Saturday, December 23, 2017

5 Ways You Can Use Mindfulness To Fix Your Brain, Reduce Stress And Boost Performance- Forbes

APR 1, 2016 @ 08:43 AM 105,574
5 Ways You Can Use Mindfulness To Fix Your Brain, Reduce Stress And Boost Performance
Travis Bradberry , CONTRIBUTOR
I cover emotional intelligence and leadership performance.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
There’s no shortage of advice out there claiming to make you better, but mindfulness meditation is the rare, research-proven technique that boosts your performance by physically altering your brain.
Researchers from the University of British Columbia recently pooled data from more than 20 studies to understand how practicing mindfulness affects the brain. While the researchers found significant changes in eight brain regions, there are two regions that are of particular importance to you.
In these brain regions, the simple act of practicing mindfulness increased both brain activity and the density of brain tissue:
1. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), which is responsible for self-control. It enables you to resist distractions, to focus and to avoid impulsivity in order to work efficiently and make great decisions. The ACC is also responsible for flexibility, and people who have problems in this brain area are known to stick to ineffective problem-solving strategies when they should be adjusting their approach.
2. The hippocampus, which, among other things, is responsible for resilience in the face of setbacks and challenges. The hippocampus is readily damaged by stress, making it a need area for most people. The hippocampus is red/orange in the image below.
APR 1, 2016 @ 08:43 AM 105,574 The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets
5 Ways You Can Use Mindfulness To Fix Your Brain, Reduce Stress And Boost Performance
Travis Bradberry , CONTRIBUTOR
I cover emotional intelligence and leadership performance.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
There’s no shortage of advice out there claiming to make you better, but mindfulness meditation is the rare, research-proven technique that boosts your performance by physically altering your brain.
Researchers from the University of British Columbia recently pooled data from more than 20 studies to understand how practicing mindfulness affects the brain. While the researchers found significant changes in eight brain regions, there are two regions that are of particular importance to you.
In these brain regions, the simple act of practicing mindfulness increased both brain activity and the density of brain tissue:
1. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), which is responsible for self-control. It enables you to resist distractions, to focus and to avoid impulsivity in order to work efficiently and make great decisions. The ACC is also responsible for flexibility, and people who have problems in this brain area are known to stick to ineffective problem-solving strategies when they should be adjusting their approach.
2. The hippocampus, which, among other things, is responsible for resilience in the face of setbacks and challenges. The hippocampus is readily damaged by stress, making it a need area for most people. The hippocampus is red/orange in the image below.
Mindfulness is a simple, yet effective form of meditation that enables you to gain control of unruly thoughts and behaviors. People who practice mindfulness are more focused, even when they are not meditating. Mindfulness is an excellent technique to reduce stress because it allows you to stop feeling out of control, to stop jumping from one thought to the next, and to stop ruminating on negative thoughts. Overall, it’s a great way to make it through your busy day in a calm and productive manner.
Just as doing curls increases muscle density in your biceps, practicing mindfulness increases the density of brain matter where it counts. Mindfulness is perhaps the only technique that can change your brain in this way, which produces a ripple of other positive effects. Thankfully, you can reap the benefits of mindfulness in as little as a few minutes a day.
Gandhi was once with a group of followers who inquired about his schedule. He told them, “I need to set aside at least one hour each day to meditate.” They were vexed by this and told him, “There’s no way you have that much time!” He responded, “Well, if that’s the case, then I need to set aside two hours a day to meditate.”
