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🌟 Listen, Can You Hear Me? 🌟

🌟 Listen, Can You Hear Me? 🌟

🗣️ When you truly listen, my heart speaks its truth.
💭 My worries and dreams seek to be heard, not dismissed.
🤝 Listening without judgment nurtures my mental wellness.
🧠 Sometimes I need advice, but mostly, I need to feel you’re with me.
🎶 I feel alive and connected when you hear me—together, we thrive.
Does this perspective of someone yearning to be heard… resonate with you? Watch the short video (2 mins) for the story.
CLICK HERE TO WATCH:
#ListenWithCare #ConnectedHearts #MentalWellness #FeelHeard #ThriveTogether
Coach Chat – centred in the saddle

Coach Chat – centred in the saddle

Centred In The Saddle – Horse Centred Approach

In this podcast, Happy Brain Trainers Kay Cooke and Tracey Hutchinson discuss the integration of Happy Brain techniques with equestrian coaching. Tracey, a British Horse Society coach, explains how Happy Brain principles enhance rider-horse relationships by focusing on mutual understanding and connection. They highlight the shift towards a more compassionate and horse-centred approach in equestrian training, driven by social media and public scrutiny. Tracey emphasises the importance of self-awareness, body awareness, and emotional regulation for both riders and horses. They also touch on the Foundations for Excellence in Equestrian Coaching (FEEC) program, which enhances the skills for simplicity, fun, and behavioural flexibility in coaching.

# Happy Brain

#equestrian coaching

#rider connection

#horse welfare

#social license

#positive psychology

#self-awareness

#body scan

#psychological safety

#neurological safety

#behavioural flexibility

#fun in coaching

#self-esteem building

#rider-horse relationship

#NLP

#coaching techniques

Busy and Fruitful Month of May

Busy and Fruitful Month of May

Hello Happy Brainers,

A busy and fruitful month of May has passed, and I am excited to share with you some key reflections that may resonate with and inspire your personal wellbeing journey.

**Like Attracts Like**

In mid-May, I had the pleasure of assisting in a Neuro Hypnotic Repatterning program in Italy with Dr. Richard Bandler. This program delves into immersing the mind-body in positive chemistry, unlocking the brain’s creative solutions centre. This experience of being part of a super high-calibre team, highlights the importance of surrounding oneself with excellence and raising personal standards of responsibility.

*Reflection:* How can you seek out and integrate systems of excellence in your daily life?

**Feedback to Feedforward**

Throughout May, I delved into personal metrics to assess my growth, including staying grounded in chaotic environments, embodying calm and confident states, and maintaining centeredness. Taking responsibility for the feedback loop of my mind-body connections has significantly improved my life.

*Reflection:* What personal metrics are you using to enhance your well-being and growth?

**Calibrating**

Whilst engaged in seminars in Italy and London during May, many discussions centred around techniques for family stability. We believe and teach that true flourishing requires the understanding of family dynamics, rather than simply managing symptoms. As a result, I’m excitedly making plans to reintroduce live workshops that support families in navigating their unique systems.

*Reflection:* How can you deepen your understanding of your family system to foster growth and stability?

**Collaborating**

The theme of collaboration resonated strongly among my peers in May, emphasising the value of authentic partnerships driven by shared values and skills. In times of rising consciousness, genuine connections and alliances are most definitely key to fostering growth and success. That means less shallow partnerships for economic or glamour gains.

*Reflection:* Since none of us are as smart as all of us, how do you align with others on or above your wavelength, to incubate and propagate mutual growth and success?

May has been a month of growth, reflection, and connection. Perhaps my insights have tickled yours? If so, please share what you apply to your personal journey for enhancing well-being and happiness. Kx

 

The Transition to University: Navigating Adulthood Challenges

The Transition to University: Navigating Adulthood Challenges

A few weeks into university life …

Entering university marks a significant milestone in a young person’s life, filled with excitement, challenges, and a multitude of unknowns. Jinty, a fictional student in this article, embodies the apprehensions and dilemmas that many individuals face as they step into this new phase. This article delves into Jinty’s journey, exploring themes of homesickness, friendships, academic pressures, and the need for support during this transitional period.

