Anti-Aging Psychology

Anti-Aging Psychologist Dr. Michael Brickey

Archive for the 'emotional intelligence' Category


Brain WiFi

Posted by drbrickey on November 26, 2007

Anti-Aging Psychologist, Dr. Michael Brickey

Action to take

When you need to get something done, remind yourself of the strengths
you have already shown.

Why

Our brains have a built in WiFi (wireless fidelity system) to read and imitate
others’ emotions in a matter of milliseconds. There is great adaptive value
to quickly recognizing danger and reacting to it before the conscious mind
even has time to figure things out. Our WiFi system also facilities rapport,
shared emotions, and emotional bonding.

When you see someone scratch, yawn, or smile, your premotor muscles
activate to do the same. What determines whether the movement it
executed is beyond the scope of this article. What is clear from
Daniel Goleman’s research on Social Intelligence is that you are programmed
to imitate other people. Two implications come to my mind for our goal of
thinking, feeling, looking, and being happier.

#1 You become like the people you are around. If you are around dour, sour
people, it drags your mood downwards. If you associate with upbeat people
who smile a lot, you will smile more as well. I’m not suggesting you get
a divorce because your spouse doesn’t smile enough. But it is worth considering
whether the friends you choose, the activities you go to, and your workplace pulls
you up or down. At the least, adopt a belief that you gravitate to upbeat people.
You may want to consider whether you want to make some changes in how you
spend your time or even whether your job could be structured differently or
is ultimately a job you want to stay with.

It is interesting to theorize what can go wrong with emotional WiFi. Religious fanatics
rigidly adhere to a belief system and pay little attention to WiFi input. Stereotypical
lab scientists who do great research but are inept with people also have a WiFi
system that pays little attention to input. Anti-social personalities may or may not
read others well but ignore empathy. Dependent personalities too readily absorb
and react to everyone else’s feelings.

#2 When one person is smiling and another frowning, which emotion is most
contagious? One influence is power, i.e., people are more likely to mirror the
bosses’ emotions than the boss it to mirror theirs. Power aside, it usually is
the person with the strongest personality. By strongest personality I mean
the person who has the clearest self-concept about who he or she is,
especially emotionally, and stays with that default program most of the time.
Thus a person who has a self-concept of being an upbeat, very resilient
person who rarely gets pulled down is likely to be emotionally dominant
with others. She is also likely to have what I would call an emotional
immunity to others’ negative emotions.

Make a statement about your emotional self-concept. Does it give you
the benefits I just described? If not, tweak it until it gives you the positive
strong personality you love to have.

Quotes

Emotions will either serve or master, depending on who is in charge.
~Jim Rohn
You have more to do than you can possibly do.
You just need to feel good about your choices.
~Time management/productivity guru David Allen

Humor

Mommy my feelings don’t feel good.
~Sonia Brickey at age 6 and not willing to settle for bad feelings

T-shirts from women who take crap from nobody:
~Guys have feelings too—but who cares
~Please don’t make me kill you
~I’m one of those bad things that happen to good people


Anti-Aging Psychologist Dr. Michael Brickey is keynote speaker and author of the Oprah-featured book, Defy Aging and 52 baby steps to Grow Young. The books and his Reverse Aging anti-aging hypnosis CDs comprise his anti-aging system.

Posted in coping skills, emotional intelligence, mental health | No Comments »

Making Life Personal

Posted by drbrickey on November 26, 2007

Anti-Aging Psychologist, Dr. Michael Brickey

Action to take

(will explain in the why section)

Why

Riddle: What is the best five-dollar present you can buy for yourself
but would be inappropriate to give as a gift to someone else?
I’ll give you the answer in a few paragraphs.

How often do you get a hand written letter or even a hand written note?
For most people postal mail has become just commercial mail.
Something handwritten typically comes just a few times a year.
When it does, it gets a Wow reaction.

I know when I receive a birthday card or holiday card, I think how nice,
display it for perhaps a week, and then it goes in the circular file.
But a handwritten note or a custom card has a hundred times the impact
and is a keeper.

Remember what it is like to be a kid. You didn’t get mail—or if you did,
it is from an organization selling something. It seems like everyone is
criticizing you and you are at the bottom of the pecking order.
Imagine one day you receive a hand written letter from grandmother
unconditionally telling you how much she loves you, thinks about you,
and is proud of you. How would that impact you?