Like Gandhi, you’ll soon find that mindfulness is one of very few things that are well worth your precious time, and the busier you are, the more important it is to have a clear mind if you want to be productive.
Mindfulness doesn’t have to take place in the mountains of Nepal or a weekend retreat under a vow of silence. The beauty of the technique is that it’s so simple you can do it anywhere and just about anytime.
Mindfulness is the simple act of focusing all of your attention on the present. This requires you to observe your thoughts and feelings objectively, without judgment, which helps you to awaken your experience and live in the moment. This way, life doesn’t pass you by.
Leadership
APR 1, 2016 @ 08:43 AM 105,574 The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets
5 Ways You Can Use Mindfulness To Fix Your Brain, Reduce Stress And Boost Performance
Travis Bradberry , CONTRIBUTOR
I cover emotional intelligence and leadership performance.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
I realize this might sound a bit abstract and complicated at first, but it isn’t. Here’s how you can do it, even with your busy schedule.
1. Focus on your breathing. Sit in a comfortable chair with your feet flat on the floor, and spend a few minutes doing nothing but breathing slowly in and out. Focus all your attention on your breath. Feel the air travel into your mouth, down your windpipe and into your lungs. Then feel your body shift as it pushes the air out of your lungs. When thoughts surface that distract you from your breathing, don’t worry. Just let them pass, and shift your attention back to your breathing. After some practice, you should be able to spend a few to several minutes doing nothing but immersing yourself in the act of breathing, at the expense of all the other thoughts.
2. Go for a walk. You can also meditate just by going for a walk. All you need to do is focus on each step. Feel your legs move and your feet hit the ground. Focus solely on the act of walking and the sensations of your surroundings (the cool breeze, the hot sun, or the dog barking in the distance). When you feel other thoughts creeping into your mind, focus even harder on the sensation of walking. Focusing on something that’s second nature is refreshing because it alters your frame of mind as you turn off the never-ending stream of thoughts that normally dominate your attention. You can do the same thing when you brush your teeth, comb your hair, or eat a meal.
3. Feel your body. You don’t even need to stop doing what you’re doing to practice mindfulness. All you have to do is focus all of your attention on what you’re doing without thinking about why you’re doing it, what you should do next or what you should be doing. Whether it’s the gentle stroke of your fingers on the keyboard or your posture in your chair, you can direct your attention from your thoughts to your bodily sensations at the spur of the moment.
4. Repeat one positive thing about yourself, over and over. One of the main goals of mindfulness is to stop the steam of thoughts that cycle through your mind over and over again each day. Funnily enough, a great way to do this is to choose a short, positive message about yourself and to repeat it over and over with each breath to keep your mind on track. A great phrase of choice is “I am capable.” The simplicity keeps you grounded in the exercise and keeps other thoughts from taking over. The right phrase also builds a little confidence, which never hurts.
5. Interrupt the stress cycle. Any moment when you feel stressed, overwhelmed or stuck on something is the perfect moment to practice mindfulness. Just stop what you’re doing, let the thoughts go for a moment and practice your favorite mindfulness technique (breathing, walking or focusing on body sensations). Even a few minutes of this can make a huge difference in quieting your mind and reducing stress. You’ll be surprised how reasonable things look once you’ve taken a few moments to clear your head.
Bringing It All Together
Nothing can improve your brain the way mindfulness meditation can. Give it a try, and you’ll be surprised where it takes you.
Have you ever tried mindfulness? What’s your favorite technique? Please share your thoughts in the comments section below as I learn just as much from you as you do from me.
Travis co-wrote the bestselling book Emotional Intelligence 2.0 and co-founded TalentSmart.

