughing is a fun way to workout, it is still advised, that whenever possible, one does sit-ups or crunches instead.

So Guys... You must watch this all the way to the end :)


Doren Cohanim C.Ht

www.HypnoCruise.com

Views: 8

Tags: Happiness, anxiety, comedy, endorphins, healing, health, laughter, muscle, reductions, relaxen, More…stress

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Comment by Michael Ellner on February 20, 2010 at 3:56pm
About the post below:

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
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Comment by Michael Ellner on February 20, 2010 at 3:53pm
Cool --

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/PainManagement/story?id=711632&page=1
Laughter May Be the Best Medicine

Research Points to the Healing Power of a Good Giggle

By BUCK WOLF
May 13, 2005

Maybe that guy at the office who deliberately laughs at the boss's jokes has it right. A carefully cultivated ability to giggle might help you and the people around you feel better.
In hospitals, nursing homes and private clubs all around the country, "certified laughter leaders" are teaching the therapeutic value of mirth, not by telling jokes, but simply pretending to laugh, so that forced hee-hee-hees eventually become honest-to-goodness giggles.
At the Midwestern Regional Medical Center in Zion, Ill., part of the Cancer Treatment Centers of America, laughter leader Katherine Puckett has patients pretend to put ice down each other's backs. At first, the patients pretend to laugh. Then it becomes so easy that they're cracking up unself-consciously.
"Remember that feeling you had giggling uncontrollably as a kid?" said Puckett, the hospital's director of mind-body medicine. "You still need it, especially if you're ill."
A growing body of research supports the theory that laughter has a therapeutic value. A good gut-buster not only helps the spirit, it gets the blood pumping, just like jogging -- only it's a workout that even hospital patients can enjoy.
Laugh on a regular basis, and you can even boost your immune system, according to some research.
A study of 20 men and women conducted at the University of Maryland School of Medicine found that 95 percent of the volunteers experienced increased blood flow while watching a funny movie, such as "There's Something About Mary," while 74 percent had decreased blood flow during a heavier picture, such as "Saving Private Ryan." The benefits lasted about 12 to 24 hours.
The results, presented at a March meeting of the American College of Cardiology, point to a strong connection between laughter and cardiovascular health.
"The recommendation for a healthy heart may one day be to exercise, eat right and laugh a few times a day," said Dr. Michael Miller, who conducted the study.

Learning to Get in the Right Frame of Mind
To be sure, America has no shortage of goofball comedies, and most of us spend enough time watching them. But sometimes that's not enough.
"Jokes are great. But you watch TV shows and movies, even really good ones, you generally don't laugh for any sustained period," said psychologist Steve Wilson. "You laugh more when you're in a comfortable environment with friends."
Wilson trains and certifies "laughter leaders" like Puckett to go into hospitals, hospices and help centers for the disabled. These instructors teach the art of chortling -- largely by pretending to chortle. A good part of the lessons involve students repeating the key phrases "ha-ha-ha," "hee-hee-hee" and "ho-ho-ho."
"What we do is go through exercises that help people learn to get themselves in a frame of mind to laugh harder and more frequently," said Wilson.
He started the World Laughter Tour after traveling in 1998 to India, where he met Dr. Madan Kataria, a physician who originated laughter clubs.
"Eastern meditation has always stressed breathing exercises, and laughter works as a form of breathing that massages your internal organs, and relaxes the muscles," Wilson said. "In India, you'll find laughing gurus, and I thought that this teaching could be adapted for Americans."
Since 2000, Wilson said, he has trained more than 1,500 laughter leaders who have created about 200 laughter clubs, a large number of them associated with hospitals, nursing homes and churches.
At the Angela Hospice and other care centers in Michigan, laughter leader Mike Millington works with patients who suffer from Alzheimer's disease, cancer and other illnesses.
"You obviously have to adapt laughter therapy to the group you are dealing with," he said. "But laughter is so primal, that you can really have breakthroughs. I've seen people who are confined to wheelchairs and dragging around IV poles laugh so hard their mood improves, and they get a pretty good workout."