Read about coping with change and homesickness; making new friends; dealing with new academic pressures, and Happy Brain TIPS for parents and students currently experiencing this transition.

A few weeks ago, Jinty’s university experience began…

After weeks of stuffing bags full of things acquired over the past 18 years; old pictures, duvets and favourite cushions… she realised how they’d all seen her grow up. Now they’re trapped between the cold edges of Ikea bags, crammed up against new shiny crockery, pans, unfamiliar new mugs. She’s no idea where they’re going to end up. Just like her.

Flinging her favourite cuddly toy into the bag seems cruel but in this new dawn of adulthood, taking it with her feels comforting. She can’t help but wonder, ‘will I feel safe there? Will I be warm enough? Will I be able to sleep?’

She reckons she’s no good at cooking, too. Will she end up surrendering herself to a diet of pot noodles like social media claims she will? Those new pots and pans might gather dust in the cupboard, barely out of their plastic containers. It seems to be what all freshers do, she surely doesn’t want to be the different one obsessing over carrots and vitamins whilst everyone else is having the time of their lives.

The statistics don’t lie, a recent survey revealed that 1 in 10 first year students will never cook, and a quarter more will be spending their maintenance loan on takeaways.  But, Jinty has always had a balanced diet and who knows what might happen without this. Especially if she’s clubbing every night, which seems to be what all the ‘Freshers’ do. All the times she’s been hungover before it’s been with the luxury of weeks in-between drinking to recuperate with home cooked meals. Without that in Freshers Week, Jinty already fears she will feel out of balance.

And then there’s the money worries. Financial struggle is a top student concern, with 92% of respondents in a Student Beans survey worrying about this, and 67% voicing concerns that they will not be able to pay back their debts after university. Like many first-time students, Jinty has not had to manage much financially before now. She’s never actually bought the food shop, or been responsible for doing her own washing or transport before. What if she finds it difficult to cope/ manage and ends up running out of money?

Jinty’s worries begin to reduce her emotional resilience.

Homesick

In the last few years, Jinty’s gained independence taking care of her own responsibilities, handling 3 A-Levels, a part time job, extra-curricular sports, and a buzzing social life. So why is it that now, in the twilight of her teenage years, it’s the security of Mum and Dad she’s craving? A recent study found the major things people miss about their homes are their family, their feelings at home and the comfort of activities in this place. Studies have found that students experiencing homesickness are likely to have less focused/ productive educational experiences and are more likely to develop mental health problems whilst at university. She may or may not have developed skills to help cope with  homesickness. Her parents may or may not have the skills to help her feel the freedom to leave the nest without guilt.

Worst of all, what if no-one else feels homesick and she’s the only one? Social media is littered with posts about how Freshers’ is the best year of one’s life. But, what if Jinty feels that her experience does not match this expectation? She reckons it’s unfair that the adults in her life are telling her that it’s going to be amazing, and ‘should’ be the best few years of her life. She feels under pressure to conform to their (well meaning) standards and supress any experience to the contrary.  54% student respondents in one study knew someone who had experienced negative events at university, with ⅓ of these people reporting this person dropped out as a direct result of this experience. Jinty wonders how the student support system will help her to avoid living through other people’s expectations, and even stimulate  a more resilient attitude.

Jinty’s also got a few friends she doubts will get homesick at all; they can’t wait to get away. They’ve got tough home lives, and hard relationships with their parents, and keep saying they’re going to seize this opportunity to ‘break free’. She really hopes they find connections and ‘their people’ at university.

Many qualitative studies have shown that students in this context, who are sometimes estranged, have highly significant friendships at university that become their ‘new family’. Perhaps healthily so. However, if these people are too keen to seek a new tribe, they may make friends with the ‘wrong crowds’ who might lure them into uncharacteristic behaviour. It could go both ways.

Friendships

Jinty knows how to keep friends, having spent the last ten years nurturing and maintaining childhood friendships that turned into mature adult ones. But she can’t stop herself worrying that she’s forgotten how to make friends. She isn’t alone on this: one Student Beans survey including over 2000 students at university found that 95% respondents were worried about not making any friends. Everybody knows that it’s the people who make up university experiences, with interview-based studies finding that in order to keep people enrolled in university, students need to integrate into this social world much better. But what if there are no societies that are just right for Jinty to make friends with likeminded people?

