Archive for Famous Fives

Foresight Five

Bit of press coverage in the UK today about the publication of Foresight’s Mental Capital and Wellbeing Report.

As the Times and the Guardian explain, some 400 scientists have identified the following five activities that we should do every day to be mentally healthy:

  • Connect
    Developing relationships with family, friends, colleagues and neighbours will enrich your life and bring you support
  • Be active
    Sports, hobbies such as gardening or dancing, or just a daily stroll will make you feel good and maintain mobility and fitness
  • Be curious
    Noting the beauty of everyday moments as well as the unusual and reflecting on them helps you to appreciate what matters to you
  • Learn
    Fixing a bike, learning an instrument, cooking – the challenge and satisfaction brings fun and confidence
  • Give
    Helping friends and strangers links your happiness to a wider community and is very rewarding

They’re difficult to argue with, but it does feel a bit general to me. And personally, having nothing in there about being in the natural world is rather surprising. If I have more time I’ll do a bit of digging into how they’ve arrived at the conclusions, particularly whether these are just things which on average helped more people, or if they’re geniunely things which they believe will work for everyone.

What do you think? How do the experts’ suggestions measure up to your five-a-day?

Posted by Andy Gibson

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Thinking about vegetables

Richard Gerver has kindly shared his five-a-day. Richard is the former Head of Grange primary school, described as one the most creative schools in the world. Richard in now BIG in creativity in education ……

1. I am a fatalist…what will be will be, stress has never changed the course of history!

2. Running, God you get so tired you have no choice but to sleep well and all you can think about is the pain in your knees!

3. Practice the art of potato thinking…always look beyond a problem and imagine the solution…it is far too easy to stop at the ‘but’ and by doing so you lose your sense of empowerment.

4. Listen to music and plenty of it…often in the dark….there’s nothing like a bit of Morrissey to make you realise that your life’s not so bad!

5. Sharing your issues with others…talking them through and letting them out!

Sponsor a marathon runner and they will tell you anything!

Posted by Tessy Britton

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Sir Ken’s New Book

Element

Sir Ken Robinson’s new book, The Element, will be out in February 09. Details have just been released by the London Business Forum for the launch of the book in London, which will be on the 3 February at the IMAX. To book click here.

Richard Gerver, who had the good fortune to read The Element over the summer when he visited Sir Ken in New York described it as ‘one of the most powerful books I have ever read’…. which is as close to an early book review we are going to get at the moment. I can’t wait to read it!

Lovely Richard is running a marathon next year for Help the Hospices ….. Please sponsor him!

Posted by Tessy Britton

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It’s a mad world

Thanks to Simeon Brody of communitycare.co.uk for sharing his five-a-day:

For what it’s worth, here are my five a day

- Have a project or try to learn something new
- Regular exercise
- Don’t take things too seriously
- Try to let worries go
- Try to be sociable

Not that I do them every day of course, but I try.

We’re all trying Simeon – good luck with them! And nice to see sociability on the list, I couldn’t agree more.

Posted by Andy Gibson

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Dr Liz Miller’s health tips

I was honoured to receive a lovely e-mail from Dr Liz Miller recently about the Mindapples project. Dr Liz was voted Mind Champion of the Year in June and featured in Stephen Fry’s 2007 documentary series the Secret Life of the Manic Depressive. She writes wonderfully about self-management of mental wellbeing, and also practises what she preaches to manage her own mental health – hence my admiration for her. You can read more about her in this great interview with her in the Guardian. (My favourite quote: “In medicine we live on this myth that illness is for other people.”)

Liz has very kindly sent me her top ten tips for managing your health, which I’m republishing here as part thank you to her, and part inspiration for the rest of us. Enjoy!

1. Eat healthy food
Start the day with a fresh fruit smoothie. Even easier, a glass of tap water, rehydrates ready for the new day. Eating a healthy diet is about eating natural food. If it was not around 10,000 years ago, then it is probably not good for you and you should not eat it. The best food is organic from your own garden or local farmer. You can have a box of organic goodies delivered to your door. A natural diet and daily exercise keeps the blood sugar steady and that helps keep your energy up, and helps concentration.

