Posts Tagged ‘love’

Master Your Emotions

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010
by Jim Finwick | No Comments »

Melissa Pheterson has some great insights on how to Master Your Emotions. Click HERE for the full article.

#1: Feed Your Brain

  • Look for low-calorie foods with lots of “crunch,” suggests Dr. Madelyn Fernstrom, director of the UPMC Weight Management Center. It’s like a vigorous workout for your teeth — a sweet release that helps deflect the binge of “stress-eating.” We suggest carrots, celery and apples, rather than tortilla chips or the eponymous “Crunch” bar.
  • Don’t use food to “self-medicate”; while it can bring comfort, remember that it’s mainly a source of fuel. Brush your teeth, take a walk, and think it through, says Fernstrom. An extra slice of cake won’t solve anything.
  • Avoid excessive stimulants like caffeine or guarana.
  • Nutrients like folate, vitamins B6 and B12 play a role in proper brain function, and might stave off depression. Find them in calcium-fortified OJ, kidney beans, acorn squash and bananas.

#2: Breathe Right

“Everyone needs a lesson in breathing,” says Mark Liponis, M.D., author of UltraLongevity: The Seven Step Program for a Younger, Healthier You. The immune system responds instantly to any change in breathing because it signals a threat. Shallow, rapid gasps — the “hyperventilating” stress response — sends the immune system into overdrive.

How to pass Breathing 101:

  • Slow it down — allow your diaphragm to fully contract.
  • Feel the breath through your entire lungs.
  • Remember to breathe out — many people don’t! Exhale the air completely.

#3: Know Thyself

Everyone’s got a different way of letting off steam. “Discover which relaxation methods work for you, and tuck them in your toolbox,” says psychiatrist, columnist and best-selling author Gail Saltz, M.D. “For some, it’s deep breathing; others thrive on exercise.” And for others, it might be a heart-to-heart followed by a steaming-hot bath.

Still wound-up? Try these:

  • Go steady: Studies suggest that rhythmic exercise is healthiest for the immune system. “Rhythms are built into the body’s mechanism, and moving to a rhythmic beat is therapeutic,” says Liponis. Think swimming, rowing, tango, or walking to your iPod playlist.
  • Get pinned: The National Institute of Health endorses acupuncture — the ancient Eastern practice of inserting thin needles at specific points in the body — for improved sleep, reduced levels of pain and a greater sense of well-being. And you thought needles were for spinsters…

#4: Step out of the “Same Old Story”
Do you déjà vu? Many women find themselves unwittingly and maddeningly repeating behavior that stymies their growth, development and fulfillment — at the office, in relationships, around their family. Do you find yourself caught in the same trap, over and over? Try the three R’s:

  • Review
  • Reality-Check
  • Re-evaluate

“The most important thing really is self-knowledge — recognizing patterns and understanding what lies beneath,” says Saltz. “We’re often living an old story of something that happened long ago.” To break the repetition, step out of the story to review it from an outsider’s perspective. Give yourself a reality-check to find the root of the problem. And remember, the best vantage point can often be found on the therapist’s couch, where you can get help re-evaluating the situation.

#5: Get Your Vitamin “L”

That’s Liponis’ tag for love and laughter as antidotes to fear, anger and despair — “emotions that signal the body is threatened, in danger,” he says. “The solution is to cultivate a deep emotional connection.” That doesn’t just mean romance. Adopt a pet, call your parents, throw yourself into your garden. Or discover a new activity that might sweep you into a new circle of friends.

Among new friends or old, reach out to others. Support them in their own personal endeavors, and project a can-do attitude; the good vibes will come full-circle to reward you, too. If you feel responsible to show up for your weekly exercise-walking group, you’re more likely to commit.

Lost and Found

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010
by Jim Finwick | No Comments »

The last two weeks have been particularly emotional. As the Vice President of Information Technology at Compassion International I am particularly connected to people and places around the world. So when a magnitude 7.0 earthquake hit the small island nation of Haiti in the late afternoon of January 12, 2010 my heart stopped. Compassion currently helps more than 65,000 children in Haiti. We have over 7 local Haitian staff members and at the time of the earthquake there was a group of Canadian Sponsors, as well as two U.S. web/video journalists in the country. The Canadian group had just arrived in Haiti when the earthquake hit and diverted to the Canadian embassy and then back out of the country.

