Friday, January 22, 2021

COVID and Politics equals loneliness and social isolation

 What a miserable combination!  An epidemic that isolated the globe, and political differences that split up the few people we have in our lives. Where do we begin again? 

I think with the few people in our lives, regarding political differences,  it's time to say, "Let's agree to disagree and let it go." How would you word it? 

Meanwhile, GET OUT of the house. Put your mask on, and go for a public walk in a park, to the grocery store, practice eye-contact (that's all they can see). Try it at home- look in a mirror, put your mask on, and try smiling with your eyes. Medical workers have been doing this for years, to put patients at ease, because they have always been masked. Nod and say "Hi".  

Pat yourself on the back for trying. It's very hard if you're depressed to get moving.  Say,  "Good for me!  I went for a walk for 10 minutes instead of staying at home. I said 'hi' to one person!" Say it out loud, because it helps to imprint it on the brain. 

Thursday, January 21, 2021

Tell me about yourself!

Open-ended questions don't work for people who experience social anxiety. We don't have instant recall of our own personal history.  So- when someone says, "Tell me something about yourself,,,,", a blank slate appears. "Well, I was born, I grew up and here I am..", doesn't help your conversation advance. Also we're inclined to view anything we might say as dull and boring. 

Practice starting with an overview, for example "Well, before COVID I worked at such and such a place, I moved here from ......., and right now I'm learning how to play..... ".  Saying something specific gives them a chance to comment on that specific that you wouldn't mind talking about. It triggers their memory. It's kind of like fishing-you throw out some bait- maybe they'll bite, maybe they won't." But how can they know if you don't throw it out there for a potential bite. And you've deposited it where you wouldn't mind if they said, "Gee, I like raising worms, too!"  You never know!

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

COVID19 and Loneliness 2021

Happy New Year to all of you!  You can build relationships; how you are now does NOT mean it's permanent. Perhaps being out of the workplace  made you see that your friendships were only from the office.  Maybe you never had to initiate anything because you were passively included in social outings. 

Becoming aware  is part of problem-solving. What would you like your life to be like at the end of 2021? This is the time to dream without limitations. It's a new year, a new beginning and think about where you would like to be at the end of 2021. I'll help you get there. Ask me any question or share a problem. Warm wishes to all of you!    

Friday, October 28, 2016

HOW DO I FORM A SOCIAL COMMUNITY?

When you move to a new place, end a relationship, change jobs, graduate from school, quit drinking, quit drugs, you lose those reference groups you belonged to before this change. It's an active process to acquire friends; it requires a blend of affiliative skills and competitive skills. For example, when you select a new place to go- whether it's for a cup of coffee, or exercise, or a social club, you need to know the facial muscles and body language  that give you the look of a friendly person. You're not going to war, you're exploring where to meet people. That's when you need to look affiliative- or friendly- and the body language that goes with being perceived as friendly. But you won't give the look of friendliness, if you don't have accompanying competitive skills. You have to know that you can say "no" if you need to, you need to be prepared for questions you'd rather not share information, and how to do it in a gracious way, you need to know how to do a leaving ceremony so you don't get trapped. You need to know how to initiate- and with that comes the ability to take a "no" and not equate it with rejection. It's a blend of affiliative skills, and the competitive skills which involve asserting or defense skills, and aggressing skills- which are the skills involved in initiating, or moving into new territories, or offense skills. Even the ability to identify what kind of a social situation you're in- whether it be affiliative, defense, offense  (and it can change while you're in the middle of it)- will give you a feeling of control- and that knowledge will reduce your anxiety.   
(Feel free to ask me any questions)

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

SOCIAL MEDIA AND THE ILLUSION OF HAVING FRIENDS

An excellent program aired on Dr. Oz in September, 2016 that explored the many contacts we have during the day with texting, Facebook, emails, etc. We feel that we are connected, but it does not correlate with reduced loneliness. That's the surprise- the constant social media interactions gives the illusion of being connected- we see the external signs- but our feeling component indicates that we are lonely.  It doesn't jive with what we perceive as having lots of friends thru social media. But trust the feeling component, and since we are social beings, loneliness impacts our health. So, when you think- I don't have the time-even a small conversation on the phone is a step to better health. I think that for people who have no friends, social media is a good first step in reaching out, connecting on common causes, expressing a like, elaboration on what someone says- these are all great first steps if you're isolated. Take it to the next step- get together at a meeting, a lunch, a cup of coffee. It's hard in the beginning, but I'll show you how to reward yourself for taking these health-giving steps.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-mehmet-oz/the-new-loneliness_b_11966516.html

Monday, October 24, 2016

SOCIAL ISOLATION AND YOUR HEALTH

 I'm thrilled to see the growing body of research linking social health with good physical health, and I will work with you on how to garner friendships. It's a process that can be learned. You don't have to be naturally social- you can acquire social skills and enjoy the process. It doesn't have to be torture!  

 http://uncnews.unc.edu/2016/01/04/social-networks-as-important-as-exercise-and-diet-across-the-span-of-our-lives/
University of North Carolina--Chapel Hill researchers show how social relationships reduce health risk in each stage of life.

"Specifically, the team found that the sheer size of a person’s social network was important for health in early and late adulthood. In adolescence, that is, social isolation increased risk of inflammation by the same amount as physical inactivity while social integration protected against abdominal obesity. In old age, social isolation was actually more harmful to health than diabetes on developing and controlling hypertension." 

Friday, October 23, 2015

Why am I so angry?

As mentioned in my last post, irritation is the logical emotional signal that alerts you to the fact that you have some sort of conflict-either with yourself. or someone else. But as I advanced in my training, I realized that although the feeling of irritation is useful as a cue to alert you to conflict, many of us didn't recognize that signal. If you have been trained that you shouldn't get angry- that's not nice- you may experience guilt as a signal of conflict. If you are fight-phobic, you will have a signal of fear. If you have been trained to be unemotional you may recognize no signal at all.

Interestingly, NOT being assertive can lead to the most destructive behaviors of all. It is the hostile person who does destructive things- not the assertive person. So- if you've been taught that you should be nice, and nice people aren't assertive, you'll land up with repressed anger-- and that's where the most destructive behaviors happen.

It's the unassertive, hostile person who lands up seething with resentment, and those infringements pile up and can have a cumulative effect. Gossiping, wishing evil upon that person, ruminating- all are cues of unassertive behavior. Sometimes one then over-reacts. Just the smallest thing can "break the camel's back" - the last straw-and one responds way out of proportion to that single incident. And with that over-reaction then comes guilt- what is wrong with me! And, of course, the other person thinks,what an aggressive crazy person!

WHY ARE YOU SO QUIET?


Most of the time we are passive participants;
watchers and listeners of our computers, our televisions, cell-phones, movie theaters.

Then with little practice we are supposed to talk and express ourselves articulately on job interviews, meeting new people at work, starting to date, selling our business plans.

These are the most intimidating situations to begin with, when we're out of practice, or never had any in the first place and where we feel we're being scrutinized.

This is my area of expertise; I merge the structure of the speech communication with anxiety reducing methods.

I have a BA in Sociology, and taught for 10 years in a behavioral/cognitive clinic at the University of Washington, where I coached people on how to make changes in communication skills and health habits.This was a pioneering clinic and I represented the clinic through the UW Speakers Bureau on radio and television shows, and did many corporate workshops.

Public speaking totally intimidated me, and I had no experience. I had accidentally developed a career in the very field I hated; public speaking.

No matter how discouraged you are, I can help you.



Joan6466@aol.com
Tel. No. 360 697 6168
Skype: joan.walz