Mojo Monday ~ Comedy


Comedy is acting out optimism. ~ Robin Williams
Having a sense of humor about life helps reduce stress, can boost positive feelings and can even benefit your overall mental and physical health.
According to an article called Laughter Is the Best Medicine there are a number of things that occur physically when you laugh.
• Laughter relaxes the whole body. A good, hearty laugh relieves physical tension and stress, leaving your muscles relaxed for up to 45 minutes after.
• Laughter boosts the immune system. Laughter decreases stress hormones and increases immune cells and infection-fighting antibodies, thus improving your resistance to disease.
• Laughter triggers the release of endorphins, the body’s natural feel-good chemicals. Endorphins promote an overall sense of well-being and can even temporarily relieve pain.
• Laughter protects the heart. Laughter improves the function of blood vessels and increases blood flow, which can help protect you against a heart attack and other cardiovascular problems.
Knowing this has led me to view comedians more as Laugh Doctors or MD’s and I love to get a regular dose of the medicine they are prescribing.
I have had the good fortune to have seen comedian Robin Williams perform three times in person. Another favorite comedian who I also saw perform once in person is Stephen Wright. Click here to see him perform a stand up routine.
I recently watched Date Night with my husband and I have to say that at the start of the film I was feeling a bit stressed about my to-do list and yet by the end of the film I was feeling much more relaxed. 

Do you have a favorite comedian? A favorite comedy film?

What makes you laugh?

What is comedy? Comedy is the art of making people laugh without making them puke.
~ Steve Martin
Nonsense wakes up the brain cells. And it helps develop a sense of humor, which is awfully important in this day and age. ~ Dr. Seuss.

Mojo Monday ~ Fear

“Do one thing everyday that scares you.” ~ Eleanor Roosevelt


“You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience by which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, ‘I lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along.” ~ Eleanor Roosevelt


“Fear is not something to be conquered or eliminated — or even tackled, for that matter” writes Harriet Lerner, author of The Dance of Fear. “Instead, we may need to pay close attention to its message.”


Another passage from The Dance of Fear states, “We may believe that anxiety and fear don’t concern us because we avoid experiencing them. We may keep the scope of our lives narrow and familiar, opting for sameness and safety. We may not even know that we are scared of success, failure, rejection, criticism, conflict, competition, intimacy, or adventure, because we rarely test the limits of our competence and creativity. We avoid anxiety by avoiding risk and change. Our challenge: To be willing to become more anxious, via embracing new situations and stepping more fully into our lives.”


The message I take from this passage is that we can’t outrun our fears. We can’t vacuum them up and throw them away. Fear is part of being human. It is more about what we do with our fears. Do we let them control us? Do we sit in the chair tapping our toes when we really want to cut loose and dance? Do we stay in a daily rut instead of signing up for that class, pursuing that dream job, starting our own business, moving cross country or asking a certain someone out on a date?


What if we embrace our fears and do it anyway? What if we say to ourselves every morning “This may be my last day living. What do I want to accomplish? What do I want to do with these precious 24 hours?”


I have found that taking a risk and doing something that is out of my comfort zone can reignite my creativity, my zest for life and inspire me to new heights. After tandem skydiving I felt incredibly alive and walked on clouds for days. When I boarded a plane to go study in France for a year I was honestly scared, but I was also thrilled to be doing something incredibly different and challenging.

Share an experience that required you to overcome a fear?
Is there something you want to do right now that is daring and risky?
Commit to doing one thing this week that scares you and share what that one thing is going to be!



Activity ~ Visualize that you are no longer afraid. Make a list of things the new FEARLESS you would do. Here are a few ideas:


Go to a hot springs with some girlfriends and dive in the water naked.
Take dancing lessons.
Tell the truth to your family about being molested as a child.
Really belt out a song on karaoke night while sober.
Apologize and try to heal a relationship.
Tell the people who mean the most to you that you love them, while staring them in the eyes.
Ride your bike without any hands.
Take a trip by yourself.
Stand up for yourself when someone is rude.
Apply for your dream job.
Go skydiving!
Ride in a car, the windows down, your hair flying and your feet hanging out the passenger window.

Peace

Peace
We cannot achieve world peace
without first achieving peace
within ourselves…inner peace.

In an atmosphere of
hatred, anger, competition and violence
no lasting peace
can be achieved.

These negative and destructive forces
must be overcome by
compassion, love and altruism,
which are the eseential teaching of
the Buddha.

Tenzin Gyatso
H.H. The XIVth Dalai Lama

Meditation ~ Embrace

Imagine Peace
is a full
and loving
heart
with wings.

Imagine it flying
around the world
spreading
and sharing
LOVE
with all
of humanity.

When
LOVE
is present,
fear dissipates
and disappears.

When
LOVE
is present
we embrace
one another
as brothers
and sisters.

When
LOVE
is present
we treat
one another
with respect
and kindness.

Imagine Peace
soaring
and flying
around the earth
and into
the Universe
to share the
LOVE

Embrace
PEACE

Embrace
LOVE

The Greatest Gifts

(Message and Design by Kathy Davis)

The Greatest Gifts

May we break boundaries, tear down walls,
and build on the foundation of goodness inside each of us.

May we look past differences,
gain understanding, and embrace acceptance.

May we reach out to each other, rather than resist.

May we be better stewards of the earth, protecting,
nurturing and replenishing the beauties of nature.
May we practice gratitude for all we have,
rather than complain about our needs.
May we seek cures for the sick,
help for the hungry, and love for the lonely.
May we share our talents,
give our time, and teach our children.
May we hold hope for the future very tenderly in our hearts
and do all we can to build for bright tomorrows.
And may we LOVE with our whole hearts,
for that’s the only way to love.