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Happiness.. show it, move with it! A delightful video for this Thanksgiving!
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Nov 22, 2017 11:16:54   #
S. Maturin
 
This was sent to me and features an artist whom I knew nothing about... but that's all changed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbZSe6N_BXs

Reply
Nov 22, 2017 11:52:57   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
S. Maturin wrote:
This was sent to me and features an artist whom I knew nothing about... but that's all changed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbZSe6N_BXs


My wife played this song so much, it wore me out. I'm glad she's happy, and all but......

Now I'm fighting back!

Manah Manah!

Reply
Nov 22, 2017 12:36:29   #
S. Maturin
 
archie bunker wrote:
My wife played this song so much, it wore me out. I'm glad she's happy, and all but......

Now I'm fighting back!

Manah Manah!



Yeah, well, I just 'Shake it Off'. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfWlot6h_JM

Reply
 
 
Nov 22, 2017 12:46:42   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
S. Maturin wrote:
Yeah, well, I just 'Shake it Off'. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfWlot6h_JM


Manah Manah!

http://youtu.be/8N_tupPBtWQ

Reply
Nov 22, 2017 12:52:47   #
S. Maturin
 
archie bunker wrote:


Oh, good Lord!

Now, that'll be bugging me for a while longer!


Reply
Nov 22, 2017 13:00:59   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
S. Maturin wrote:
Oh, good Lord!

Now, that'll be bugging me for a while longer!



I've got the Happy song stuck in my head again now, so we're even!

Reply
Nov 22, 2017 13:13:58   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
I'm both Happy and Manah, Manah.

Reply
 
 
Nov 22, 2017 13:39:07   #
S. Maturin
 
slatten49 wrote:
I'm both Happy and Manah, Manah.


Balance... that's close to bliss, isn't it?

A sort of nirvana? http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana

Reply
Nov 22, 2017 14:34:52   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
S. Maturin wrote:
Balance... that's close to bliss, isn't it?

A sort of nirvana? http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana


Bliss, for sure. But, I'm certainly no Kurt Cobain...trust me.

Reply
Nov 23, 2017 07:26:07   #
Peewee Loc: San Antonio, TX
 
slatten49 wrote:
I'm both Happy and Manah, Manah.


What happened to "Don't worry be happy"

Reply
Nov 23, 2017 07:33:27   #
S. Maturin
 
Peewee wrote:
What happened to "Don't worry be happy"


And, that great old 1960s era super-moronic advice: "If it feels good, Do it!"

Reply
 
 
Nov 23, 2017 07:41:42   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Peewee wrote:
What happened to "Don't worry be happy"

Momentarily forgotten in the annals of time

But, "Don't worry, be happy."

Reply
Nov 23, 2017 07:50:26   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
S. Maturin wrote:
And, that great old 1960s era super-moronic advice: "If it feels good, Do it!"

This is, no doubt, more of a response than you may have wanted...but, this from the internet:

David D. Nowell Ph.D.
Intrinsic Motivation and Magical Unicorns
If It Feels Good Do It?
What would happen if we did what (actually) feels good?
Posted Feb 06, 2011

Maybe, like me, you're just barely old enough to remember this expression. To my father, a minister, this dictum summed up everything that was wrong with the emerging values of the 1960s and 1970s. Can you imagine? If everyone just did what felt good? Anarchy! Ribaldry!

I'm interested in rehabilitating this corny phrase and, in fact, have come to see it as perhaps the most challenging precept of all.

Like any if/then statement, there are two parts to this mandate, and because we're taking this seriously, both parts require their own bit of examination.

If It Feels Good

The first piece of work here -- and this is impossibly harder than it would appear at first blush -- is to determine what feels good. That is, what really feels good?

Back in graduate school, a group of us had gathered for an all you can eat buffet. Like any broke graduate students we were taking full advantage of this offer. We had eaten to the point of discomfort. And now it was time for dessert!

With a mouth full of my second helping of something that looked like peach cobbler, I asked one of my dinner companions why she wasn't eating dessert. "It's free," I encouraged her. This was not one of my fellow clinical psychology students, but someone from one of the other programs on campus. Film History, or American Studies, or Urban Planning and Resource Allocation, something like that.

I don't remember her name now, but I recall that she dressed in gauzy clothing, a la Stevie Nicks. And that she'd grown up in a family of Carnival entertainers, traveling around the country. She was offbeat and interesting, and had perspectives that were different from those of the more practical psychology students.

And what she said to me at dinner that evening was something I carry with me even now. In the sing-song cadence of the Valley Girl speech still fairly common on campus at the time, she chirped "Oh, I decided a couple of years ago not to eat food that makes me feel bad."

I stopped, spoon in my hand gripped tight like a microphone, with a warm gooey mouthful of peach flavored crust. I just stared at her.

She'd decided not to eat food that makes her feel bad! What an incredibly sensible and basic (here I took another bite of cobbler) way to approach (another bite) life! I should totally live my life (and another bite) like that!

So that's how I like to think about the "if it feels good" half of this very difficult maxim. Determining what really feels good is some of the important and serious work of any adult.

