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Mental Health Research and Reports
1999-2001 -The power of the
unconscious, the importance of self-awareness
How
the psyche reveals itself -the power of the unconscious mind!
Mental
health Research and Reports:
1)
Depression and heart failure-Aug. 21, 2001:
Approximately 400,000 people each year are diagnosed with congestive
heart failure, a condition characterized by the heart's inability
to pump enough blood. People who are depressed and have heart
failure " . . . appeared twice as likely as other patients
to die or be readmitted to the hospital over the course of a year."
(From the New York Times, Aug. 21, 2001).
2) A doctor
links hypertension to emotional problems that are
hidden and denied. "The conclusion Dr. Mann draws in the medical
journal (Archives of Internal Medicine) is that a link
exists between patients with episodic hypertension, also called
paroxysmal hypertension, and powerful emotions or traumatic experiences
that they are either unaware they had or that they have driven
out of their awareness." (From the New York Times, April 13, 1999).
3) Compared to a control group, at the end of four months patients
suffering from chronic asthma or rheumatoid
arthritus had a significant improvement in their health
when they ". . . were instructed to write down their 'deepest
thoughts and feelings' about traumatic experiences, while control
subjects wrote about their plans for the day. . . The new study
underlines the role of stress in both
asthma and rheumatoid arthritis . . . But Dr. Smyth
cautioned against generalizing the findings too broadly." (From
The New York Times, April 14, 1999).
The importance of self awareness
If your
goal in life is primarily centered on affluence,
looking good, being famous, you might end up not as content
as the individual whose primary goals are satisfaction in relationships,
closeness with others, and self-awareness.
This does not mean that one can't pursue different goals and
be content, but if the primary goal is something external,
one could end up being more depressed and anxious. Having a
sense of achievement as a goal is different than acquiring money:
" . . .The researchers paint a bleak portrait of people who
value 'extrinsic goals' like money, fame and beauty. Such people
are not only more depressed than others, but also report more
behavioral problems and physical discomfort, as well as scoring
low on measures of vitality and self-actualization." (The New
York Times, Feb. 2, 1999).
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