The Best Life Diet Revised and Updated

From the bestselling author of Get With the Program! and Bob Greene’s Total Body Makeover comes The Best Life Diet, a lifetime plan for losing weight and keeping it off. Bob Greene helped Oprah achieve her dramatic weight loss, and he can help you too. You’ll eat the same delicious food that Oprah enjoys, and, just like Oprah, you’ll have Bob to encourage you at every step. Unlike a celebrity, however, you don’t need to hire a staff of experts to aid and advise you, because Bob’s plan, easily tailored to an array of tastes, lifestyles, and activity levels, acts as your personal trainer and private nutritionist. Just open the book and let Bob help you get started down the path toward your best possible life. What sets Bob apart from all the other experts who claim to have plans that work is that he admits that weight loss is difficult: seventeen years of watching people struggle to lose weight on a seemingly endless string of trendy crash diets, only to backslide and regain the pounds they’ve shed, have taught him that dropping pounds is not simply a numbers game. By acknowledging that it is not simple laziness but a complicated web of social rituals, cultural expectations, and habits that drives people to gain weight, Greene is able to attack the problem of weight loss realistically and offer not a short-lived, quick-fix formula, but a long-term program that accounts for the challenges and constraints of the real world. Divided into three phases, The Best Life Diet gives you the tools you need to change your life. In each phase, you’ll be asked to reexamine the decisions you make on a daily basis and gradually alter your habits to achieve lasting results. The book also includes easy-to-follow meal plans that make it simple to meet your daily energy and nutrient requirements, whether you are on the run and breakfast means a quick smoothie or you have time to shop for fresh produce and make something special. You’ll watch the weight disappear as you learn to prepare festive and flavorful dishes like Fire-Roasted Tomato-Shrimp Veracruz, Chicken Sausage Jambalaya, or Flank Steak with Chimichurri Topping and indulge in desserts like Roasted Peaches with Ricotta and Almonds or Apple Rhubarb Walnut Crisp. And for each delicious recipe, there is a detailed nutritional analysis, so you know exactly what you are eating and how it fits into your personal eating plan. Most important, Bob’s plan doesn’t end once you’ve lost the weight. Instead, it gives you the tools you need to make living your best life second nature, because for Greene, a diet is not something you go “on” or “off” but a set of guidelines that will help you claim the life you deserve.

Preventing and Reversing Heart Disease For Dummies

The safe and trusted way to prevent and reverse heartdisease Written in plain English and packed with tons of authoritativeadvice, Preventing & Reversing Heart Disease For Dummiesincludes the most up-to-date information on coronary heart diseaseand its treatment. This resource covers new ways to diagnose andtreat both short- and long-term complications of heart disease, thelatest medications, updated diet and exercise plans, the lowdown onrecognizing the risk factors and warning signs of a heart attack,determining if you have heart disease, distinguishing betweenangina, heart attack, and stroke, and much more. It is projected that by the year 2020, heart disease will be theleading cause of death throughout the world. As the magnitude ofcardiovascular diseases continue to accelerate globally, thepressing need for increased awareness and a stronger, more focusednational and international response has become more important thanever. Preventing & Reversing Heart Disease For Dummiestackles this vital subject with compassion and authority, outliningthe steps you can take to help ensure you don’t become just anotherstatistic. Helps you find the right doctor and handle a managed careplan Covers all thirteen types of heart disease and discusses thekey differences that may determine their progression andtreatment Illustrates how simple changes in diet may be enough to preventheart disease Shows how you can reverse some of the effects of heart diseasethrough exercise If you’re suffering from or are at risk of heartdisease—or love someone who is—Preventing &Reversing Heart Disease For Dummies empowers you to takecontrol of heart health and get on a path to a longer, healthierlife.

‘I hate my life’: Josh Earnest’s face betrays his inner turmoil [photos]

http://twitter.com/#!/wkamaubell/status/517404312041824256

It can’t be easy being Josh Earnest these days. He’s got a lot of crap to explain.

