People who are diagnosed as having "generalized anxiety disorder" are afflicted by three major problems that many of us experience to a lesser extent from time to time. First and foremost, says Rapgay, the natural human inclination to focus on threats and bad news is strongly amplified in them, so that even significant positive events get suppressed. An inflexible mentality and tendency toward excessive verbalizing make therapeutic intervention a further challenge.
Winifred GallagherMots clés buddhism worry meditation anxiety attention therapy focus
The simple act of paying attention can take you a long way.
Keanu ReevesMots clés attention
The breath of the mind is attention 128
Joseph JoubertCabel gives her a quizzical look. "I am totally not getting enough attention here.
Lisa McMannThere are so many attention whores out there, prostituting for people's acknowledgment
Jason MyersMots clés attention
If you feel obsessed to prove something to the world,
then you'd need world attention to be able to prove it.
Mots clés life truth success world accomplishment attention prove
People of our time are losing the power of celebration. Instead of celebrating we seek to be amused or entertained. Celebration is an active state, an act of expressing reverence or appreciation. To be entertained is a passive state--it is to receive pleasure afforded by an amusing act or a spectacle.... Celebration is a confrontation, giving attention to the transcendent meaning of one's actions.
Source: The Wisdom of Heschel
Mots clés attention celebration
Lack of direction, not lack of time, is the problem. We all have twenty-four hour days.
Zig ZiglarMots clés motivational inspirational direction attention focus
I don't judge people.
It blurs out the center of my attention,
my focus,
myself.
Mots clés life judge people self secret judgement center attention focus blurs
I thought I was getting away from politics for a while. But I now realise that the vuvuzela is to these World Cup blogs what Julius Malema is to my politics columns: a noisy, but sadly unavoidable irritant. With both Malema and the vuvuzela, their importance is far overstated. Malema: South Africa's Robert Mugabe? I think not. The vuvuzela: an archetypal symbol of 'African culture?' For African civilisation's sake, I seriously hope not.
Both are getting far too much airtime than they deserve. Both have thrust themselves on to the world stage through a combination of hot air and raucous bluster. Both amuse and enervate in roughly equal measure. And both are equally harmless in and of themselves — though in Malema's case, it is the political tendency that he represents, and the right-wing interests that lie behind his diatribes that is dangerous. With the vuvu I doubt if there are such nefarious interests behind the scenes; it may upset the delicate ears of the middle classes, both here and at the BBC, but I suspect that South Africa's democracy will not be imperilled by a mass-produced plastic horn.
Mots clés politics nationalism democracy africa civilisation media culture fascism south-africa attention atmosphere crowds bbc 2010 robert-mugabe culture-of-africa 2010-fifa-world-cup alarmism association-football culture-of-south-africa julius-malema right-wingers vuvuzelas
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