2. Avoid junk food
Treat your stomach with respect. Always read the label. Factories turn food into junk. The purpose of a biscuit is to sell another biscuit. Did you ever see a Kit Kat tree? A packet of crisps can be stored for 2 or even three years, and the crisps are still crunchy, there is nothing alive in that bag. “You are what you eat” and do you want to end as a MacDonald and fries or a Pizza express? A modern milking cow produces up 20 litres of milk a day, ten times as much as a natural cow. Modern milking cows produce high concentrations of hormones, most of which go into the milk. Dairy products do more for supermarkets selling yoghurt and semi-skimmed milk than for anyone else in the food chain. The stomach is one of the most complex and interesting organs in the body. It even has its own nervous system or mini brain. It sorts out, digests and absorbs the complete range of diets the different people eat from across the world eat. On the other hand, putting something like Coca-Cola into this delicate and refined organ is like pouring battery acid into your PC. It is hardly surprising people get indigestion.

3. Omega-3 Supplements
The easiest and quickest way to improve your health is through Omega –3 supplements. Omega 3 essential fatty acids help a wide range of medical conditions from heart disease, mental health to better joints. Shop on-line at www.mindfirst.co.uk. or at any health food store, on-line or in the High Street. It takes a couple months for their full benefit to be clear. Choose one without vitamin A or vitamin D. If you are a vegetarian and do not want to take fish oils, then Udo’s Oil, Hemp Seed Oil, or VegEPA are fish free alternatives. The next step is a multimineral, multivitamin supplement and if you can choose natural vitamins in preference to synthetic ones. Once upon a time, a balanced diet gave you the minerals and vitamins you needed but fifty years ago, fruit and vegetables contain five times the vitamins and minerals as they do today. Over-intensive farming, long periods of storage in warehouses, refrigeration, picking unripe fruit and vegetables mean food quality is getting worse.

4. Exercise daily:
Exercise needs to be daily, varied and fun; like dancing, football, running, walking the dog, taking the stairs rather than the lift and running up the down escalator. The gym is fine, but variety is the spice of life and the key to being fit. There are three types of exercise:

  1. Those that concentrate on posture such as Yoga, Pilates, Alexander technique, postural alignment and martial arts training. These exercises concentrate on balance, so a person gets their ears above their shoulders, above their hips, above their knees, above their ankles.
  2. Those that concentrate on building strength for short bursts of exercise, such as weightlifting, shot putt and gym machines. These exercises build muscle. Core strength is more important than bulging pecs. Regardless of how you look on the beach, if you have strong arms, strong legs and a weak back, you will develop back trouble. Rather than developing specific muscles, all round strength is important.
  3. Exercises for stamina, such as running, swimming, football, dancing, skipping, cycling and fast walking.

Try a different exercise, each day of the week

5. Get outside and feel the rays

Sunshine is an instant pickmeup. Just half an hour in the midday sun, especially in winter makes a big difference to theday. Sunshine makes us feel better; so just getting out of the office for a quick wander, even in the rain there is more light outside than there is inside. If you find the winter depressing, think about buying a light box, or a light visor from www.outsidein.co.uk Put it on full blast while you clean your teeth and make your breakfast to stop the winter blues.

6. Avoid alcohol and other poisons
Alcohol reaches those parts that other poisons don’t. It damages the brain, the liver, and the pancreas. Few organs escape its effects. Nothing reduces a person’s energy, damages their lungs, narrows their blood-vessels, gives people wrinkles and increases their risk of cancer quicker than cigarettes. In the right environment, the body can recover from almost anything. Drinking and smoking stop the body healing.

