Two
studies from Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania show that there has
been a shift in happiness since the 1970s, when women claimed to be happier than
men. One of the studies explains that since the 1960s, men have cut back on unpleasant
activities and relax more. On the other hand, women are taking on more tasks than
they did four decades ago. They have replaced housework with working outside the
home, yet are still responsible for the house work. This means that a womans
"to do" list has increased with less time to do everything. As a result,
a woman feels stressed, under-accomplished and fatigued! How can anyone be happy
with all that on her plate?
The
obvious question: Why cant women relax more, the way men do? The surprising
answer is that they are afraid! When you have been in prison for most of your
life where everything has been defined and structured, you are afraid of freedom,
making choices and going with the flow to let things unfold. Relaxation, fun and
quiet can be downright unnerving because there would be no one to validate your
performance. Also, you are accustomed to suppressing feelings of unworthiness
and so, you actually work hard to make those compliments keep flowing your way,
See what I can do!
What
men have realized is that their health has been compromised by stress especially
the cardio-vascular and digestive systems and it is just not worth it! At the
end of the day they have heard their own fathers express regret that they missed
out on family time; they were not present to life while it was happening and if
they had it to do all over again, they would have worked less and enjoyed more!
As a result, their sons have listened and cut back responsibilities to ease up
on themselves, most importantly, to live in the present.
Women
rarely live in the present. Women stew about the past getting stuck in negative
thoughts or a resentment loop. Then they worry about the future, what will happen
later or what is next on the to-do list. Women can learn from men how to live
in the present and not dilute it.
Its
time for women to love themselves. I dont mean standing in front of a mirror
and trying to convince yourself about how beautiful you are. True self-love means
valuing yourself by your own standards, not someone elses or when no one
else understands you. Ralph Waldo Emerson said, To be great is to be misunderstood.
Its time to shape your own world or the world will shape you according to
its own image and this will become your barometer for purpose as opposed to your
own passion. Ask yourself: Whom do you fit with? And do you need to fit at all?
Lets
learn from men how to be happier because we have forgotten how:
Recognize that
your addiction to busyness is a survival mechanism. You are not thriving, but
living in stress-mode fight or flight hormonal rush. Start putting your
feet up on the coffee table and watching TV. Ease up on your standards. Everything
is perfectly imperfect, the way you are.
Solve
your problems instead of stewing about them. Approach them from different angles
to see what works. Dont get absorbed by them. They are a small part of your
big picture. Like a man, stress should not keep you from making love and experiencing
intimacy.
Dilute
the drama. Objectify and distance yourself from the upset or conflict to reduce
its impact. Sometimes you will find it humorous from this perspective.
Dont
agree to everything. Express your feelings honestly and briefly. Learn to say,
Later, honey.
Liberate
yourself from old beliefs and too many duties. Do you really want to be like June
Cleaver, Donna Reed or Hillary Clinton?
About
the Author Debbie
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 WHLI 1100AM in New York City ,
produces a weekly wellness newsletter, and has been featured on radio/ TV and
print media. To learn more visit
her site.
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