Saluting 'Col. Laughter'
Laughter leaders don't need to be stand-up comics, but a sense of humor about your vocation doesn't hurt. That still doesn't mean the therapy can't be useful for people in the most serious of situations.
At the Pentagon, U.S. Army Reserve Col. James Scott says his laughter programs give family members of those serving in the National Guard a guilt-free opportunity to relax and have a little fun, especially when a loved one is deployed overseas and facing a dangerous assignment.
"Laughter is an important stress-management tool," he said. "When you laugh, the brain stops thinking. It's a proven way to keep your mental balance."
Scott says he begins his programs in uniform, explaining the benefits of laughter with a PowerPoint slide show. Then he leaves briefly, changes into shorts and a T-shirt, reintroduces himself as "Col. Laughter" and invites everyone to "get silly." Many choose to watch, rather than participate, and then later join in.
In the last two years, the colonel has suffered only one "laughter casualty" -- and that phrase is not military jargon that he's cooked up to adapt his workshop to Army life.
A laughter casualty is anyone in a laughter workshop who leaves with a bad case of uncontrollable giggles. Perhaps it's the only sort of casualty the Army -- or Wilson's World Laughter Tour -- doesn't regret having to report.
Scott's classes have gone well enough for him to train 15 to 18 Army Reserve officers to bring workshops on a more regular basis to military families in Kansas, Texas, Idaho and Indiana.

From 'Patch Adams' to 'Damaged Care'
The medical world started taking note of the possibilities of therapeutic laughter after Norman Cousins book, "Anatomy of an Illness," came out in 1979. In it, he describes how watching Marx Brothers movies, "Candid Camera" and other comedies helped him fight ankylosing spondylitis, a life-threatening disease of the joints and connective tissue, that left him in excruciating pain with few options for treatment.
One of the things Cousins documented was that a 10-minute belly laugh could give him two hours of painless sleep. "What you begin to appreciate is the profound effect that positive emotions can have on the physical body," said Alex Zautra, professor of psychology at Arizona State University.
Zautra recently conducted a long-term study of 124 women with osteoarthritis and related illnesses. While many would assume that patients in good spirits would be better able to deal with pain, Zautra's research, published in the April issue of The Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, suggests the ability to manage and conquer pain can largely be predicted by a patient's frame of mind.
"It's true that some people are naturally happy, and they tend to do better than others," Zautra said. "But even if you factor out different temperaments, it seems that people who are not as jovial can learn to better handle pain if they work toward improving their mood."
Of course, Hollywood has taken the issue to heart. The Robin Williams movie "Patch Adams," highlighted the approach of Dr. Hunter Adams, who made comedy part of his patients' medical treatment, donning a clown nose to help entertain patients.
Through the years, celebrities have a time-honored tradition to make hospital rounds to raise spirits, if only to build their own public image. But entertainment -- especially laughter -- is more and more becoming hospital routine.
On staff at New York's esteemed Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center is Dr. Stubbs the Clown, aka Michael Christensen, co-founder of the Big Apple Circus Clown Care Unit. Since 1986, he's spearheaded a program that has placed 93 clowns in 17 hospitals around the country, making 200,000 bedside calls a year.
Allison Crane, a nurse from Illinois, furthered the effort in 1987, founding the Association for Applied Therapeutic Humor. She had earlier belonged to a focus group called Nurses for Laughter and wanted to expand the program so that all health-care professionals could realize the healing benefits of humor.
Among the AATH's missions is to compile research, and among the most promising studies comes out of Loma Linda University in California, where doctors have been studying laughter's benefits on the immune system.
A 2000 study of 52 male medical students found that when they watched humorous videos, their stress levels, as measured by T-cell activity in the blood, tended to rise, according to Dr. Lee Berk. T-cells, also called "natural killer cells," jump-start the body's immune system by attacking viruses.
In another study, Berk followed two groups of cardiac patients through a yearlong rehabilitation program. All the patents received standard care. But one group also watched 30 minutes of comic videos each day. Berk found that laughter decreased disease-related symptoms, such as arrhythmias.
"It's more than a little ironic that we're quickly realizing just how important humor is to the healing process, because doctors have always had the reputation of being the most humorless of people," said Dr. Greg LeGana, who maintains a duel career in medicine and show business.
LeGana and fellow doctor Barry Levy, a school chum from New York's Cornell Medical College, created the New York cabaret show "Damaged Care," a musical comedy about the medical profession. They've performed before health-care professionals and general audiences throughout the country.
"Anyone who's ever made people laugh knows that they are soothing a soul," said LeGana. "It's great that research seems to be bearing out something we've always known in are hearts to be true."
For more information on the Association for Applied and Therapeutic Laughter, click here.
To learn more about the World Laughter Tour,click here
Comment by Doreen Cohanim C.Ht on February 20, 2010 at 2:54pm
Here It Is :)

Comment by Alex in England on November 1, 2009 at 4:30pm
Thats very interesting - I a friend of mine, a diabetic friend, never laughs at my jokes - personally I think he's self sabotaging...
Anyway, I did find it interesting that laughter is such an important side of our health and yet such little time is spent on enjoying life. My Grandfather told me that a few friends of his in the order would always set aside time to enjoy them selves so that their studies/learning would be more productive. I suppose its far healthier to start work with a smile on your face than not to.

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