Notice, the issue here is not to determine what's cheap or easy. Nor is the work here to figure out what other people in your zip code like to do. Nor is the challenge to determine what your siblings enjoy. Rather, what is it that my body, my neurology, calls "good"?

In a sense, smoking cigarettes feels good. But in a deeper and more pervasive sense, smoking limits my options, makes it harder for me to hike mountains or even stairs, and shrouds me with an odor that many people simply don't like. Moreover, I can't avoid persistent reminders that I'm shortening my own life with this behavior. So in a deeper sense, smoking, really, doesn't feel good.

It feels so good to eat a piece of cheesecake, that it must feel really good to eat three pieces. But in a deeper, and more real, sense, that feels nauseatingly bad.

And if I'm really asking deep, honest questions about what feels good I will treat people and animals kindly, I will be more honest with the important people in my life, I will stick with the commitments I've made in my primary relationship, or try to renegotiate the rules of that relationship. I will not, if I'm really doing what "feels good" in a deep and true way, hit other people, c***t other people, or eat food that makes me feel bad.

Do It

Okay, so the second half of our adage is a quick and punchy action phrase: "do it." Quick, without thinking too much about this, what is the one thing -- and you know I'm talking about here -- that you need to do now?

I'm talking here about the one thing that will make the biggest improvement in your life, and in the lives of those around you - the thing you've been putting off. For lack of social support, or lack of resources, or lack of courage, for wh**ever reason that action step you have not -- yet -- done.

If we got up a little bit earlier in the morning and spent some time inquiring honestly and deeply into what feels -- really -- good, we could likely generate a quick to-do list of the most important actions we could take each day.

Treating my roommate better, for example, might be something that would feel really good. Or learning French. Or developing my body into something that feels svelte, lean, and masculine. That sounds like something that would feel, deep down, good.

And at the end of the day, with those precious chunks of unstructured time, do I honor what I know will "feel good" or do I settle for something slightly less?

Something like another hour of reality television. Or another long conversation with a friend who, honestly, drains me. Or half a can of potato chips that, remarkably, all look alike and stack one on top of the other.

Many of us know full well what feels good, and it's the "doing it" that is the real challenge of this axiom.

Isn't This All a Bit Selfish?

A while back, I blogged at this site about the value of asking ourselves two questions on an ongoing basis. One of these questions had to do with whether I am deriving fun or pleasure from a given commitment or activity or obligation. This posting was picked up by the folks over at Lifehacker, where several readers commented on the dreadful superficiality of asking questions about pleasure and fun.

And I get similar feedback when I discuss this in my workshops on ADHD and related conditions that make it difficult for students and adults to focus their energies and manage their time. Culturally, we seem to have strong and mixed feelings about pleasure. On the one hand, there is the 24 hour Internet and cable television sex-and-chocolate show. On the other hand, we distrust pleasure and suspect that anything really worth doing has a bit of drudgery or suffering mixed in there.

But if I'm listening attentively to feedback from my body, and asking deep questions about what is really "good," then everyone around me will benefit. I may try doing this for myself alone, but cannot help improving the lives of those around me.

When I'm enjoying better health, when I'm sleeping better, and when I'm enjoying more honest and true relationships, and when I'm engaging in exactly the right work/life balance, then I'm a better brother, student, clinician, and teammate.

So Let's Try This Again

As you think about your next meal, your next conversation with your partner, your next bit of unstructured free time, what choices will you make? What would feel good?

Now, pause for a beat and a half, and asked the question again, what would feel really good?

And what's keeping you from "doing it" right now?

Reply
Nov 23, 2017 07:59:07   #
S. Maturin
 
slatten49 wrote:
This is, no doubt, more of a response than you may have wanted...but, this from the internet:

David D. Nowell Ph.D.
Intrinsic Motivation and Magical Unicorns
If It Feels Good Do It?
What would happen if we did what (actually) feels good?
Posted Feb 06, 2011

Maybe, like me, you're just barely old enough to remember this expression. To my father, a minister, this dictum summed up everything that was wrong with the emerging values of the 1960s and 1970s. Can you imagine? If everyone just did what felt good? Anarchy! Ribaldry!

I'm interested in rehabilitating this corny phrase and, in fact, have come to see it as perhaps the most challenging precept of all.

Like any if/then statement, there are two parts to this mandate, and because we're taking this seriously, both parts require their own bit of examination.

If It Feels Good

The first piece of work here -- and this is impossibly harder than it would appear at first blush -- is to determine what feels good. That is, what really feels good?

Back in graduate school, a group of us had gathered for an all you can eat buffet. Like any broke graduate students we were taking full advantage of this offer. We had eaten to the point of discomfort. And now it was time for dessert!

With a mouth full of my second helping of something that looked like peach cobbler, I asked one of my dinner companions why she wasn't eating dessert. "It's free," I encouraged her. This was not one of my fellow clinical psychology students, but someone from one of the other programs on campus. Film History, or American Studies, or Urban Planning and Resource Allocation, something like that.

