general commentary on psychology and psychotherapy, and other stuff too from time to time
Docsplainin' -- it's what I do
Docsplainin'--it's what I do.
After all, I'm a doc, aren't I?
After all, I'm a doc, aren't I?
Pages
Monday, April 1, 2013
Fat and your health
Labels:
Health,
Mindfulness,
Weight loss
Monday, March 25, 2013
On Best-Laid Plans
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English: Wood mouse (Apodemus sylvaticus) – (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
- The best laid schemes o' Mice an' Men,
Gang aft agley,
An' lea'e us nought but grief an' pain,
For promis'd joy!- Robert Burns, To a Mouse (Poem, November, 1785)
Scottish national poet (1759 - 1796)
Labels:
Plans
Location: Woodstock, GA
240 Creekstone Ridge, Woodstock, GA 30188, USA
Monday, March 18, 2013
Jimmy was right
Jimmy Carter, former President of the United States. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
When he said that, I was young enough and naïve enough to expect that life should be fair, and so to be appalled at his comment. I loved Mr. Jimmy, but he broke my heart with that line." There are many things in life that are not fair."
-Jimmy Carter
In the intervening years, though, I have learned that life is, indeed, manifestly not fair and that when we persist in demanding that it should be (there's that word again), we set ourselves up for all sorts of misery.
I am not saying that we should not be willing to step up to address inequities when it is in our power to do so, only that in expecting the universe to operate along some sort of moral lines we add to the unhappiness that is already there. And sometimes we create the unhappiness.
I have come to believe that the sooner and more fully we can embrace the notion that we need to be able to accept life on life's terms in order to live happily, the better off we'll be. Harsh as it may sound, then, the real question becomes not "Why is this happening?" but "What do I intend to do about it?"
I suspect that when bad things happen, this is nobody's instant response. We all need a little time to wrap our heads around the new state of affairs, to take stock of things and begin to see where we stand now. But then we need to dust our butts off and get back up on that horse and ride it. Wise old horsemen would tell you that if you don't, the horse understands that he just got the better of you, and he'll remember that next time. In life, the message is the same except that you're the one getting it. Be sure the message you send your self is that you can cope, you can deal.
Location: Woodstock, GA
240 Creekstone Ridge, Woodstock, GA 30188, USA
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Words to Live By
The Writing Life (Photo credit: Simply Bike) |
Labels:
Annie Dillard,
Writing Life
Location: Woodstock, GA
240 Creekstone Ridge, Woodstock, GA 30188, USA
Sunday, March 3, 2013
On Gratitude
joy! (Photo credit: atomicity) |
I like that one, and I'm going to start prescribing it.
So hop to it. Unhappy? Get out your pen and paper!
Labels:
dog,
Donald Hebb,
gratitude,
Jon Kabat Zinn,
journal,
Mindfulness,
Pockets of Joy,
Pollyanna,
Thich Nhat Hanh,
Tiny Buddha,
Wood's rules
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Bullying
Physical bullying at school, as depicted in the film Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
One very damaging aspect is the response of the people in charge. Bullying victims get doubly traumatized when teachers, administrators, and parents do nothing: This is experienced as a betrayal, an abandonment, or as further abuse--and sometimes, as all three. For example, a boy who was physically assaulted in front of a raft of teachers who did nothing reported it both the assault and the faculty's inaction to the principal. That worthy's response was that this would not have happened had the student not chosen to come out. In actual point of fact the boy had been outed by one of the bullies some months previously in a separate incident, and he had reported it at the time. So the victim gets the message that nobody cares, nobody's going to do anything, and it's his fault anyway. I suspect that, as studies of childhood sexual abuse have demonstrated, this kind of response on the part of adults is a risk factor for some of the more negative outcomes for the child.
Nor, as far as I can tell, are long-term effects limited to childhood experiences: I know one fellow, retired about four years now, who still has regular nightmares about workplace bullying he suffered. And I have worked with several veterans who count abuse by their superiors as among the worst experiences of their careers.
So am I surprised by the results of this study? Not hardly.
Labels:
abuse,
Anxiety,
Bullying,
Panic disorder
Sunday, February 17, 2013
If Everybody Did

The tax complainers seem to see taxes as some kind of terrible, unfair imposition, as if (a) they had nothing to do with electing the governments that assess them, and (b) they never use the services the taxes pay for. They complain about how the money is spent, without much actual awareness of where it really goes. About a fifth, for example, goes for Social Security and Medicare, both of which these folks will apply for the day they become eligible. They elect a government that takes us on military excursions overseas and then resent ponying up their share (almost another fifth of the national budget, not including veterans' benefits) every April. These same people send their kids to public schools and will not hesitate to call the police if their office is burgled, while resenting paying their fair share for these services via sales, property, and other local taxes.
A couple of years ago, the IRS released results of a survey in which about 84% of us said it was never ok to lie on your returns. From that, researchers assumed that about 16% of us cheat. I would bet that there's another few percentage points at least comprised of those who say one thing and do another. Add those together, and you get at least a $345 billion (yes, that's billion) shortfall in any given year. Approximately 3/4 of government borrowing goes to make up this shortfall, adding to the deficit every year. Is it any wonder that early in the wars we saw stories about soldiers' parents having to purchase and ship body armor out of their own pockets? Or that programs and services are being cut or terminated because of lack of funding?
Besides being illogical and selfish, it's unethical to lie on your tax return.
When I was a little girl, someone gave me a book on ethics called If everybody did. The gist of it was that there were some things one person could do once that had small(ish) consequences, but if everybody did it, well, then. . .
Kant for short people
I've been thinking a lot about that little book lately.
What if everybody who ever accepted cash for their work did not report it? What if everybody put their personal dry-cleaning bills, club memberships, and even church pledges down as business expenses? What if everybody claimed everything they bought at the drugstore, from magazines to shaving cream, as medical expenses in order to get the itemized deduction? And before you ask, yes, I've personally known people who've done every one of these things. Where do you think the the money would come from to treat injured veterans? to pay for your Daddy's nursing home? to upgrade the armor on that HUMVEE your cousin's riding around Afghanistan in?
When you cheat on your taxes, you are not cheating the IRS. You are, in effect, cheating your fellow citizens. Your coworkers. Your neighbors. Your children. Your parents.
The irony is that none of these people think of themselves as illogical, selfish, and unethical, or as liars, cheats, or criminals, despite the fact that they are every one of these things.
The whole system is based on self-reporting, on trust. If everybody lied and cheated, it would collapse. If everybody dragged their feet like I've been doing, we'd have to borrow even more every year to keep the government running (10% of the budget every year goes to interest payments as it is). The IRS would have to audit everybody, or maybe they would require all our patients, customers, clients, etc. to start issuing us 1099s at the end of the year. Or maybe we'd just go back to the system of old, when the government just showed up at your front door and took what it needed at the point of a spear. How would you like that?
So you just think about that the next time you are tempted, as a former colleague liked to put it, to "round things off at the corners". I know I'll be thinking about it this spring when the temptation to procrastinate arises.
What if everybody did?
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- Why we cheat on our taxes (msnbc.msn.com)
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