It’s part of his job to look calm even when it’s all hit the fan, and bless his heart for trying, but he’s not fooling anyone anymore:

Josh Earnest always looks like what I think I'd look like if I was in charge of explaining everything Obama did. pic.twitter.com/P7QM2wbF0v

— W. Kamau Bell (@wkamaubell) October 1, 2014

That … describes it perfectly.

Earnest right now pic.twitter.com/HGB3FrR9mu

— Kate (@misskathrynhyde) October 1, 2014

We don’t blame you, buddy.

***

Related:

Twitchy coverage of Josh Earnest

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/10/02/i-hate-my-life-josh-earnests-face-betrays-his-inner-turmoil-photos/

The 14-Day No Sugar Diet

A smaller belly and a healthier body are just 14 days away! This easy-to-follow, six-step plan of healthy eating and easy exercise helps readers lose at least 7 percent of their body weight to cut their risk of diabetes by 60 percent. The 14-Day No Sugar Diet is a practical guide to losing body weight and belly fat, the two most effective strategies for lowering high blood sugar. The book takes readers through six simple steps that will help them lose at least 7 percent of their body weight, up to 14 pounds in just 2 weeks. Studies have shown that reducing body weight by 7 percent effectively cuts type 2 diabetes risk by 60 percent. As a health journalist for nearly two decades, author Jeff Csatari was shocked when his doctor told him he had prediabetes. He thought he ate a healthy diet, he was not obese, and he exercised regularly. He resolved to lower his blood sugar numbers by cutting out added sugars and losing weight. It worked. He reversed his prediabetes, lost weight and added muscle using the simple lifestyle strategies detailed in the book: 1. Targeting a 7% weight-loss goal. 2. Following a delicious meal plan emphasizing lean protein and healthy carbs. 3. Eliminating added sugars. 4. Drinking more water. 5. Moving more every day. 6. Going to sleep earlier. The 14-Day No Sugar Diet offers easy, practical tips and advice that anyone can use to immediately improve eating habits and overall health. If includes a four-point jumpstart to help readers start shedding sugar pounds on day one of the plan, a practical guide to the six powerful steps that make up the backbone of the program, lists of surprising high-sugar, high-carb foods to avoid, and healthy super foods to swap in their place, an easy-to-follow 14-day meal plan, and more than 40 recipes for delicious no-sugar diet, smoothies, breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and snacks. Plus in the spirit of the Eat This, Not That! online brand, the book offers a comprehensive list of the unhealthiest restaurant meals to avoid and much healthier choices to make when dining out. The book will be supported and promoted at EATTHIS.com and in house advertisments and editorial in Eat This, Not That! magazine, published my Meredith and available nationwide on newsstands. The 14-Day No Sugar Diet offers an efficient and effective plan for anyone who wants to lose pounds of belly fat fast and avoid type 2 diabetes, a lifestyle disease that has now reached epidemic proportions in the United States and around the world. Everyone is at risk. And everyone can benefit from the simple message of this book.

