"Think Yourself Thin"
Can you really lose weight just by thinking about it?
Scientists now seem to think you can. Researchers at Harvard
have come to startling conclusions about the body-mind
connection.
Just Think About It. How many times has someone said that to
you? More than once, I'll bet. But now it seems it's even
better advice than ever.
It seems an amazing discovery has been made by
researchers at Harvard University.
Psychologists studied 84 hotel cleaners, whose job involved
physical activity. It seems that half the group lost an average
of two pounds and lowered their blood pressure somewhere in the
region of 10 percent, while the other half had no noticeable
changes. If the successful half had been put on a new diet, the
world right now would have bought millions of copies of it and
every talk show would be discussing how good it is.
If you're wondering what caused half of the hotel cleaners
to lose weight, you may be in for a bit of shock. The only
difference between the two groups was that the successful group
had been coached to believe that the jobs they were doing
burned calories, made them healthier and helped them lose
weight.
In other words the weight loss group were taught to believe
what they were already doing
anyway was going to have health benefits and
the health benefits appeared, without any extra effort
on their part.
The chief researcher, Ellen Langer, claimed 'The changes
were a function of the change in mindset alone'.
She goes on to say 'If you can
put the mind in a healthy place, you can have dramatic
physiological consequences'. In other words you
can lose weight, or improve your general health just by
thinking about it the right way.
That's an amazing statement and has implications for
everyone who would like to enjoy vibrant good health. If you
imagine yourself losing weight and burning up calories during
normal daily activity, you will lose weight and bodyfat. That
simple. No dieting, no extra exercising, no pills, no shakes,
no meal replacements.
It almost sounds too good to be true, but the researchers at
Harvard have now proven that it's not. So next time you see a
slim friend who eats what they want and never puts weight on,
you'll know their secret.
Think about that!
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