Many studies have also shown there are factors that make friend-making worries even harder. One study found that lower-represented students at university, such as those from a lower-income background or of traveller status experienced more hardships when making friends, and higher levels of isolation.

Also, the relationship between alcohol and friendship at university is nothing new… for generations Freshers’ week has fuelled friendships through lower inhibitions and increased fun. But what if students don’t feel in the mood for drinking? A recent study has found that many soon-to-be university students perceive non-drinkers as people who will struggle making friends. Jinty’s really keen to find her group, but fears she’ll have to binge drink every night in order to make the right impression. She doesn’t know how to resolve that worry.

Spending time with her friends from home is predictable, fun and easy…it’s been tried and tested over the years, and it’s evolved and been made stronger through growing up. What if her new connections aren’t as meaningful? She might be given rubbish flatmates which loads of people complain about online. 85% of respondents in one study at the University of Exeter, said this was their top concern. Jinty also worries about her old friends back home, replacing her with their new friends. Ridiculous idea but real emotion.
In particular, Jinty realises that her home-based friendship group helps her feel the most like herself, and therefore by contrast, forging new friendships may increase self-awareness stress. Jinty’s often  struggled with her identity, and understanding of who she is, and now fears this might make her more prone to peer pressure.

But resourceful Jinty has decided to make friends more easily. It started through finding her flatmates online, and chatting to them, which is typical of many first-year students trying to build their new communities. She quickly thinks she’s got a pretty good idea of them already: sussing out their personalities, comparing them to friends from home, and deciding these will be her new pals. In order for her to feel the safest while entering this new, scary and uncertain experience, she’s decided to stick with people who feel familiar. Which could, of course, limit her development if she doesn’t experience a wider range of social interactions.

Academia

All of Jinty’s teachers at school told her about the leap from A-Level to university that was going to be really difficult. To prepare herself, she’s done all the pre-reading and looked over all of the modules. Even so, she is already worrying about failing the course.
One massive contrast to school is that at Jinty’s uni, the learning will be self-directed, so she’s stressing that without teachers around to provide structure, discipline, worksheets or positive feedback, she won’t manage the workload.

And crucially, what if she doesn’t like her course? She’s actually had that recurring thought for months. She’s been interested in this field of study for so long that it’s really become part of her identity and social currency both at home and with her friends. What if she sleepwalks into a wrong fit? She might get there, realise it’s not for her and have to start the whole process of deciding her career path again. There’s just so much that could go wrong. These thoughts are not easily shared.

How can the adults in Jinty’s life support her transition into adulthood?

  1. Actively Listen to her experiences of university, instead of interrupting with personal judgements and opinions. When a human feels really seen/heard unconditionally and without judgement, a channel for inner trust opens up. Emotional expression and release are vital to good mental health.
  2. Project a safe emotional space where all thoughts can be explored, dismissed, embraced, shunned. It’s all part of healthy growing up. Let the dynamic flow of different personality facets play out as they evolve. Don’t fear what comes up. Don’t rush to label what comes up. Honour the transitory moments of youth.
  3. Look for and acknowledge signs of flourishing. Don’t project your fears, hopes and desires. This is not your life! It is their opportunity to find new independent ways to thrive in a world no one is prepared for. Avoid looking for problems so that you can rush to their rescue – that’s your agenda for self-worth and doesn’t build resilience.
  4. Use language that presupposes self-reliance for thriving: “after you are all settled in your cosy bed with your brand-new duvet, I wonder which books/games/ friends will help you feel most relaxed?”
  5. Clever language orientates their brain in specific directions. Play with words such as ‘THIS’ and ‘THAT’… “That homesickness will surely pass” helps dissociate and dissolve some of the emotional intensity that comes from this

 

How can students just like Jinty, support their transition into adulthood?

  1. Social media is a binary system, completely out of touch with reality as people choose their own filters and give away information according to how they’d like to be perceived. Your life experiences are to be trusted so that you build strong inner wisdom out of whatever you have learned to deal with.
  2. Try as many new things as you can. Plus, playfully using words like ‘I could’ sets up an open mind to new experiences, without feeling under pressure.
  3. Modify your inner dialogue. Instead of conning yourself with a potential lie that could set you up to fail i.e. “you will have the best time” start practising thoughts like “I wonder what will be the most fun to do next week …?”
  4. Identity: who is the real you? You are on a journey of discovery, and nothing is set in stone. So, start to choose activities that bring you alive and help you feel more ‘you’.