I NEVER THOUGHT THIS WOULD HAPPEN…


[Music] you’ve got the needle and this one is one that I have yet to inject did sin no unfortunately negative again I know how much he wants kids and I I couldn’t want them anymore all we all we want is to just be parents I really would hate this infertility thing and and I hate I hate how people say well you’re stressing and that’s why you have infertility and it’s like no I have infertility and that causes my stress pump me full of drugs now even care I just want a baby so I start my family I just I just want that it would mean it would be the best day of my life it would be the best shit in the world if I got a positive pregnancy then unfortunately I feel like I’m never going to be a mother and that I am going to be childless forever and it’s not really funny I kind of laugh it off but um it’s an it’s a real fear and concern that I have it we’ve been trying for four plus years does a long time pnina to be honest with yourself you can’t keep doing the same thing over and over again and expect a different results I mean I’m not going to get pregnant naturally I’m not you know if I don’t get a have my own kid which I don’t think I’m going to I think I can still live a relatively happy life I’ll just have to I just might have to get a lot of birds or something alright guys I will let you know please keep your fingers crossed for me think it’s pray to God this is the cycle and then I get it become a mama I won’t ever have them and um that’s okay it’s fine that I can’t have babies that’s totally fine I almost feel guilty that I can’t have babies because my niece won’t have a cousin you know and um Shh moms always want to tell me just how how much they didn’t realize what love was until they had a kid let’s say I’m like 33 and I finally like say I just find out that I’m pregnant which embrasure is never gonna happen everything that I have when I die and he dies there’s nobody to give it to there’s nobody to keep it do it’s funny I don’t cry thinking about me not being a mom I cry thinking about Zach not being a dad it’s so weird like he’s what makes me cry because he’s so like I tried to get pregnant for five years I am infertile I’ve come to terms with it and then in those terms that I’ve tried to come to I have tried to tell myself that I don’t want children because it really sucks to be somebody with infertility that has issues that are really hard to fix and to also want for something so badly then it’s it’s life ruining I’ve never been pregnant and I don’t think I can get pregnant and basically he let me know a few years ago like oh I would love to be a dad and for a while there I thought that we were kind of on the same page of like we can’t get pregnant so babe okay and then he let me know like oh my god I would love to you dad and I it like crushed my heart and soul because I was like I can’t get fucking pregnant oh like that well I’m sorry but it’s okay so don’t we had a conversation about it and I said like we can but I don’t think I can are you going to be ruined if we can he was like no I’ll be fine because it kills me to think that he would want to be a dad but I can’t like make that a reality it’s not so much that I just think we would both be good parents oh you fantastic mother you’ll be a wonderful that I would be a freak why can’t we be my everything my heart and soul you’re free oh right now in this moment as I sit here have totally come to terms with not being able to get pregnant on the same page so oh I might be sorry I’m happy [Music] this isn’t real this isn’t real this isn’t real this isn’t real no this cannot be real this cannot be real this cannot be real [Music] doesn’t get me real doesn’t give me real [Music] this can’t be real [Music] this can’t be real this cannot be real this is not happening this is literally not happening it’s not possible [Music] it’s literally not possible it’s not possible [Music] there’s no way there’s no fucking way there is literally no way this is happening I’m actually having an out-of-body experience this cannot be real this can not be real there is no way this cannot be real I have to go get something I have to do what I have to I’m literally losing my fucking mind holy shit this can’t be real this isn’t happening it can’t be happening you don’t understand I don’t get pregnant I don’t ovulate I don’t I don’t I don’t have that I don’t have it doesn’t work what one two three four [Music] a plus sign is pregnant holy absolute shit holy holy shit holy shit holy shit oh my god let’s say I’m like 33 and I finally like say I just find out that I’m pregnant which the preachers never gonna happen I almost feel guilty that I can’t have babies because my niece won’t have a cousin I love you too gee I’m so happy that I’m gonna have a real cousin I miss you really much and I hope I get to stay really sure [Music] [Music] you [Music]