7. Breath from your belly
Most people pant! They take far too many short breaths using only the top part of their lungs. Longer deeper breaths increase the oxygen in the blood without over breathing. Real breathing comes from the belly and it has become counterintuitive. When you breathe in, the belly comes out as the diaphragm pushes down to allow the bottom of the lungs to fill. As you breathe out, the belly comes back in and pushes the air out, like a piston moving up and down. Belly breathing needs the shoulders to be relaxed down and back. Babies and small children naturally breathe from their belly. The first time you start to control your breathing it may feel as though you are going to suffocate, no one has yet. Practise breathing from your belly for a few minutes everyday and gradually it will become more of a habit as you develop a more natural way of living. Being able to control your breathing, is the fastest way to control your state of mind. It is impossible to panic if you breathe gently and quietly!

8. Rest and relax
There are many ways to relax and calm the mind, from meditation through breathing, repeating a mantra, or just becoming more aware of what is happening from moment to moment. Other people relax by reading, sewing or through a hobby. Nonetheless everyone needs time just to chill out, rest and recover and let go the worries of the day.

9. Exercise your mind

In some ways this is the opposite of the last tip. Just as the mind needs to relax, so it also needs to work. The most effective way to work is to focus or concentrate on one task at a time. It can take twenty minutes to recover from an interruption. Modern life is full of diversions, e-mail, texts, mobile phones and it is easy to be continually distracted and do nothing all day. Multitasking sounds great but it is not efficient. People work better if they concentrate on one task at a time. The natural rhythm of concentration lasts between forty and fifty minutes. After that time, take a few minutes to recover, with some belly breathing, stilling the mind, and having a drink of water, before starting the next cycle. Focus takes time to develop. Just as it takes time to get the body fit, it takes time to train the mind to focus on one task only. Start by setting a timer, to help you stay concentrated for a few minutes. As you get mentally fitter, your concentration span gets longer, until you can manage to concentrate intensely for up to forty or fifty minutes at a time. A healthy mind is a fit mind. It is a mind that does what you want it to, rather one that is at the mercy of every passing whim and impulse.

10. Learn all you can about health
Although there is more and more health information available, much of it seems contradictory. One person says do this and another person says do that. Nonetheless, every health article usually has one or two good points worth remembering. But there always has to be a balance, for example, exercise is important but not if you have the flu. Activity has to be balanced with rest, concentration with relaxation and living a healthy life with the demands of earning a living. Some people recommend a low-fat diet, others a low sugar diet. You alone are the best person to find out what suits you and helps you feel healthy and energised.

By being interested in health, you learn more about yourself and this will encourage you to live a happier and healthier life.

Read more about Dr Liz Miller, and drop her a line (like I did), at www.drlizmiller.co.uk.

Posted by Andy Gibson

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Mind Training

I went to see some very helpful people at Mind this morning for their campaign skills training – a marvellous free service they offer to people like me who care about mental health but don’t know what to do about it. It was great to meet people at the sharp end of the spectrum, campaigning at local level for specific support for service users. Very humbling to see how much passion and commitment goes into making even the smallest changes to the ‘system’.

Interestingly, the first ‘icebreaker’ question of the day was “What’s good for your mental health?” – a very Mindapples question if ever there was one. Everyone had at least one thing to say, so, in no particular order, here’s what they said:

  • walks in the open air
  • supporting your football team (when they win)
  • being listened to and respected
  • being taken seriously
  • talking to friends
  • doing something you’re good at
  • chocolate

The idea of being listened to and taken seriously is a big one for me. I’m not sure if it’s something we can always control ourselves though, more like something we need from our environment. That’s why we’re focussing on the simple, practical things we can all DO to care for our minds. But it’s important to acknowledge that what’s good for our mental health is as much about our context as our activities.

Here are some more ideas from Mind on how to improve your mental wellbeing.

Posted by Andy Gibson

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Expert Fives: the Mental Health Foundation

Ten Ways to Look After Your Mental Health

I spent a very pleasant few hours with Simon Lawton Smith of the grassroots organisation ok2b today. I’d not met Simon before, but we heard some excellent piano playing at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama (I thoroughly recommend their free recitals), and then had a good chat about Mindapples.

