{"id":8679,"date":"2012-12-10T12:25:45","date_gmt":"2012-12-10T12:25:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/acneeinstein.com\/?p=791"},"modified":"2018-11-03T12:06:58","modified_gmt":"2018-11-03T12:06:58","slug":"new-research-shows-how-to-throw-away-negative-thoughts-and-feelings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/acneeinstein.com\/new-research-shows-how-to-throw-away-negative-thoughts-and-feelings\/","title":{"rendered":"New Research Shows How To Throw Away Negative Thoughts And Feelings"},"content":{"rendered":"

What\u2019s the most important thing in life? Ask that from 100 people and most of the answers will reflect happiness in one way or the other. Unfortunately it may also be one of the hardest things to achieve in life. Changing your diet is a voluntary decision, but you have far less control over your emotional responses.<\/p>\n

I just finished writing a lengthy chapter on stress to my book. While researching that chapter I became even more aware of the many ways stress, anxiety and negative emotions affect physical health. The skin is innervated with stress-sensing nerves. In response to stress and anxiety these nerves signal the skin to produce more sebum, induce inflammation, and accelerate skin cell growth. To put it in other words, stress has \u2018built in\u2019 all the ingredients for baking a pimple.<\/p>\n

A few days back I stumbled onto some interesting psychological research on embodied cognition<\/a>. These studies show how to manipulate feedback mechanisms between the mind and the body to influence emotional states and response to stress. I also fortuitously stumbled on a few studies on the effect of language and language patters on emotional states and responses.<\/p>\n

So let\u2019s take a look at this weird concept of embodied cognition and how you might use it to feel better and deal with stress.<\/p>\n

Theory of embodied cognition<\/h2>\n

The theory of embodied cognition states that the mind and the body are not separate (but not \u2018not separate\u2019 in a new age fashion). Traditional theories of psychology state that the brain is like a meat computer and is responsible for all cognitive processes (such as thoughts, emotions, decisions, judgments). Perception is the input to the computer that then computes the input into thoughts, feelings and actions.<\/p>\n

Embodies cognition theory says that the body plays a much larger part in these cognitive processes. And that the mind-body relationship is not a one way stress, what the body does actually feeds into and affects these cognitive processes. It\u2019s similar to the \u2018As If\u2019 principle I talked about in the previous post about acne anxiety<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Scientific American blog section has a good article on embodied cognition<\/a>. Let me pull a few examples from there to illustrate this weird concept:<\/p>\n