As found on YouTube

5 Easy Tips to Beat Anxiety!

Hey everyone Today, I’m going to talk with you about five tips to beat anxiety, So stay tuned. So, like I said Today, I want to talk with you about five helpful tips to beat anxiety. I’ve heard from so many of you that you struggle with this, And there are so many ways that we can help ourselves, And this is only five. There are tons of ways, But these are just some helpful tips to get. You started Number one Keeping busy all day. I know that sounds really silly and simple, But often times our anxiety, loves and lives in the quiet When we have nothing to do And we are sitting at home And we are moping about It. Kind of takes a mole hill and turns it into a mountain When we have time to ruminate and think about things, It can make it so much worse. But if we are just going about our day, We’re doing things We’re making deals. We’re breaking hearts. We don’t have time to think about it. So I would encourage you if you are able plan your days out, Make sure you have things happening Back to back to back You,’re scooting on through The second helpful tip. Is what we call’feeling focusing 39, And this is something that we can do, no matter where we are, Which I love about tips, Because we never know when the anxiety may strike And feeling focusing is when we focus on the area in our body where We feel the anxiety For some of us. It might be our throat Our chest, Our stomach. It could be in our shoulders Wherever you feel it physically. I want you to focus on that spot And I want you to slowly breath into it And if you find your mind wandering Bring it back to that spot Keep breathing. Slowly – And I know this is just one of those things where you are like’Kati – that sounds really weird 39, But I promise you, by drawing your focus back to the area in your body. Back to that area Over and over Your anxiety will diminish It.’s because our mind can’t go out, searching for more things to worry us with It slowly, dissipates. The third helpful tip is exercise Now. Obviously I don’t want you to do anything to an extreme, But taking a thirty minute walk If you like to run and it’s not unhealthy, You go for a run. Maybe you jump some rope. Maybe you take your dog out. Maybe you walk with a friend, Maybe you do yoga Whatever it is. If you play tennis Play basketball There’s, so many things to do Just last week I went to Target and got Sean and I some tennis, rackets and basketballs. So we can play Anything. You can do to exert some physical energy Can help with anxiety, Often times when we have a lot of pent up. Energy Anxiety thrives So having an outlet for that. Even if it’s just nervous energy, Having an outlet like exercise Can really help bring it down. The fourth helpful tip is phoning a friend I feel like we are on Who Wants To Be a Millionaire, But it’s really important to contact people and to have people on what I always talk to my clients about on your’emergency call list’And this isn’t a real this isn’t like an emergency 39. I’m going to the ER I’m bleeding I broke a bone 39. This is 39. I’m feeling stressed I’m feeling overwhelmed. I don’t know what to do right now. 39. We need to have at least five people on this list. If you can, Because we never know who can pick up right, Some people might be in class. Some people might be asleep. Some people might be at work, We don’t know, But we want to make sure we have people that we can contact Even if it’s a text. I know now we text more than we actually call, But I want you to reach out to people Because having someone on the line Having someone talking to us, I think calling is the best Because hearing someone’s voice can be so soothing And sometimes when We feel like we are a ten on our anxiety scale. It can help bring us back down to maybe a six Or a five And the more we talk with them And the more we kind of vent to them about what’s going on with us. The better we will start to feel The fifth and final tip Is something that I don’t really talk that much about on my channel, And that is going to see a psychiatrist. And the reason that I wanted to put this in here Is because there are those of us who doing these things. This feeling focusing we’re exercising, We’re trying everything to help ourselves. We’re seeing our own therapist And nothing gives It’s not getting better, And sometimes it’s getting worse And seeing a psychiatrist. They can offer medications that can help with it. Now. Obviously, I’m a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist. I’m, not a physician. I don’t prescribe medication, But it can be so helpful and so pivotal in your recovery And don’t be ashamed of it. Many people seek help from psychiatrists. How else would they even exist? They wouldn’t have a job or career People see them. When we can’t do enough ourselves, The medication can help us get there. I often tell my clients – and this still rings. True. All research shows that therapy and medication gives us the best possible outcome, Because sometimes our mind is running so quickly. Things are happening so fast That we can’t even think about doing anything to help ourselves. We’re just trying to stay afloat. It’s so overwhelming, And medication can help with that, Bring that anxiety level down enough That we can actually take action. We can start making steps towards our recovery, Putting things in place, Creating plans. It can give us that little bit of squish. We need to get started, So I would encourage you If you have tried a lot of things And that’s not helping Reach out to your psychiatrist Or your general practitioner doctor And let’s start working on recovery. As always, don’t forget to subscribe to my channel. I put out videos five days a week And you don’t want to miss them, And if you have any tips and tricks of your own That have helped with your anxiety. Can you let us know below, Because we’re a wonderful community Sharing in our experience And together we’re getting better And we are towards a healthy mind and a healthy body. Now don’t forget to like the video And if you click below there,’s a little share button. Don’t forget to share it on reddit. That will help more people, get the tips and tricks that we know about. It will help get that information out there And keep working with me Towards a healthy mind and a healthy body. The snaps don’t bug the Okay, I like to snap Subtitles by the Amara org community.

Stop having panic attacks now: exposure, coping, and grounding

I'm going to show you how to stop having panic attacks using exposure therapy, coping skills and grounding skills and you can start applying this to your life. Right now. I'm clinical psychologist Dr. Ali Mattu. Psychology took me from almost flunking out of high school to becoming an assistant professor at Columbia University. Now I've left academia so I can give away everything I've learned to you for free. Welcome to the psych show. The first step to stopping panic attacks is to understand what exactly is happening when someone has a panic attack.