Simon’s day job is Head of Policy at the Mental Health Foundation, and he told me about the excellent work they’ve been doing around day-to-day mental and emotional wellbeing. They’ve come up with ten things we can all do to improve our day-to-day mental health. In no particular order, they are:

  • Talk about your feelings
  • Keep active
  • Eat well
  • Drink sensibly
  • Keep in touch with friends and loved ones
  • Ask for help
  • Take a break
  • Do something you’re good at
  • Accept who you are
  • Care for others

I think that’s a pretty good list, but I’d like to know how it compares to yours. How many of theirs would make your top five? Anything they’ve missed? Take the survey yourself and tell us your five-a-day, and we’ll see how they compare.

Posted by Andy Gibson

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Famous Fives – with Scott Pack


I asked Scott Pack about a week ago to think about what his Five A Day might be, and he very kindly just replied with this unusually literary focused list:

“One.  I will read aloud to the children every night.  Reading out loud is very different to the normal reading experience and I can almost feel my brain working in new ways while I do it.  Of course, some books are better than others to read aloud.  My kids are 9 and 6 so we go for a children’s novel and tackle a chapter a night.  If the book isn’t best suited to the fine old oral tradition then it can be quite a chore but that just makes the experience all the more useful for the old noggin.

Two.  Looking up.  At clouds.  At treetops.  At the roofs of buildings.  Even the most familiar territory can appear completely different if you approach it from a new angle.

Three.  I try to write a haiku every day.  They are short so that makes things easier but the 5-7-5 syllable constraint certainly keeps me on my toes.

Four.  Reading lots of books at once.  I currently have about a dozen on the go.  Only 2 or 3 are regular daily reads.  Others are short story collections or diaries or collections of letters that I dip into from time to time.  There is an element of plate-spinning about it but it does make things interesting.

Five.  Solve maths equations while jogging.

I lied about number five.”

Scott Pack is the Commercial Director of The Friday Project.  Scott runs a very creative blog: Me And My Big Mouth. Scott used to have some rather uncomplimentary, (but amusing) press quotes on his blog about his Waterstones buying days … Where have they gone Scott?

Posted by Tessy Britton

 

 

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Famous Fives – with Dave Briggs

Today we’ve asked Dave Briggs about the most important things he does to stay mentally well. I asked Dave if wearing orange was part of a much grander plan?

“To be honest, the tshirt I am wearing in my Facebook pic, and the one to which you were referring, I think, is red rather than orange. I don’t know if the clothes I wear have much effect on my state of mind, other than that stripes often cheer me up and wearing odd socks gives me a sneaky feeling of barely-seen rebellion.

As a type 1 diabetic, the number one of my five a day is to ensure I take my insulin injections at the right times of the day. I’ve only been diagnosed for about a year now, and am still struggling to come to terms with it all. Having to do four injections a day depresses the hell out of me, but not doing them just makes things worse. I had a crippling bout of depression last summer, when I was really struggling to cope with my illness and for various complicated reasons too boring to recount here, my family was apart from me for 5 out of every 7 days. I don’t want to go there again, that’s for sure, so being a good diabetic means not being sad, which is good.

Being clean helps me feel happy I think. Lots of showers are good.

Looking at my 6 year old when he is asleep helps put things into perspective. It also helps me forget what a sod he’s been during the day.

I like helping people, going out of my way to do stuff for them, and doing it quickly, too. I think it probably comes out of some deep-rooted desire to be liked. I dunno. But it’s nice when folk say ‘thanks’.

Taking a break from things always helps. I can get wound up about stuff, especially when it is things that I care about and that I devote my time to. It’s not always as easy to progress things as it possibly ought to be, but getting in a strop generally doesn’t help. On the other hand, sometimes when you ignore a problem, it will go away. Not often, but sometimes.”

Thanks so much Dave. This was so interesting!

Dave Briggs is a full time civil servant, working in the further education sector, building relationships with and between stakeholder groups both on and offline. In his spare time, he is a regular blogger and social networker and has a particular interest in how the social web can bring government closer to the people it serves.

Posted by Tessy Britton

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