Ululations, tears as white Zimbabwean farmer returns to seized land- reuters

DECEMBER 22, 2017 / 8:34 AM / UPDATED 2 HOURS AGO
Ululations, tears as white Zimbabwean farmer returns to seized land
Emelia Sithole-Matarise
RUSAPE, Zimbabwe (Reuters) - The last time white Zimbabwean farmer Rob Smart left his land it was at gunpoint, forced out in June by riot police armed with tear gas and AK-47 assault rifles.
He returned on Thursday to ululations and tears of joy from former workers and their families who were also kicked out - a jubilant return and the first sign that the president who has replaced Robert Mugabe is making good on a vow to stop illegal land seizures and restore property rights.
Scores of jubilant black Zimbabweans nearly knocked the 71-year-old off his feet as he and his two children stepped out of their car and onto their land for the first time in six months.
Smart’s case was taken up by Emmerson Mnangagwa, Zimbabwe’s then vice-president who heard of Smart’s violent eviction while at an investment conference in Johannesburg.
Mnangagwa became president last month following a de facto coup that ended 93-year-old Mugabe’s rule. In the latter half of his 37 years in power, Zimbabwe’s economy collapsed, especially after the seizure of thousands of white-owned commercial farms under the banner of post-colonial land reform. [L8N1OE2E7]
Land ownership is one of Zimbabwe’s most sensitive political topics. Colonialists seized some of the best agricultural land and much of it remained in the hands of white farmers after independence in 1980 leaving many blacks effectively landless.
Twenty years later, Mugabe authorized the violent invasion of many white-owned farms and justified it on the grounds that it was redressing imbalances from the colonial era.
White farmers complained that well connected people used state security forces to force them off their farms, sometimes in the middle of harvesting, even after the Mugabe government indicated, some four years ago, that land seizures were over.
“We are overjoyed, over the moon. We thought we would never see this day coming,” Smart’s son, Darryn, told Reuters.
“Getting back to the farm has given not just us, but the whole community hope that it’s a new Zimbabwe, a new country.”
Rob Smart, whose father said he started the farm from “virgin bush” in 1932, expressed confidence in the new government’s pledge to protect the commercial farming sector, a mainstay of the struggling economy.
“It’s early days but so far what they (the new government) said they are going to do they are doing,” he told Reuters.
Commercial farmer Darreyn Smart is welcomed at Lesbury Estates by village elders and children at a farm in Headlands communal lands east of the capital Harare, Zimbabwe, December 21, 2017. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo
“We just hope this whole incident will give hope to other farmers, who’ve had the same situation.”
“NO CONFUSION”
Mnangagwa, who is under pressure to revive the economy ahead of elections next year, said on Thursday that he was resolute about the changes he was introducing.
“There is no business as usual. Things have changed, it’s a new era,” he said at a meeting with business leaders in South Africa.
“I‘m from the military. If it’s ‘left turn’ then it’s ‘left turn’. If it’s ‘right turn’ it’s ‘right turn’. No confusion.”
Mnangagwa’s new agriculture minister, Perrance Shiri, last week ordered illegal occupiers of farms to vacate the land immediately, a move that could ultimately see some white farmers who say they were unfairly evicted return to farming.
Shiri, a military hardliner who was head of the air force before being picked for the crucial ministry this month, called for “unquestionable sanity on the farms”.
For 83-year-old Anna Matemani, whose late husband worked on the farm, Smart’s return was long overdue.
“I‘m so happy he is finally back. He always helped us and the farm provides jobs for many of our young people,” said the grandmother of 15, who grew up and raised her children on the farm and witnessed Rob’s birth, wiping away tears.
Some of the Smarts’ joy subsided as they walked into their ransacked farmhouses.
The occupiers had looted property, including clothes, the children’s toys, three guns, bottles of 100-year-old wine and Smart’s late father Roy’s medals from when he served with the Police Reserve Air Wing in the former Rhodesia.
“I‘m sad about my grandfather’s medals,” Darryn Smart said, surveying a ransacked room.
“You can buy tables and chairs, you can’t buy that family history. But thank goodness we’re here.”
Additional reporting by Tanisha Heiberg in Johannesburg; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Matthew Mpoke Bigg

Merkel, Macron say no alternative to peaceful settlement in eastern Ukraine - Reuters

DECEMBER 23, 2017 / 10:33 PM / UPDATED AN HOUR AGO
Merkel, Macron say no alternative to peaceful settlement in eastern Ukraine
Reuters Staff
PARIS (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron urged the parties involved in an increase of ceasefire violations in eastern Ukraine to implement decisions they have already agreed upon as soon as possible.
Ukrainian officials, security monitors and Kiev’s foreign backers had warned on Wednesday that Moscow’s decision to withdraw from a Ukrainian-Russian ceasefire control group could worsen the fighting in eastern Ukraine.
Macron and Merkel said in their statement there was no alternative to an exclusively peaceful settlement and called for a return of the Russian officers to the Joint Centre for Control and Coordination. Russia had accused the Ukrainian side of obstructing their work and limiting access to the front line.
“In the light of the volatile security situation, they ask the sides for immediate and verifiable steps to remedy this situation,” Macron and Merkel’s statement said.
“It is necessary to implement agreements on disengagement and the withdrawal of heavy weapons behind the agreed withdrawal lines, withdrawal of tanks, artillery and mortars to the agreed storage sites”.
“Other aspects of the Minsk agreements, like the withdrawal of foreign armed formations or the return of control over the Russian-Ukrainian border need to addressed seriously as well.”
Fighting in eastern Ukraine has escalated to the worst level in months, officials monitoring the conflict said on Tuesday.
Reporting by Maya Nikolaeva; Editing by Alison Williams