The two U.S. team members, however, had just entered the Hotel Montana and were crossing the lobby when the hotel collapsed on top of them. Separated in the chaos and confusion they wound up in different places. Dan Woolley found himself injured and bleeding, but used his SLR camera to take flash photos of his surroundings and made his way safely into an elevator shaft. 65 hours later he would be rescued. As of this writing (11 days after the earthquake) we have still not heard from David Hames.

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Dan Woolley being pulled from the rubble of the Hotel Montana in Port Au Prince Haiti

Watching people frantically search for loved ones after the earthquake has been heart wrenching. A husband grasps and tears at cement block and rebar with his bear hands and calls out for help to anyone passing by because his wife lay under the rubble of what used to be their house. His hands are shredded and bleeding but he can’t slow down, every second counts.

It is with this same ferocity that God pursues us. His love for us so deep and His desire for us so strong that He desperately wants us be rescued from the rubble of broken lives. Like a shepherd who runs into the darkness of night to find a sheep that has wandered off or a mother who has misplaced the money for the weeks groceries and is tearing apart the house in order to find it, God goes to great lengths to be reconnected with us.

I can’t claim to understand what God is thinking as I watch in horror the devastation of an already devastated group of people. But I do know that He loves each and every one of them with an incomprehensible love which far exceeds my ability to understand it.

Love Complicates the Life of God

Sunday, August 9th, 2009
by Jim Finwick | No Comments »

In his great book “Epic” John Eldredge talks about the gift that God has given mankind in the form of a human heart. Our ability to love, and the freedom that God gives us to love is amazing…and terribly risky for God. Here is how he explains it:

“God gives us the freedom to reject him.
He gives to each of us a will of our own.
Good grief, why? He knows what free-willed creatures can do. He has already suffered one massive betrayal in the rebellion of the angels. He knows how we will use our freedom, what misery and suffering, what hell will be unleashed on earth because of our choices. Why? Is he out of his mind?
The answer is simple and staggering as this: If you want a world where love is real, you must allow each person the freedom to choose.

‘Power can do everything but the most important thing: it cannot control love…In a concentration camp, the guards possess almost unlimited power. By applying force, they can make you renounce your God, curse your family, work without pay, eat human excrement, kill and then bury your closest friend or even your own mother. All this is within their power. Only one thing is not: they cannot force you to love them. This fact may help explain why God sometimes seems shy to use his power. He created us to love him, but his most impressive displays of miracle — the kind we may secretly long for — do nothing to foster that love. As Douglas John Hall has put it, “God’s problem is not that God is not able to do certain things. God’s problem is that God loves. Love complicates the life of God as it complicates every life.”‘
(Philip Yancey, Disappointment with God)

Any parent or lover knows this: love is choosen. You canot, in the end, force anyone to love you.”

Going Further:
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The writing on the wall

Sunday, April 26th, 2009
by Jim Finwick | No Comments »

Last year I was at a conference in Washington D.C. and decided to get up before sunrise and head down to the National Mall to take some photos. It was a nearly perfect morning, and as the cab driver dropped me off in front of the World War II memorial, I started what turned out to be an all day adventure in the heart of my American history.

As the sun began to rise I found myself standing in front of the Vietnam Memorial and I noticed a nearly perfect image of the Washington Monument reflected in the wall. After I returned home and was sorting through my photos, this one quickly became one of my favorites. In fact, I placed in my folder of photos that my Macbook uses for screen saver images. So, I frequently get to see this image on my screen.

www.redfoxstudio.com

As the image appeared again and again on my screen I began to become particularly conscious of the individual names that are carved into the wall that created such a clear reflection. People. People who had died. People who had died fighting for my freedom. People who had Moms and Sisters, Dads and Brothers, friends and coworkers. People like Richard Conrad, Thomas Herndon, Roger Sumrall, Howard Caffery, Lester Parker and Gordon Hill.

Gordon was in the US Air Force and at the age of 25 was shot down in his F-4E on June 30, 1970 over Laos. His body was never recovered. And his family in Seattle never had the closure of laying him to rest.

I did not know Gordon C. Hill. Never met him. He never met me. He was not a friend of our family, or my Sunday school teacher. But he gave up his tomorrow so that I might live free today. And for that, I am forever grateful.

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