• Home
  • Meet Brooke
  • Recipes
    • How To Make It
    • Glossary
    • Categories
    • Search by Ingredients
  • Jam in Jars
    • Making Jam
    • Jar Exchange
    • Recipes in Jars
      • Jam
      • Chutneys
      • Preserves
      • Salsa
  • Podcast
  • Home
  • Meet Brooke
  • Recipes
    • How To Make It
    • Glossary
    • Categories
    • Search by Ingredients
  • Jam in Jars
    • Making Jam
    • Jar Exchange
    • Recipes in Jars
      • Jam
      • Chutneys
      • Preserves
      • Salsa
  • Podcast
  • Home
  • Babbling by Brooke
  • I make my own decisions

I make my own decisions

Posted on Jan 18th, 2012
by Brooke
Categories:
  • Babbling by Brooke
Planning weekly meals

I read an excellent article the other day on SparkPeople. While I don’t often comment on other people’s writing as the content of a post, I just loved the examples he used to illustrate his point and had to share.

The premise of the article is about decision making and how “it’s usually the feeling of being powerless that really gets those stress hormones flowing. A key to staying in control is using “I” statements.” The article goes on to suggest that you study your decisions over the course of a week, writing down what you did and/or the basis of a decision, and then go back over the language you chose. These are the examples that struck me because I hear them so often, from myself or my family, sometimes friends and colleagues. It is common language to describe an event but he really spells out the truth of what happened vs how you felt. By making it your responsibility, an issue can be resolved with actionable steps that you can take rather than fretting or regretting a decision:

Go back through the words you wrote, changing any passive verbs to active verbs (“My lunches are packed by my husband” becomes “I let my husband pack my lunches”) and replacing any external forces with “I” statements (“It was too cold to walk outside today” becomes “I decided I didn’t want to walk in the cold today”). Once you have done this, go through your problem statement again and see what solutions come to mind. — By Dean Anderson, Behavioral Psychology Expert

I highly recommend reading the article »

(Visited 16 times)
  • SparkPeople

Brooke

My name is Brooke and I love to cook, hence the nickname. I am passionate about eating for pleasure and nutrition, making jam, and Pilates.

More Than Good Food Podcast

Popular Tags

Allie Bonnie & Ryan breakfast casserole Chef Jamie Oliver Chef Julie D Chef Meg Chef Michael Smith cpdc dismal wine do-over easy econo but okay eggs gift idea Gillian gluten free good wine healthy eating indian ITER jam Judi Kerry Meaghan mexican Mom & Dad muffins pasta pilaf pizza potato Recipe exchange red sandwich Sandy Scott & Laurie SGS SI-DAF slow-cooker South Beach Steve's Fav List tlc series white wild yeast
  • Terms of Service
  • Permission Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Brooke Gordon | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED | © 2007-2021