spacer
MoodEnhancement.net

November 17, 2008

7 Colours That Can Reflect Your Mood.

Filed under: Self Help — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:07 pm
mood enhancement
I have a friend, who shall be nameless for obvious reasons as I love her dearly. This friends favourite colour is red. Her car is red, flowers in her garden are red, she wears red, her lipstick is red. Need I say more - everything is red. She is a go-getter and the speed with which she embraces life is past the speed limit. So recently I was very interested to read on how wearing certain colours can reflect our mood.

We do react to colour, and scientists have ascertained that each colour transmits a unique message to the brain which impacts our moods in different ways. Consider the list of colours below and consider how your own clothes and decor can enhance particular moods.

Red

Red is a stimulating and energizing colour. It also enhances self-assurance; what woman in a fiery red dress doesn’t exude confidence. Red will produce an illusion of fantasy. It can promote opposition in others ( you have been warned) If you want to be attention-getting, feel powerful and dominate - wear red. The colour also symbolizes love. It is a hot and passionate color. Red is said to increase the appetite, so you may want to keep it out of the dining room unless you’re having a dinner party. In the bedroom, red light helps sexual activity, and could lead to active nights.

Yellow

To wear yellow will rejuvenate and balance the mind. It wipes out the feeling of heaviness and oppression. Yellow is a sunny and reflective and is a pensive colour. It will lift ones mood to be positive and optimistic.

Orange

This is also the colour of love. It is perhaps a little less serious and a little more fun. Wear it to lift your love life. Orange is a very high energy colour imparting boldness and distinction. Is about being different. Like red and yellow, orange is stimulating. It is an antidepressant and also stimulates the mind. Anyone with a desire to sharpen and add focus and purpose to their life can do with a little orange. ( It is potent, do not add too much)

Green

Green is relaxing and tranquil to the eyes. It reduces stress and brings a feeling of tranquility. It presents natural healing and balance. Wear it to inspire harmony in others and restore your energy. It is the second most popular color. Green is symbolic of faithfulness and unity and hope. It is quick to help others even at their own expense. It represents dependability and tactfulness.

Pink

The colour pink is trendy. Its a girly color and is a symbol of innocence and beauty. Pink has a soothing effect. It also speaks of pure love. It is a romantic color, while red is hot and passionate. It also is bright, vibrant, a strong and healthy color.

Blue

Blue relaxes muscles, lowers blood pressure and was found to have a calming effect on hyperactive children. Blue causes a slight psychological change which results in people feeling less hungry. I don’t think you could call it a weight loss program though. Blue is also regarded to be effective for increasing wisdom energy. It is the color of peace, tranquility and is excellent in increasing spiritual meditation and healing.

Purple

Purple balances the mind, brings serenity and combats fear. It’s connected with psychic powers and helps wake up that aspect. Its also the colour that speaks of royalty. Purple stands out in a crowd.

In conclusion; consider the colours you are wearing - maybe you can create the mood you want to reflect. The chose is yours!



By: Lynn Zingel

About the Author:
Lynn Zingel is the author and editor of http://www.icando.co.nz. Here you will find words of encouragement, inspiration, and challenge to change whatever you focus your mind upon.



Embees anxiety depression treatment products and information

Share/Save/Bookmark

November 16, 2008

Using the Best Massage Oils Enhances Your Experience

Filed under: Health — Tags: , , — admin @ 1:41 pm
mood enhancement
One of the most beneficial parts of going to get a massage is the extraordinary aromas coming from the massage oils that you therapist uses during your session. But are you aware that some massage oils can trigger reactions in the brain or arouse certain moods that make your experience particularly gratifying. Here are some tips that you can use when selecting your massage oils.

Relaxing

First, you must determine if you are using your therapy sessions to better sleep patterns, to relieve muscle tension, or improve your mood as well as gain energy. This will help you to decide whether you want the scent of the massage oil to be calming and subduing, or a scent that is vibrant and induces energy.

You also should set up your spa massage to include perfumed oils that you selected when you made your appointment. You can also bring along the massage oils yourself so that your therapist can make you a customized oil combination for you.

Massage oil is applied during your sessions to make the skin soft and flexible, making kneading and the muscle stimulation more effortless and comfortable. The herbs, flowers, and plants that are used in massage oil are also related to receptors in the brain that change the mood your in, which is why you leave the spa in a relaxed and better mood.

So, if you want to calm yourself after a long day’s work, you can try massage oil that integrates lavender, which has been acknowledged to relax the senses as well as detoxify your skin. Vanilla is also an excellent scent to use during a session, since it arouses the senses and provides the body with a calming, centered feeling.

Energizing

If you want to get a massage that gives you a burst of energy to your current day, you can select an oil with scents of citrus fruit, such as grapefruit, lemon, or bergamot. These oils are known to awaken receptors within the brain, making it less problematic for you to remain focused on the tasks of the day and preserve energy as well.

