

Jeff Halevy
Halevy Fitness
www.HalevyFitness.com
Transcendental Meditation (TM) is easily one of the most hyped forms of meditation. Since The Beatles first tried it decades ago, it’s garnered the following of a bevy of celebrities and high profile individuals, like Russell Simmons and Jerry Seinfeld.
TM also has one of the largest libraries of scientific research supporting it; substantiating claims of everything from increased cardiovascular health to decreased violence to increased creativity. But celebrity endorsements and even the best academic studies can hardly be relied on as conclusive proof.
So why has this method of meditation endured the test of time and received a stamp of approval from doctors and celebrities alike?
In short, because it works.
The rest of this article is available HERE
Jeff Halevy
Despite the market’s recent upswing, we’re facing a time of great economic upset and instability. Many New Yorkers feel helpless and hopeless; buried in debt, unemployed – how could it ever change?
At times like this keeping ourselves in a positive, resourceful mental state is most important. How can we ever expect to change anything when our focus is solely on how bad it is and how much worse it will get? Believe in the Law of Attraction? Well, you better be careful what you’re focused on!
For this reason, New York area therapists are seeing growing numbers of new clients seeking treatment for depression stemming from the current economic turbulence.
But the recession needn’t become a depression.CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE
The human 'operating system' is our set of beliefs; our thoughts and behaviors are our programs. In other words, the way we run our lives – how we organize and interpret experience -- is our operating system: the structure of how we live and what we think to be possible and impossible for us. The potential range of thoughts we have, like programs by an operating system, is controlled only by beliefs. Thoughts and behaviors that aren’t compatible with our beliefs just won’t work.
This is why there’s actually very little power in positive thinking. Going back to the computer metaphor, you can wish and will for non-matching programs to work on the wrong computer, but it’s just not going to happen. If you believe “all men are scum,” what are the odds you’ll ever be able to have a deep trusting relationship? Or if you believe “I’m a fat loser,” do you really think you’ll ever stick to a diet and exercise regimen? Of course not! Your thoughts will always coincide with your operating system: your beliefs. If you’re ‘running’ a bad set of beliefs, the best intentions, thoughts and actions will never stick because they’re a system mismatch.
As Henry Ford said, “Whether you think can or you can't, you're right.” Our beliefs can be the most empowering or most limiting force in our lives. The key to change isn’t forcing ourselves to do or think differently, but instead changing beliefs.
So think about some of the things you tried to change but couldn’t over the past few months or years. What underlying belief was there that sabotaged you? That you’ll always fail, that people aren’t to be trusted, that life will always let you down? Maybe it’s none of these examples, but what is it?
There are three steps to changing beliefs, and they are…all in my next article!
For those unacquainted with the concept, this simply means stating what you're committing to accomplish, not what you're committing to not do or stop doing. For example, someone who wants to eat better shouldn't create an outcome of "I won't pig out," but instead a 'juicy' emotionally-resonant "I'll only allow things that make me feel healthy and powerful to enter my body."
And now research supports this NLP principle; in a nutshell, if you try to *not* do something, the likelihood of it happening may likely INCREASE:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/07/health/07mind.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
Jeff Halevy
www.HalevyFitness.com
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/can-you-get-fit-in-six-minutes-a-week/
Jeff Halevy
www.HalevyFitness.com