So, you got a tax cut. Now what? - CNN Money

So, you got a tax cut. Now what?
by Lydia DePillis and Paul P. Murphy @CNNMoney
December 22, 2017: 2:23 PM ET
Your video will play in 00:15
The tax bill has just been signed into law, and with CNN's tax calculator, it's possible to find out how much you'll save (or lose) next year because of it.
So, how are people planning to spend their windfalls, which the Joint Tax Committee says will be worth $264 billion over the next two years?
It's an important question for the economy. Companies determine who benefits from tax cuts by whether they choose to put their extra cash into payouts to shareholders, wages and hires, or new investment. But spending by individuals accounts for more than two thirds of gross domestic product, so their decisions are arguably more important.
One, individuals don't always notice the change — it's just one of many factors that influence the amount of money in their pockets, including wages, rent, the price of gas, the cost of college. President Barack Obama passed a tax credit as part of the 2009 stimulus bill worth $400 per person, for example, but polls showed later that few people realized it.
Related: 34 things you need to know about the incoming tax law
Two, we know that people spend tax cuts differently depending on how much money they make. Economic theory generally says that lower-income people are more likely to spend any extra cash they get, while upper-income people are already spending as much as they want or need to spend, so they just sit on the money.
inRead invented by Teads
University of Chicago economist Owen Zidar found in a recent study that the theory holds: Places with a higher concentration of wealthy people saw less of an economic boost from tax cuts in the last 30 years than places with more poorer people.
By that logic, this tax cut isn't structured for growth. According to the Tax Policy Center's calculations, people in the bottom 90% of the income spectrum will see less than a 2% tax cut in 2018, while people in the top 5% see about a 4% cut.
We don't know what's going to happen with this tax bill. Consumer spending is already very healthy, with today's report showing 0.4% inflation-adjusted growth in November, driven by car purchases, recreation, and utility bills.
But when we asked readers, many of them said they'll save the extra money, or use it to pay off loans. That makes sense. Consumer debt is now at an all-time high. Delinquency rates are creeping upwards for auto loans and credit card debt, while people are behind on their student loans at almost as high a rate as ever.
If taxpayers decided to save the money, they'd be reversing a longstanding trend that only turned around for a short time after the recession, and putting themselves in a better position in case the economy stumbles.
tax cut savings
Either way, research shows that consumers probably won't do much until the extra money actually shows up in their paychecks. For some people, that might happen as soon as February, after the IRS issues new rules for federal withholding. Others may need to wait until next tax season to see the difference.
Here's what people texted us in response to a question on our tax liveblog about what they're planning to do with any savings after using our calculator to figure out what the tax bill means for their wallets.
DeAries Martin, 28, Dallas,Texas
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 2.7%.
"Save for vacation"
James Deal, 52, Smithville, Texas
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up about 3%.
"Save it for when the, you know what, hits the fan."
Brandon Lindahl, 27, St. Paul, Minnesota
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 3.1%.
"Debt and savings."
JL, 45, Houston, Texas
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 2%.
"I don't think it will be enough to be substantial do not planning on doing anything with it."
Rian Whitman, 31, Ohio
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 1.9%
"Save for my daughter's college fund" [His daughter is 7 years old.]
Kevin, 31, Milford, Connecticut
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 3.2%.
"Pay off student loan principal" [He has about $50,000 in student loan debt]
Ann Johnson, 46, Huntsville, Alabama
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 3.1%.
"Probably try to save it or add to credit card payment"
Related: Corporate America's big, fat profitable year
Harold Fonseca, 20, Davenport, Florida
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up .4%
"I'm gonna save that .4%!"
Kellie Jones, 54, Laguna Niguel, California
Taxes going up.
"This does make me consider if I'll be retiring in a neighbor state that has no state income tax. I highly doubt I'll move. I love my California lifestyle."
Steve Shell, 30, St. Louis, Missouri
Taxes going down.
"Probably invest some in this bitcoin craze eventually but increase my savings % into my 401k."
Jaime, 32, Brookline, Massachusetts
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 2.7%; about $92 a month in after-tax income.
"Most likely pay down debt, and find a way to give a little to an organization whose funding is likely to be cut by this administration" "Couldn't even get cable for that amount" "Doesn't cover half of a doctor's visit."
Dannielle, 47, Champaign, Illinois
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 2.7%.
"HAHAHAhAhAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA Buy a pizza?! Oh, wait, you are being serious. Since just about everything else (insurance, gas, power, cable, groceries) is going up in price. It mostly averages out to a increase of 30$ each pay cycle. Between 2 jobs I still end up owing money each tax season anyway."
Dan Sczcepaniak, 45, Baltimore, Maryland
Taxes going down in 2018 and after-tax income going up 4.7%.
"Pay more on bills and use some for vacation/house projects."

