We can do this by working as our....
If you are having trouble viewing this email, [click here.]( You are receiving this email because you have expressed an interest in quality health and lifestyle tips. You can remove your email by clicking [unsubscribe]( at any time, or simply reply back to this email asking to be removed.  Here's Today's Tip... Stop Negative Thinking.  Self-defeating thoughts can be short lived or part of a condition we actively work to manage (often anxiety and depression). Either way, they donât feel good, we all have them, and itâs important to catch ourselves when we start to notice them.  We can do this by working as our own fact checker. We do this with major debates, the news, and when someone else tells us something weâre not sure is true.  The crazy thing about this is that we generally DONâT do this when it comes to our own thoughts or internal monologue. We assume these thoughts and ideas are 100% accurate, even when some of them are not. As much as we would like to believe our own thoughts are always the truth, the fact is that sometimes they are FAKE NEWS. These specific negative and untrue thoughts are called âcognitive distortionsâ. Specifically, these are thoughts that reinforce negative thinking patterns that generally have little to no basis in reality.  Essentially they are the words of our inner critic, not the voice of truth. According to PsychCentral some of the most common distortions are called filtering, polarized thinking, and overgeneralizing. The best way to arm yourself against these distortions? Recognize when they are happening and GET INSIDE YOUR OWN HEAD. Donât be scared to tell yourself your thoughts are wrong, especially when they are self-defeating.  You can either be your best friend or your worst enemy. Donât you want to have your own back? Letâs take a closer look at these Top 3 Cognitive Distortions, and how we can better arm ourselves to deconstruct them: Filtering: This is when we selectively filter out all positive instances and only focus on the negative. You know those meetings where your boss tells you 10 things youâre great at and one area for growth, but all you think about is the one negative? This is filtering.  Instead of focusing on the area for growth, write down the 10 things that you were complimented on, and focus on these! We are much better off building on our strengths than we are focusing on the one thing weâre not great at. Itâs ok to be mindful of your growth areas, but itâs not so great when we let them consume us. When we focus on our strengths, growth areas often improve as a result. Note how I called these âgrowth areasâ and not âweaknessesâ.  Words matter - use ones that build you up, not tear you down! Polarized thinking:  Black and white. Right and Wrong. If youâre not first, youâre last. I either do everything at the gym or nothing at all. This is polarized thinking.  The best way to combat it? Focus on progress NOT perfection. Success is in the details, and keeping a gratitude journal or list of victories over the course of the week makes a big difference. Consistency is essential to achieving any goal, not being perfect. The more we practice consistency and progress in anything we do, whether it be work, health goals, or relationships, the better off weâll be at it. I donât know how many times we have to tell ourselves this, but EVERY LITTLE BIT COUNTS! Anything else is polarized thinking. Itâ okay to live in the âgray areaâ. Overgeneralization: Taking one instance of something happening, and applying the result to all other areas is overgeneralizing. I actually did this with CrossFit. I went to one specific gym, had a terrible experience, and swore it off for good.  Not just this specific center, but all of CrossFit, for the rest of my life. To be honest, I still havenât gone back and this is something that I need to give another shot. I canât take one bad coach or exercise class and apply it to every coach and gym out there. Scientists don't take one finding in a small sample and then announce it to the world as the absolute truth, and neither should we.  ITâS BAD SCIENCE! Moral of the story:  Investigate your thoughts and refute them. If you catch yourself having self doubt in any area, be sure to examine why and look for the positives. The more we focus on this, the more we hardwire the pathways to positive thinking and make it part of our natural thinking process. Thatâs the cool thing about our brains, the more we focus on something the more hardwired it becomes. So if we think positive, weâre going to be positive, and the same vice versa.  Be a mad scientist - destroy the fake news in your brain! Donât be afraid to question your own thinking. After all - we know ourselves best, and if we donât call ourselves on our own BS, who will? To Always Improving, Change That Up. One more quick thing before I go... if you battle with high blood sugar, then you might want to check this out....
 This tiny purple berry can help you pee out high blood sugar. It sounds weird. But folks who've tried it no longer need Metformin or insulin⦠Instead⦠Their blood sugar is now stable - even if they eat "cheat" food like pasta, pizza, and pie. Simply eat this berry and in less than 1-hour it will: [â
] Help you pee out sugar [â
] Restore healthy A1C levels [â
] And boost your energy What's more⦠This purple berry is backed by Harvard University, Johns Hopkins, and Yale Medical School. So if you'd like to FINALLY regain control over your blood sugar⦠[This "tiny purple berry" could be exactly what you're looking for.](   Change That Up was founded to help replace old habits with positive, healthy habits. It is our core belief that you have the power to #changethatup when weâre stuck in rut. You can do this by using our powerful daily insights delivered to your inbox. We all grew up on the typical standard American diet. We followed the patterns and behaviors that we learned from everyone around us. When we all first started growing up and becoming adults, we started living a work life behind the desk. We got busy with life. We almost all fell out of any good habits that we had while growing up (this almost always happened unless you grew up in a home that taught good nutrition and healthy habits). As any adult in their 40s and 50s can relate, you feel a great amount of joy when you see your healthy habits create a life of freedom and happiness.
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