
|
Sign up today for the SacredHome newsletter and read helpful articles, receive exclusive offers and discounts, and learn about new products!
|
|

 
|
|

|
How to Brighten the Winter Blahs
by Debbie Mandel
In the Northeast we have had some significant snow storms in early
December forcing us to shovel and stay home. Our initial reaction was,
“How beautiful and pure.” Then the next day when driving and walking
became difficult, we began complaining, “Who needs snow!” By the time
Christmas rolled around no one longed for or dreamed of a white Christmas
as we all had our fill. It seems that we get bored quickly with the
terrain and need to change things up. We are tired of the short days and
cold temperatures. When we feel bored, mildly depressed, or burned out, we
always look for external stimulation.
Strange, we never look within ourselves where the cold emptiness begins.
Ironically, the solution exists inside where we can find greater control
and empowerment through positive perception. Seeing every day as a good
day with its special distinguishing moments creates peacefulness and
clarity. And for those of us who demand immediate gratification, we can
change our perception immediately whether at work or at home.
It can be as simple as: rearranging a few knick knacks, where we usually
sit at the kitchen table, or moving a chair or lamp from here to over
there. If I change my seat at the kitchen table, I really see things from
a different perspective. I might notice something new in my field of
vision. If I rearrange paintings or furniture, I see them with a fresh eye
and appreciate them differently. When we are beset by winter doldrums,
long nights, clearly we need to let the pendulum swing the other way to
restore the balance.
Here are 10 tips to help you change your perception of winter and bring
warmth and light into a chilly life:
• Raise the blinds and let the light shine in. Sit by the window look out
and gaze, or read. Feel the warmth.
• Try eating more hot soups and stews. Add beans and lentils to your diet.
These hearty meals are both comforting and nourishing. (If you use canned
soups pay attention to the amount of sodium as many ready-made soups are
high in sodium.)
• Go outside to reset your biological clock. Let natural sunlight
counteract SAD. Appreciate the winter landscape: the “tree architecture”
that we never notice when the leaves are flourishing, or the feathery
ornamental grasses swaying in the wind.
• Exercise to stimulate and bring warmth to your body. Many of us are
bored with treadmills and stairmasters that go nowhere. Change up your
routine. Dress warmly and go for a brisk fitness walk. If you can get to
the shore, a walk on the beach is peaceful and inspiring. Try some new
classes in Pilates, Yoga, Belly Dancing, Salsa and Weight Training. Join a
league to participate in fun team sports. Get a buddy to exercise with or
make friends in fitness centers.
• Connect with sunny people. Do volunteer work. We tend to get isolated in
the winter and keep to our igloos. Get out and see positive people who
appreciate you and if you can’t get out, use the phone or email.
• Bring tropical plants into the house. Their gracious leaves and greenery
will lift your spirits and give you a taste of eternal summer.
• Look at the color orange which is cheering. No need to repaint your
home; just put something orange on the desk or your coffee table.
• Try a warm glowing candle light meditation. Light a candle in the
evening and stare at the flame for about 30 seconds to a minute. Then
close your eyes and breathe to your own natural rhythm and see what comes
up for you in meditation.
• Give yourself an auto-massage. Warm some inexpensive olive oil in the
microwave and massage your body from head to toe. Long strokes for the
limbs, circular strokes for the torso. Make sure to massage the temples,
and using your thumbs, do windshield wiper movements under and over your
eyes. Feel the warmth pervade your body.
• Simplify your home, room by room. Clean out the clutter and donate what
you have not used in years. In winter we tend to contract and go inward.
Use this indoors time to organize your home. Sharing with the needy will
give you an inner glow.
Debbie Eisenstadt Mandel, MA is the author of Turn On Your Inner Light:
Fitness for Body, Mind and Soul, a stress-reduction specialist,
motivational speaker, a personal trainer and mind/body lecturer at
Southampton College. She is the host of the weekly Turn On Your Inner
Light Show on WLIE 540AM in New York City , produces a weekly wellness
newsletter, and has been featured on radio/ TV and print media. To learn
more visit: www.turnonyourinnerlight.com
1
|
|