Positive Thinking Can Help You Feel Better, Longer
There is power in positive thinking.
Have you noticed that some older adults continue to feel
good and stay active well into their senior years, while others appear to age
rapidly and experience increased health problems? Positive thinking may play a
significant role
According to an APA news release, researchers found a link
between positive emotions and the onset of frailty in 1,558 initially non-frail
older Mexican Americans living in five southwestern states. This was the first
study to examine frailty and the protective role of positive thinking in the
largest minority population in the United States.
How Was the Study Conducted?
Study authors Glenn Ostir, Ph.D., Kenneth Ottenbacher, Ph.D., and Kyriakos Markides, Ph.D., from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, followed older adults for seven years to study their level of positive thinking in relation to their level of frailty.
Study authors Glenn Ostir, Ph.D., Kenneth Ottenbacher, Ph.D., and Kyriakos Markides, Ph.D., from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, followed older adults for seven years to study their level of positive thinking in relation to their level of frailty.
Frailty was assessed by measuring:
- Weight
loss
- Exhaustion
- Walking
speed
- Grip
strength
The study says that positive emotions (or positive thinking)
were measured by asking how often in the past week participants had the
following thoughts:
- “I
felt that I was just as good as other people”
- “I
felt hopeful about the future”
- “I
was happy”
- “I
enjoyed life”
There’s a Link Between Positive Thinking and Frailty
The report said that the incidence of frailty in the older adult participants increased overall nearly eight percent during the seven-year follow-up period, but people who scored high on positive affect or positive thinking were significantly less likely to become frail.
The report said that the incidence of frailty in the older adult participants increased overall nearly eight percent during the seven-year follow-up period, but people who scored high on positive affect or positive thinking were significantly less likely to become frail.
While researchers in the study couldn't explain why positive
thinking or positive emotions reduced the incidence of frailty, they speculated
that positive thinking may directly affect health via chemical and neural
responses that help maintain an overall health balance.
Another possibility, according to the researchers, is that
positive thinking can have a beneficial effect on people’s health by increasing
a person’s intellectual, physical, psychological and social resources.
You Have a Choice About How You Think
I read somewhere that people can only hold one thought at a time. If that’s true, then you have a choice:
I read somewhere that people can only hold one thought at a time. If that’s true, then you have a choice:
- Focusing on a thought that makes you feel bad
- Focusing
on a thought that makes you feel good
Try to focus your energy on positive thinking rather than
negative thinking, and look for reasons to feel happy and hopeful every day. If
you put your energy toward positive thinking and ways to make your life more
enjoyable, you may discover that positive thinking really doeshelp
you feel better.


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