Californians mistake lights in sky from SpaceX rocket launch for UFOs or nuclear attack from North Korea - Independent

Californians mistake lights in sky from SpaceX rocket launch for UFOs or nuclear attack from North Korea
Motorists stopped their cars on motorways to get out and take pictures
22/12/2017
Jeff Farrell
The SpaceX rocket hurtles across the sky over California
How Star Wars fans can see Tom Hardy's cut The last Jedi cameo
Aardvark 'unaccounted for' after London Zoo fire
Seventy-five people die as storm wreaks havoc in Philippines
Bitcoin trading partially suspended as value of cryptocurrency plunges
SpaceX founder Elon Musk's latest rocket launch left many onlookers fearing it was a UFO or a nuclear bomb attack by North Korea.
The spacecraft streaked through the night sky after its launch in California, illuminated by a giant oval-shaped glow against the backdrop of a setting sun as it hurtled into the stratosphere.
Onlookers across the US state stopped their cars on motorways and ran out of their homes to gaze upwards and take pictures.
SpaceX: Falcon 9 makes history as first ever recycled rocket launch
Many took to social media and told how they believed the orb of light – shaped like a Zeppelin air balloon – was an alien craft or a bomb attack by Kim Jong-un.
Celebrities were not immune to the excitement.
Rapper will.i.am posted: “What is that in the Los Angeles sky?”, while singer Billy Ray Cyrus wrote:
Emergency services had to field calls from worried bystanders, forcing one fire department to notify the public that the “mysterious light in the sky” was actually Mr Musk’s rocket launch.
@billyraycyrus
1:29 PM - Dec 23, 2017
The tech guru himself even made fun of the confusion, posting a video of the launch on Twitter captioned: “Nuclear alien UFO from North Korea”.
The SpaceX rocket was launched from the coastal Vandenberg Air Force Base, in Santa Barbara County in California.
The Falcon 9 booster lifted off carrying a batch of 10 satellites which were successfully propelled into orbit an hour later.
Why you don’t need to build a rocket to prove the Earth isn’t flat
Flat-Earther 'Mad' Mike Hughes forced to delay homemade rocket launch
North Korea 'producing 'devil's venom' rocket fuel to power missiles'
Sanee Akbar told The Independent how he was visiting friends with his children in San Diego, California when he went outside to take a video of the rocket.
He said: “We ran out of the house when we saw the streak in the sky. We called our kids out to see.
“We were in awe and thought it’s a UFO. Of course we know about Elon Musk and his adventures, I would say, but didn’t know it was a rocket.”
@iamwill
What is this in the sky?
12:40 PM - Dec 23, 2017
In another video, published on Twitter by Ally Thornton, a girl is heard apparently calling the emergency services after seeing the sight.
She appeared to make a phone call and said: “Hi, do you see what’s happening outside in the sky? I seriously think it’s a nuclear bomb.”
Mr Musk, a South African multi-billionaire, founded the tech company in 2002 with “the ultimate goal of enabling people to live on other planets”.