 

Helpful reflections of a graduate

Although I did not love my course at first, I soon started loving it as the months went on. My advice would be not to judge it too quickly. Clear up your thinking mind and stay out of judging and analysing.

In retrospect, my best friend at university was the one I did not speak to at all before we met in person. I had absolutely no expectations about who she was, so when we met things were candid, unfiltered, fuelled by genuine curiosity, and our bond was pretty instantaneous!

However, the girls I chatted to before, who I thought would be some of my best friends, were not at all. You can never predict these things from online chats. This also shows how the brain’s predictions are often off the mark, it’s best to live in the moment.

Written by Kay Cooke and Emily Elliott

References

Bristow, L. (2010). An evaluation of an educational intervention aimed at improving confidence, knowledge and skill of university students to cook.

Denham, J. (2013). Can’t cook, won’t cook? A tenth of students never make their own food. Independent.

Grajek, M., Krupa-Kotara, K., Białek-Dratwa, A., Sobczyk, K., Grot, M., Kowalski, O., & Staśkiewicz, W. (2022). Nutrition and mental health: A review of current knowledge about the impact of diet on mental health. Frontiers in Nutrition, 9, 943998.

Eder, M. (2019). University Freshers’ Biggest Worries revealed.

Scharp, K. M., Paxman, C. G., & Thomas, L. J. (2016). “I want to go home” homesickness experiences and social-support-seeking practices. Environment and Behavior, 48(9), 1175-1197.

Biasi, V., Mallia, L., Russo, P., Menozzi, F., Cerutti, R., & Violani, C. (2018). Homesickness experience, distress and sleep quality of first-year university students dealing with academic environment. Journal of Educational and Social Research, 8(1).

Thurber, C. A., & Walton, E. A. (2012). Homesickness and adjustment in university students. Journal of American college health, 60(5), 415-419.

Wilcox, P., Winn, S., & Fyvie‐Gauld, M. (2005). ‘It was nothing to do with the university, it was just the people’: the role of social support in the first‐year experience of higher education. Studies in higher education, 30(6), 707-722.

Wilcox, P., Winn, S., & Fyvie‐Gauld, M. (2005). ‘It was nothing to do with the university, it was just the people’: the role of social support in the first‐year experience of higher education. Studies in higher education, 30(6), 707-722.

Scanlon, M., Leahy, P., Jenkinson, H., & Powell, F. (2020). ‘My biggest fear was whether or not I would make friends’: working-class students’ reflections on their transition to university in Ireland. Journal of Further and Higher Education, 44(6), 753-765.

Gambles, N., Porcellato, L., Fleming, K. M., & Quigg, Z. (2022). “If You Don’t Drink at University, You’re Going to Struggle to Make Friends” Prospective Students’ Perceptions around Alcohol Use at Universities in the United Kingdom. Substance Use & Misuse, 57(2), 249-255.

Thomas, L., Briggs, P., Hart, A., & Kerrigan, F. (2017). Understanding social media and identity work in young people transitioning to university. Computers in Human Behavior, 76, 541-553.

Worsley, J. D., Harrison, P., & Corcoran, R. (2021). Bridging the gap: exploring the unique transition from home, school or college into university. Frontiers in public health, 9, 634285.

Ding, F., & Curtis, F. (2021). ‘I feel lost and somehow messy’: a narrative inquiry into the identity struggle of a first-year university student. Higher Education Research & Development, 40(6), 1146-1160.

Clasen, D. R., & Brown, B. B. (1985). The multidimensionality of peer pressure in adolescence. Journal of youth and adolescence, 14(6), 451-468.

Peel, M. (2000). Nobody cares’: The challenge of isolation in school to university transition. Journal of Institutional Research, 9(1), 22-34.

FREE Entrancing Journey

FREE Entrancing Journey

This FREE 20 minute mind-magic-meditation will entrance your inner worlds.

