No, this isn't a recipe for a drink. It's a recipe for life.
      
      We all come upon problems, either self-imposed or from elsewhere,      often from the least expected places. Little or big, easily managed      or seemingly devastating, they all can lead to growth and a path to      the good life.
      
      When we're in the midst of the problem, it is not easy to think that      this pain, this sidetrack, can lead to anything that could resemble      good, but even if we can't think that way in the midst of angst, the      outcome can work to our benefit.
      
      How many people will describe an awful incident that happened to      them years ago and attribute a successful outcome to that incident?      Is this just a nice way to justify the pain and suffering or is this      really true?
      
      No doubt there are lessons to be learned from those hard times, but      I think the key to using them to grow a good life is being able to      consciously study on them.
      
      For most of us, though, when we're going through a difficult time we      are less than conscious of what is occurring and how we are      reacting. Interviews of people who have been involved in car      crashes, muggings, fires and the like, will describe blanking out at      crucial times, not able to remember after a particular point in the      incident.
      
      That blanking out, functioning on "automatic pilot, " as many say,      happens in all manner of situations, some not as dramatic as a fire      or car wreck, but as mundane as an argument with someone.
      
      It is an important survival tactic that helps move us through severe      physical and emotional pain and fear. Without it, we might become      immobilized and unable to save ourselves or help others escape a      tragedy.
      
      We hear stories of heroism and may wonder how that person found the      strength to surmount the catastrophe which confronted him. He will      tell you that he just achieved it, not thinking of the dire      consequences that could have fallen on him or even of the chance      confronting him.
      
      In the recent collapse of the 35W bridge in Minneapolis, a school      aide initiated the rescue of about 50 children from their school bus      precariously lodged against the railing of the fallen bridge. When      asked by a reporter how it is that he did this kind of heroic thing,      he looked somewhat embarrassed and befuddled. His answer didn't come      easily or smoothly, more of "I just did it" response. He really      didn't know.
      
      No doubt he was in that time between consciousness when he responded      to the situation without thought to personal outcome. How he uses      this incident in his life is, of course, yet to be determined. Will      he use it to rise to a level that he may not have achieved without      this trauma or will it be the chain around him that keeps him from      attaining what he considers success? We may never know the effect of      this major event on his life, but it will have an effect.
      
      Is there a way to get a positive effect from a trauma, in other      words, to make life's lemonade? There are many studies that show      this is not only a possibility but that it happens frequently. There      is even now a budding branch of psychology, of which i am a student,      which studies and implements techniques that make these positive      effects. It is called positive psychology and is quite different      from illness-based psychology which seeks to find and treat      disorders in individuals which make for long term trauma and      problems in living.
      
      The Recipe
      1. Feeling the sorrow of a trauma is normal and natural and part of      what is described as the "healing process. " The school aide will      feel this, as will those who survived the catastrophe and those who      helped them afterwards. Some try to deaden the pain of the trauma by      using alcohol or drugs, prescription or illicit, but this will only      stall the process, not bypass it.
      
      2. Some situations will not have great trauma, they will be smaller      problems. All situations will need to be consciously considered if      something useful is to be gotten out of them. That is, we must      determine
      (1) what occurred,
      (2) why it occurred,
      (3) how we handled it to our benefit or detriment,
      (4) what we can study on it that we can use from here on out,
      (5) how we can implement what we have learned.
      3. The realization that life is made up of happiness and sorrow is      an important defense against the effects of long term depression and      an unhappy life. A patient of mine told me, years later, that when i      first made that statement to her she thought I might be a bit crazy      myself. It was only after overcoming her own life's difficulties did      she understand my meaning. Life is wonderful, but don't expect an      easy ride-you will be disappointed.
      manfaat        lemon untuk kesehatan.    
 
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