I see so many people complain that their parents or even their grandparents
didn’t tell them they loved them. When I see people at nursing homes,
I often talk with them about how much power and influence they have.
They are often surprised. Many are grandparents or even great grandparents.
They have plenty of time. If great grandmother can’t physically write,
she can have someone write her words for her. All she has to do is write
a letter or send a card with a personal message to have enormous impact on children.

The answer to my riddle is–a box of thank you cards. I’m not talking about
obligatory thank you cards for presents, wedding, funerals, etc. How many
unprompted thank you cards do you receive a month? How do you feel
when you receive one? The rarity of unprompted thank you cards gives them
huge impact.

If you are looking for a good New Year’s resolution consider making it
sending an unprompted thank you card every week–
or if you are really ambitious, every day.

What do unprompted thank you notes have to do with being more youthful
and living longer? Gratitude and sense of purpose are key traits of happy,
healthy people. What goes around comes around, and expressing
heartfelt gratitude will bounce back again and again.

Quotes

Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it.
~William Arthur Ward

Humor

Six-year-old Tommy wanted $100. He prayed for two weeks but nothing happened.
He then wrote a letter to The Lord, USA requesting the $100. The post office
didn’t know what to do with it so they sent it to the White House. Administration
officials were touched and sent Tommy a $5 bill, which they though would seem like
a lot of money to a six year old. The boy wrote The Lord a thank you note:

Dear Lord,
Thank you very much for sending me the money. For some reason you had to send it
through Washington, DC and as usual, those jerks deducted $95.
Love,
Tommy


Anti-Aging Psychologist Dr. Michael Brickey is keynote speaker and author of the Oprah-featured book, Defy Aging and 52 baby steps to Grow Young. The books and his Reverse Aging anti-aging hypnosis CDs comprise his anti-aging system.

Posted in coping skills, emotional intelligence | No Comments »

Aging Can Help Your EQ

Posted by drbrickey on October 18, 2007

Anti-Aging Psychologist, Dr. Michael Brickey

Action to take

If you know more, have more savvy, and are more effective
than you were years ago, give yourself credit for having a higher EQ.

Why

Pat Nicolino, a corporate consultant friend, was catching me up on
what had happened since I saw her in September. In short, she is having
great success at turning around yet another company and has
never felt better or enjoyed herself more.

“I’m 56 now and I have 20 more EQ points than when I was 36,”
she said with exuberance. “At 36 I would have been clueless
about how to accomplish things that I now do with ease.”
Everyone knows what IQ is. EQ, she explained, is knowing how
to get things done and doing them.

I love it. As you get older your experiences and new learning build on each other.
Do you have more confidence than you did twenty years ago? Do you
know more about how organizations work and how to work with people?
Have you learned a lot of new skills in the last twenty years?
If so, give yourself credit for a higher EQ (Experience Quotient).

I would suggest that at 18 the average IQ and EQ is 100. If you are
continually learning and growing, give yourself credit for an additional
EQ point each year since age 18. If you have gone back to school,
learned a new career, or have had other intense learning experiences,
give yourself extra credit.

After the insight, I realized there is a lot of overlap between experience quotient
and Dr. Daniel Goleman’s emotional intelligence and his eventual use of
EQ for emotional intelligence. The broad skills he describes for emotional
intelligence have a lot of overlap with experience quotient. The difference is
an emphasis on having social intelligence vs. those skills getting better with experience.
Why is considering your EQ important? Psychology and medicine
have painted a negative picture of declining skills as we age.
Your EQ reminds you that you have grown, and are getting sharper with age.
No disrespect to my teenage children, but would you really want to go back
to the mind you had at 18? Neither would I. So what’s your EQ?

Quotes

Many people think you have to be very intelligent to be successful in life.
Exhaustive research shows that many self-made millionaires have only average intelligence.
~Brian Tracy

Continuous effort–not strength or intelligence–is the key to unlocking our potential.
~Winston Churchill

Humor

America is the only country where it takes more brains to
fill out the tax forms than it does to make the money.


Anti-Aging Psychologist Dr. Michael Brickey is keynote speaker and author of the Oprah-featured book, Defy Aging and 52 baby steps to Grow Young. The books and his Reverse Aging anti-aging hypnosis CDs comprise his anti-aging system.

Posted in aging, anti-aging, emotional intelligence, improving with age, mental health | No Comments »