They experience a sudden rise in at least four of these symptoms. It's normal to feel the sensations when we're in a real dangerous situation like an animal's chasing us or before an important event, like a presentation for school or work. But what's so scary about panic attacks is the sensations can feel like they're coming out of nowhere. Your mind is an association machine. It connects things together, ice cream and a beautiful summer's day movies in popcorn and email from your boss and stress. All of this happens automatically it happens without you even realizing it through a process called classical conditioning. This is the stuff Ivan Pavlov was working on when he got dogs to salivate when they heard a metronome, sometimes weird things get associated together.

And for some reason, your mind has associated normal physical sensations of anxiety with a real sense of danger. Maybe you were really sick one day and had difficulty breathing or you were driving across a bridge and there was a lot more traffic than usual and you felt stuck and unsafe or you were using a drug and had a really bad experience with it. There are so many ways in which your mind You can experience those physical sensations of panic and why it might associate those sensations with danger. If you avoid going to certain places because you're afraid you might panic or you might do something really embarrassing. You might also have agoraphobia. This gets us to step two exposure therapy. It doesn't matter too much how these associations formed, what matters is they exist now. So we have to understand what is it that you're afraid might happen? When you panic, I want you to take a moment and write that down, write down what it is you're afraid might happen when you panic.

Maybe you're afraid that the panic attack will end. Maybe you're afraid of having a heart attack, or something really embarrassing happening, like fainting or making a fool of yourself or the ambulance and all these people being called Your rescue when it was a panic attack and not a heart attack. Or maybe you're afraid of losing control of hurting yourself hurting someone else of losing your mind, or maybe even dying. I wish I could tell you to not worry about this stuff. But you've already tried that and it hasn't worked. You can't out think panic attacks, these associations have been formed. And the only way we can break them apart is by gaining new experiences and that is where exposure therapy comes in. Before I introduce you to exposure therapy exercises, there's a couple things you need to know first, these exercises require you to get physically active.

So if you have any health problems like any of these conditions, talk to your doctor first and make sure it's okay to try out these exercises. Number two, if you're someone who has gone through a traumatic event or traumatic events, you might want to skip ahead and master step three and four first and then come back to exposure exercises. The reason for that step three and four are going to help you to feel more in control of your emotions.

And if you're someone who's gone through a traumatic event, just going through exposures without gaining that sense of control can make the exposures really overwhelming and can make it harder to break apart those associations. Remember those fears we wrote down a moment ago. What we're going to do now is try out a variety of exposure exercises and see what gets us in closest contact with that fear.

These exposure exercises are designed to recreate those sensations that you experience when you panic. So it might seem scary at first, what I want you to remember is they're not painful. They're designed to get your body active in the same way as when you have a panic attack. I want you after every exercise to rate them, zero to 100% house Similar were the things you felt when you did this exercise to when you experience a panic attack hyperventilate for one minute, hold your nose and breathe through a straw for two minutes. Hold your breath for 30 seconds. Sit with your head covered by a heavy coat or blanket for one minute.

Place a tongue depressor on the back of your tongue Run quickly in place with high knees for two minutes. Step Up and down on the stair or a step stool for two minutes. Hold up push up position for 60 seconds or as long as possible. Sit in a hot stuffy room or sauna, a hot car or a small room with a space heater. wear a tie turtleneck or scarf tightly around your neck for two minutes. Drink a hot drink. Drink an espresso or coffee spin in an office chair for one minute spin around while standing up for one minute.

Shake your head side to side for 30 seconds while looking ahead. with your eyes open, put your head between your legs and then sit up quickly. Lie down for one minute and then sit up quickly. Stare at yourself in a mirror for two minutes. Stare at a blank wall for two minutes. Stare at a small dot posted on the wall for two minutes. Stare at an optical illusion for two minutes, stare at a fluorescent light and then try to read something What got you closest in touch with your fears? Usually 1-3 of these exercises should do it now that you know how to recreate your fears. You have to start practicing these exposure exercises. So I want you to take one week of your life. And each day that week. I want you to sit down and practice these exposure exercises. Write down on a piece of paper what you're afraid might happen when you do the exposure exercise. Then do the exposure completely fully be in that present moment.

