Tuesday, October 2, 2007, 11:01 AM [
General]
This just out from the National Institutes of Health.
People who spend their years feeling worried, tense and angry may
not like how things turn out. A researcher says that, the more people
do that, the greater their risk of developing mild cognitive impairment.
Mild
cognitive impairment – a little forgetting or a little less clear
thinking – doesn’t sound that bad. But it can be a warning of
approaching Alzheimer’s disease, which is why Robert Wilson of
Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center looked into it.
``What we found is that negative emotions are bad for your cognition and your risk of Alzheimer’s disease.’’
This
doesn’t mean constant worry causes Alzheimer’s – just that there seems
to be some connection. Wilson also says being happy doesn’t prevent it.
Stephen
Hi Stephen,
Matt SisonThat video with the newscaster was great. It not only shows the power of hypnosis but the power of regression hypnosis.
Thanks,
Matt Sison
www.regression-hypnotherp...
04:55 PM CST