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Health & Fitness

Kate's Blogs on health and spirituality

Can we be scared into being healthier? By Eric Nelson - Photo by ยฉ Glow images o models are used for illustrative purposes

Research-although not conclusive-is pointing in the direction of using less fear tactics to utilizing more positive forms of reinforcement to encourage people to make better decisions about their health. Eric Nelson, a syndicated writer, spiritual explorer and colleague, offers a different-more spiritual method for breaking the cycle of negative thinking which may culminate in making bad health choices. Join me and find out what spiritual insight Eric has to share.

Ever since the first โ€˜dietary interventionโ€™ in the Garden of Eden, even the threat of death has not proven to be an effective motivator to making healthy choices.

Anyone over 40 likely remembers the TV ad.

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A man standing next to a kitchen stove picks up an egg.

โ€œThis is your brain,โ€ he says. โ€œThis is drugs,โ€ he continues, pointing to the piping hot skillet in front of him.
Then, after cracking the egg into the skillet, he says, โ€œThis is your brain on drugs.โ€

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The message couldnโ€™t have been clearer. But was it effective? Yes. And no. Although drug use among adolescents in the U.S. dropped from 3.2 million to 1.3 million between 1985 and 1992 (this particular ad began running in 1987), just a year later the number went back up to 2.1 million.

Although the jury is still out as to whether such scare tactics provide any lasting benefit โ€“ not just in terms of drug use, but also for other health-related choices we make โ€“ the scales appear to be tilting in favor of an approach that involves fewer sticks and more carrots.

Kate is interested in blogging about the impact of prayer and spirituality on our health from her experience as a Christian Science practitioner. She is the media, legislative and public contact for Christian Science in the state of Maryland. Contact Kate on Twitter: @CscomMaryland, on Facebook: Kate Johnson CS, or email: maryland@compub.org.

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