Be aware of what's happening in your mind during the exposure, what's happening in your body. And then after the exposure on that same piece of paper write down. Did your fear come true? Yes or no? How do you know if it came true or not? And what did you learn through this exposure, then do it again, do it three times in a row. If you do this for one week in time, you should start to break apart those associations that have been formed. Once you start to make progress with these exposures, then you want to play with the details a little bit like maybe you do this when you're home alone, or when you're outside in a crowded space or after drinking a lot of caffeine. Check out this video right over here. It'll walk you through even more details.

To sum it all up. The goal is, I want to help you get comfortable being uncomfortable. I want to help you to learn about what it's like. experienced these difficult sensations and then what actually happens to you when you go through them. So these associations are starting to break apart. Now it's time to move to step three, which is developing coping skills. But before I explain some of my favorite coping skills, we have to talk about what a coping skill is and what a safety behavior is.

Safety behaviors give you some immediate relief, but they keep you from getting in contact with the thing you fear. And when that happens when you're relying on safety behaviors. These associations they don't break apart because you're not learning any new information, completely avoiding a situation being on the lookout for escapes, only being able to get through with a safe person. Those are some examples of things that can be safety behaviors, coping skills, reduce your anxiety and help you to stay in contact with the thing you fear So those associations do break apart. Because you are learning new information you are getting in contact with a thing that is difficult for you safety behaviors reduce learning, while coping skills enhance it. This can get really tricky because what's a safety behavior for one person might be a coping skill for another. And what starts off as a coping skill might eventually become a safety behavior. So it can get really confusing. All this stuff exists on a continuum from highly safe behavior to highly coping behavior. To keep it really simple.

Ask yourself these two questions. Is this skill helping me to reach my goal right now? is it helping me to be flexible in the situation I'm in? If the answers are, yes, that's probably a good healthy coping skill. If the answer is no, then you might be dealing with a safety behavior that you want to phase out over time. The first goal I want you to try is slow, deep controlled breathing. This slows down your breathing, which triggers your body's parasympathetic nervous system, the part of your body that calms you down. I got a whole video about this, so you can check that out. But the quick version of it is, you want to work your way up to breathing in for four seconds. Holding it and then out for four seconds, so you can start by breathing in for two seconds, holding it out for two seconds, breathing in for three seconds, holding it out for three seconds and then four.

And you can just keep doing that until you feel like you're a little bit calmer and a little bit more present the dive reflex. This is a awesome skill that is universal to all vertebrates on this planet. Basically you are fooling your body into thinking you're diving into the water that also triggers your body's parasympathetic nervous system that calms itself down. I've got a whole video on how to do that. So if you're interested in that skill, check out that video. Get physically active, your body is fired up.

So do something with that energized body. Go for run, go for a bike ride, do a ton of jumping jacks do something that gives your body something to do think about The Doctor. One of my favorite episodes of Doctor Who has The Doctor talking to a small child who's afraid of monsters under his bed. Now, there actually are monsters under his bed spoilers for those of you haven't seen this episode, but it's you know, Doctor Who that's going to happen.

But what's really amazing is what he tells this child it's one of my favorite quotations about panic, and I'm going to read it to you all here because I don't want this video taken down due to copyright violations filed from the BBC. Let me tell you about scared. Your heart is beating so hard. I can feel it through your hands. There's so much blood and oxygen pumping through your brain. It's like rocket fuel. Right now you can run faster and fight harder. You can jump higher than you've ever been able to in your life. And you are so alert. It's like you can slow down time. What's wrong with scared? Scared is a superpower your superpower there is danger in this room and guess what? It's you reach out to someone. Call text dm, connect with someone else. Ask them to send you support. Ask them to send you a funny meme to reassure you or talk to them about something that's completely not related to panic. Connecting with someone else might help you to get a little bit out of your head and help you to reach your Goal whatever it is in that situation question for all the Psychees What is your favorite coping skill? Let's flood the comments section with a ton of coping skills, so we can help whoever discovers this video in the future.