I don't remember her name now, but I recall that she dressed in gauzy clothing, a la Stevie Nicks. And that she'd grown up in a family of Carnival entertainers, traveling around the country. She was offbeat and interesting, and had perspectives that were different from those of the more practical psychology students.

And what she said to me at dinner that evening was something I carry with me even now. In the sing-song cadence of the Valley Girl speech still fairly common on campus at the time, she chirped "Oh, I decided a couple of years ago not to eat food that makes me feel bad."

I stopped, spoon in my hand gripped tight like a microphone, with a warm gooey mouthful of peach flavored crust. I just stared at her.

She'd decided not to eat food that makes her feel bad! What an incredibly sensible and basic (here I took another bite of cobbler) way to approach (another bite) life! I should totally live my life (and another bite) like that!

So that's how I like to think about the "if it feels good" half of this very difficult maxim. Determining what really feels good is some of the important and serious work of any adult.

Notice, the issue here is not to determine what's cheap or easy. Nor is the work here to figure out what other people in your zip code like to do. Nor is the challenge to determine what your siblings enjoy. Rather, what is it that my body, my neurology, calls "good"?

In a sense, smoking cigarettes feels good. But in a deeper and more pervasive sense, smoking limits my options, makes it harder for me to hike mountains or even stairs, and shrouds me with an odor that many people simply don't like. Moreover, I can't avoid persistent reminders that I'm shortening my own life with this behavior. So in a deeper sense, smoking, really, doesn't feel good.

It feels so good to eat a piece of cheesecake, that it must feel really good to eat three pieces. But in a deeper, and more real, sense, that feels nauseatingly bad.

And if I'm really asking deep, honest questions about what feels good I will treat people and animals kindly, I will be more honest with the important people in my life, I will stick with the commitments I've made in my primary relationship, or try to renegotiate the rules of that relationship. I will not, if I'm really doing what "feels good" in a deep and true way, hit other people, c***t other people, or eat food that makes me feel bad.

Do It

Okay, so the second half of our adage is a quick and punchy action phrase: "do it." Quick, without thinking too much about this, what is the one thing -- and you know I'm talking about here -- that you need to do now?

I'm talking here about the one thing that will make the biggest improvement in your life, and in the lives of those around you - the thing you've been putting off. For lack of social support, or lack of resources, or lack of courage, for wh**ever reason that action step you have not -- yet -- done.

If we got up a little bit earlier in the morning and spent some time inquiring honestly and deeply into what feels -- really -- good, we could likely generate a quick to-do list of the most important actions we could take each day.

Treating my roommate better, for example, might be something that would feel really good. Or learning French. Or developing my body into something that feels svelte, lean, and masculine. That sounds like something that would feel, deep down, good.

And at the end of the day, with those precious chunks of unstructured time, do I honor what I know will "feel good" or do I settle for something slightly less?

Something like another hour of reality television. Or another long conversation with a friend who, honestly, drains me. Or half a can of potato chips that, remarkably, all look alike and stack one on top of the other.

Many of us know full well what feels good, and it's the "doing it" that is the real challenge of this axiom.

Isn't This All a Bit Selfish?

A while back, I blogged at this site about the value of asking ourselves two questions on an ongoing basis. One of these questions had to do with whether I am deriving fun or pleasure from a given commitment or activity or obligation. This posting was picked up by the folks over at Lifehacker, where several readers commented on the dreadful superficiality of asking questions about pleasure and fun.

And I get similar feedback when I discuss this in my workshops on ADHD and related conditions that make it difficult for students and adults to focus their energies and manage their time. Culturally, we seem to have strong and mixed feelings about pleasure. On the one hand, there is the 24 hour Internet and cable television sex-and-chocolate show. On the other hand, we distrust pleasure and suspect that anything really worth doing has a bit of drudgery or suffering mixed in there.

But if I'm listening attentively to feedback from my body, and asking deep questions about what is really "good," then everyone around me will benefit. I may try doing this for myself alone, but cannot help improving the lives of those around me.

When I'm enjoying better health, when I'm sleeping better, and when I'm enjoying more honest and true relationships, and when I'm engaging in exactly the right work/life balance, then I'm a better brother, student, clinician, and teammate.

So Let's Try This Again

As you think about your next meal, your next conversation with your partner, your next bit of unstructured free time, what choices will you make? What would feel good?

Now, pause for a beat and a half, and asked the question again, what would feel really good?

And what's keeping you from "doing it" right now?
This is, no doubt, more of a response than you may... (show quote)


Definitely wordy enough to be something a prof would gleefully share.

What I am thinking of I believe is in that 'if it feels good, do it' business resides hedonism and gluttony not to mention disregard for others who may be effected by one's pursuit of what 'feels good'.

Reply
Nov 23, 2017 08:11:06   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
S. Maturin wrote:
This was sent to me and features an artist whom I knew nothing about... but that's all changed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbZSe6N_BXs


Know him well and love this song~~~Excellent choice there S....

For you in return~~

https://youtu.be/Edwsf-8F3sI



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