This journey is designed to gradually induce deep altered states of consciousness and therefore you should only listen to it while in a quiet and safe environment where you will not be disturbed. You must not be driving or operating machinery!

Connect to your deeper wisdoms, guided by light and love, and at times, by archetypes and beings who are in service of your soul’s flourishing. After returning to your waking consciousness, you will feel a renewed sense of well-being, higher purpose, and connection to all life.

Whilst many people find the effects of these mind-magic mediations therapeutic, they are not a substitute for medical or psychiatric interventions.

Content of this session includes: Tuning in Breath & Body Grounding in Gaia Entering the quantum field Embracing Circular Time Connecting with the Cosmos Embracing Wisdom and Balance Being Divine Web of Consciousness Luminous Energy Field Healing and Integration Closing the Session

Keywords Breath, quantum field, resonance, cosmos, consciousness, body, invisible worlds, divine, light, love, crystalline, choral, cosmic, celestial.

 

Power of Words for Positive Transformation

Power of Words for Positive Transformation

Every word, every utterance, carries an electro-chemical charge that affects your nervous system.

Words have power. 

I can say the word ‘spider’ to 10 people and each person will build a unique image inside their minds. One that fits their personalised mental mapping/interpretation of that word.

 

I can say ‘vicious spider’ and some people will laugh; others will recoil in terror.
Some will imagine a cartoon spider, perhaps wielding a sword, others may see death jaws and claws.

The interpretation of any word is subjective. Yet that meaning will instigate a floodgate of FEELINGS i.e. neuro-chemicals.

Words are spells.

 

Many people are careless with words. Many people are wounded by words.
People are also strengthened by words.

Words carry powerful energies. 

Tune into the intensity of your response to the following phrases.

  • You should know better.
  • You should have known better.
  • You might know better next time. 

 

If you don’t feel the shift in your brain’s processing of these word combinations, call me.  You should. You should know the great power of word-smithing. Because you are being bombarded by wordsmiths.
Every. Single. Day.  Be they cunning and manipulative OR sloppy and ignorant.

 

To know is to reclaim your brain. 

 

TAKE AN EVERY DAY CONVERSATION ABOUT A NEWS ITEM:

“They were REALLY AWFULL. They are such ignorant bigots who deserve what they get.”

= Fact-less opinions with a poisoned arrow of invitation into heavy emotional entanglement. 

“I didn’t enjoy that. I found myself willing them to open their hearts, but it didn’t happen.”

= Personal opinion with a tangle-free opportunity to respond.

“Well, that’s not for me!”

= Honest statement as a platform to move the conversation onward. 

 

Know the difference between facts, feelings, opinion, and imagination.

FACTS

Verifiable by the outside world.

FEELINGS

The meaning that your brain interprets with positive or negative emotions.

OPINION

How you see the situation.

IMAGINATION

How the situation could become better or worse.

GET CLARITY! And help your young ones to know these differences!

 

But those words and phrases don’t just happen out loud. No! The most toxic words can happen inside your mind.

So you really should start listening to your everyday vocabulary. Make sure you include:

Owning your opinion (I think)

Owning your emotion (I feel)

 

Empower Yourself!

In week one of Happy Brain training, we include an exercise to wake up your word-smart filters. It’s called The Fun-Shine Alphabet. Try it!

Take each letter of the alphabet and find fabulous words that make your brain, mind and body feel shiny, happy and joyful. It’s a Mini Mind Spa. Flush some happy chemicals through your system  each day and format some positive language into your auto-pilot.

The magic starts inside your mind. 

In which direction you choose to utilise your word power is between you and your morality. But I wish for a more kind, compassionate, tolerant, peace-seeking, curious, explorative, loving, fun, happy, intelligent, and healthy society. And I hope you’ll join me in the intention and practice of positive transformation through word power.

Wouldn’t it be Amazing if we Aimed our brains in Beautiful, Creative, Displays of Energised, Feelings, Growing, Hopeful, Imaginations, Joyfully, Kind and Loving, with Marvellous, Nourishment, of Opulent Playfulness, Quirky Resilience, with Shiny,Terrific Understanding and Violet-light Wonderment that leads to X-cellent, Yummy, Zinging!!!

You’re welcome …

the happybrain co.
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