Step number four is to develop grounding skills. Some people who experienced panic also experienced depersonalization or Derealization. This is where you are going through the motions of your day. But you don't really feel that plugged in to yourself to your body to your mind, you might feel like you're on autopilot. Or you might not feel like the things around you are really happening.

One of my patients recently described it as having this brain fog and it was really hard to just kind of navigate through daily events. So if this kind of stuff happens to you, we need grounding skills that help you to feel plugged into your body plugged into your mind plugged into the present. moment, or they ground you in an important memory and important place or an important idea. Grounding skills can also be really helpful if someone around you is having a panic attack and you want to help that person through this difficult experience 54321 This is a skill that really engages all of your different senses. It starts by looking at five different things around you, then to touch four different things to listen to three different sounds, to pick up on two different smells. And to notice one taste, it's usually whatever taste is in your mouth. You really want to try to focus in on those sensations and if there's one type of sensation that works a lot better for you.

It's okay just to stick to that one. Like if you really like the touching to touch your hands or to touch your jeans or the material on your shirts. Stuff like that you can just focus on that sensation that's totally fine. Make a list pick something that you know well, and that you can't easily finish like your favorite movies or your favorite superheroes or the places you like to go and your local community. I like to pick my favorite starships from Star Trek and I just kind of cycle through those guys.

I'm a huge Trekkie. This is something that's going to ground you in an idea, something that you care about, and it's going to make that feeling of depersonalization Derealization, a little bit less scary, transport yourself to a place you know, well, this could be your home, your school, your work, doesn't really matter where it is only what matters is that you know a lot of details about it. Imagine walking through the front door of this place entering it. What do you see next? what's around you keep thinking about all the details as you navigate through the space.

This is going to ground you in a place that's very familiar to you. And again, take you away from those some of those feelings of depersonalization and derealization. Experience intense sensations. This includes listening to loud music or a really funny video on YouTube, drinking a hot beverage, or sucking on a lemon or peppermint candy. pinching the bridge of your nose, snapping a rubber band against your arm, anything that's going to shock your nervous system and focus your complete attention, get absorbed in an activity, do something that's going to completely require all of your focus maybe something that you do well or you know how to do well something that's really going to activate your mind and get your hands moving. Something like that would also get you out of depersonalization derealization and make you feel a bit more present If you've tried everything in this video and are still struggling there's two things I want you to consider.

The first is speaking with an anxiety expert, a therapist who can guide you through this process in a much more detailed way than I can in a short YouTube video. The other thing to consider is a consultation with a psychiatrist, they might be able to prescribe medication that can bring down the intensity of anxiety so that you can greater apply these things to your life.

If you want to learn more about anxiety check out this playlist that has all my anxiety videos, you can learn a lot more about exposure therapy and my own journey with anxiety or right over there. All right now it's time for the weekly Geck Boo (GCBU) challenge. This is where I share how I'm working on getting comfortable being comfortable this week. The big thing for me this week has been trying to catch up on my inbox over the summer and fall I really let things get out of hand.

I had hundreds and hundreds of emails that were that were needed a response. And I haven't responded to. So this week, the uncomfortable thing for me is to go through it because it's very overwhelming to even open that inbox and to write uncomfortable messages where I say, Hey, I'm sorry for this late response. I had a lot going on. And I'm now getting back to you like a year after I promised. I'm so sorry. So that's, that's my weekly Geck Boo challenge.

What are you working on? Let me know in the comments below. Or if you want to join me this Friday, I'm hosting my weekly office hours. This is a time where for one hour on Instagram, I go live to hear about what you are working on out there in the Psychee community, and how I can help and how we can help each other to reach our goals and to help each other get comfortable being uncomfortable. So if you want to join me for my weekly live office hours, come over to Instagram I'm @AliMattu and we'll talk about all this stuff and we'll support each other. Share this video with someone who struggles with panic in your life. And if you want more videos that celebrate mental health, make psychology fun and easy to understand.