Oils that are instilled with ginger works excellent as well to enhance mood and gain energy, and ginger can also assist in removing pollutants from the body, because the root can take out mucus from the sinus cavities and keep harmful fluid away from your muscles.

You can find massage oils in a number of different places, for instance your local grocery, cosmetics store, health food store, or at your spa. Be sure to ask your physician about which the are the best massage oils for your skin type, and also have a skin test done if you have sensitive skin. You can even utilize your massage oils at your home to give you an immediate pick-me-up, and can they can also be used in the bath or shower to provide your skin with a boost.



By: Corbin Newlyn

About the Author:

Listen to Corbin Newlyn as he shares his insights as an expert author and an avid writer in the field of health. If you would like to learn more go to Massage Therapy Degree advice and at Hand and Foot Massage information.



Anxius anxiety treatment and information

Share/Save/Bookmark

October 31, 2008

Signs of Depression

Filed under: Mental Health — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:38 am
depression
Everyone knows what depression feels like. Everyone feels the blues at times. Sadness, disappointment, and fatigue are natural parts of life. There is a correlation between the blues and clinical depression, but the difference is like the difference between the sniffles and pneumonia.

Depressive disorders are whole person illnesses; they concern the body, feelings, thoughts, and behavior. The depression itself can make us feel as if it’s hopeless to try to find help. The excellent news is that 80 to 90 percent of people with depression can be treated successfully, but the bad news is that only one sufferer in three seeks treatment. More bad news is that almost half the American public see depression as a character defect, rather than an illness or emotional disorder. In addition, only half of all cases of depression are correctly diagnosed, and only half of those get satisfactory treatment.

We tend to confuse depression, sadness, and grief. But the opposite of depression is not happiness, but vitality - the ability to experience a full range of emotion, including happiness, excitement, sadness, and grief. Depression is not an emotion itself. It’s not sadness or grief, it’s an illness. When we feel at our worst, sad, self-absorbed, and helpless, we are experiencing what people with depression experience, but they don’t recover from those moods without help.

The trademark of depression is a unrelenting sad or empty mood, sometimes experienced as tension or anxiety. Life shortage of pleasure. People with minor depressions may go through the motions of eating, sex, work, or play, but the activities appear shallow; people with more severe depression withdraw from these activities, feeling too drained, tense, or hostile to contribute. There is often a nagging fatigue, a sense of being powerless to focus, a feeling of being ineffective.

People with depression usually experience a lowered self-esteem. In a depression, you may feel that you are a helpless victim of fate, but also feel that you don’t deserve any better. Feelings of guilt, dishonor, and misery are common.

There are often a host of physical symptoms, of which sleep disturbances are key. People may have difficulty falling asleep or may get up early without feeling refreshed. Others may sleep excessively, again without feeling rested. Appetite may increase or decrease. There may be difficulty in sexual functioning. There may be harassing aches and pains that don’t respond to medical treatment. But there are physical illnesses that cause symptoms like depression - Lyme depression, diabetes, thyroid conditions, anemia - and depressions can cause physical symptoms like other diseases.

If you are feeling depressed, it is important to be sure that an underlying health problem does not exist, and you should see your physician for a checkup. At the same time, if you know you have a health problem and are feeling depressed, don’t imagine you will feel better once the health problem is under control.

There is a sequential process in the recognition of depression. First is a stage of confused pain in which the sufferer knows he suffers, but doesn’t know why. People often blame circumstances. Adolescents blame their home lives, married people blame their spouses, and employees blame their bosses. But there is acknowledgment that the pain is not ordinary.

The second stage is recognition that something is definatley amiss. It may be that external circumstances have changed but the pain keeps on going, or it may be a gradual recognition that the suffering is so dangerous that circumstances can’t be blamed. This is a painful recognition that often takes years. It is an acknowledgment of a damaged self. But because of the nature of depression, the self-blame and guilt that are manifestations of the disease, this acceptance does not always lead to searching for help.

People then may move to the third stage, a crisis that habitually leads to professional intervention and diagnosis. It is often a ******* attempt or psychiatric hospitalization. The diagnosis often supplies hope, that treatment or a cure is possible, and explanation, a way to understand what has only been confusion before. The fact is that this is a diagnosis of a mental illness, with all the shame and stigma that that entails.

The fourth stage involves acceptance of an illness identity. Depression comes to be seen as an outside agent invading the self, rather than as a manifestation of the self.

It is essential that anyone suffering from depression gets good help from a competent, qualified professional. If the warning signs are obvious, always seek a professional diagnosis. Going to a health professional with your troubles could prove, at worse, embarrassing, if the problem is really just a seasonal case of the blues that can be dealt with without medical intervention, but the potential cost of failing to diagnose a serious case of depression should far outweigh any concern about potential embarrassment.



By: David B Smith

About the Author:

To find out more about treating depression visit
Understanding Depression as a Disease



Mood Enhancement information and products

Share/Save/Bookmark

spacer