Be sure to subscribe to the psych show and now my favorite comment of the week.

How LSD and shrooms could help treat anxiety, addiction and depression

It was the most peaceful, joyous, incredible, life changing experience I've ever had in my life. There were scary parts, foreboding parts … I always knew there was beautiful and joy and peace on the other side of it. It was freeing, it was really freeing. This is Alana. She’s describing what she felt after she took a dose of this stuff — psilocybin. It’s a naturally occurring psychedelic compound, the kind you find in magic mushrooms. But she wasn’t tripping in a dorm room or at Woodstock — it actually wasn’t recreational at all. If anything became unreal or I was feeling nervous or not in touch with reality, I would squeeze his hand and he would squeeze mine back just to reassure me that I was okay and everything was alright. It was part of a controlled medical test to see if psychedelics could be useful in helping people quit cigarettes. Alana had been smoking for 37 years before her session with psilocybin, and she hasn’t had a cigarette since. Research on psychedelics for medical use is preliminary. Most studies suffer from really small sample sizes.

That’s partly because the federal government lists LSD and psilocybin as Schedule 1 drugs. So researchers face extra red tape, and funding is really hard to come by. Vox writer German Lopez reviewed dozens of studies that have been done. He found that psychedelics show promise for treating addiction, OCD, anxiety, and in some cases, depression. One small study of 15 smokers found that 80 percent were able to abstain from smoking for six months after a psilocybin treatment. In a pilot study of 12 advanced cancer patients suffering from end-of-life anxiety, participants who took psilocybin generally showed lower scores on a test of depression. And smaller study suggested psilocybin treatment could also help people with alcohol dependence cut back on their drinking days.

We don’t have all the answers as to what exactly these treatments are doing in the brain. But they seem to work by providing a meaningful, even mystical experience that leads to lasting changes in a patient's life. The issues that I talked about, or thought about, or went into during my experience were transformative in the sense that I got to look at them through a different lens. I know this sounds weird, I feel like I have more connections in my brain that I couldn't access before That feeling that Alana is describing is actually pretty spot-on. When you take LSD your brain looks something like this. You can actually see a higher degree of connectivity between various parts of the brain, it’s not limited to the visual cortex.

This communication inside the brain helps explain visual hallucinations — and the researchers argue that it could also explain why psychedelics can help people overcome serious mental issues. They wrote that you can think of psychiatric disorders as the brain being “entrenched in pathology.” Harmful patterns become automated and hard to change, and that’s what can make things like anxiety, addiction and depression very hard to treat. That’s Albert Garcia-Romeu, he’s a Johns Hopkins researcher who worked on studies of of psilocybin and smoking addiction, like the one that Alana's involved with. He says that when participants take psychedelics, One of the big remaining questions here is how long these benefits actually last after just the one-time treatment. A review of research on LSD-assisted psychotherapy and alcoholism found no statistically significant benefits after 12 months. And a recent study on psilocybin and depression found that benefits significantly dropped off after three months. And of course are some big risks to using psychedelic drugs. It’s hard to predict a patient’s reaction and some might actually endanger themselves.

Those predisposed to psychotic conditions are especially at risk for having a traumatic experience while on the drug. It’s difficult to draw solid conclusions from the existing studies. But there’s more than enough promise here to merit further research and further funding for that research. As Matthew Johnson of Johns Hopkins said, "These are among the most debilitating and costly disorders known to humankind.” For some people, no existing treatments help. But psychedelics might. One thing you might still be wondering is why so much of this research is so new, when we've known when we've known about psychedelics for thousands of years. Well since these drugs are so old, they can't be patented, which means that pharmaceutical companies don't really have any incentive to fund any research into them.

So that really leaves it up to governments and private contributors to fund all these studies. And there actually was a lot of research done into these drugs in the 50s and 60s, but there was a big enough backlash to the abuse of psychedelics in that period, especially around events like Woodstock, that funding really dried up, and research stopped. And that's why it's only now that we see this research happening, with private, not government contributions..