Showing posts with label make a difference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label make a difference. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

The 40 Percent Solution


In the US, although untrue, the elderly are considered slow witted, chronically ill, and a drain on society. I am over 70.
An abundance of money, which has been proven not to be a source of happiness, is still considered a status symbol. I do not have a lot of money.
Uneducated people are not taken seriously. I do not have a college degree.
Like a lack of education and money, having an abundance of time is considered shameful. I have a lot of time.
All of these beliefs are untrue, yet by America’s standards, I am not considered successful and to finish me off, I should not be happy.  Yet, the people I meet have called me a firecracker, an alligator, fiercely independent and have described me as whooshing into a room.  The most common description of me?  She’s an INSPIRATION.
I can’t explain people’s reactions to me. It is as if a label were tattooed on my forehead. This curious responses have me baffled. My only explanation is that I do not fit their expectations.
Sonja Lyubomirsky a psychologist at the University of California, Riverside proposes that roughly 50 percent of happiness is determined by genes (i.e., totally out of your control). I am convinced I wasn’t born with happy genes.  I fought depression during much of my adult life.
 Roughly 10 percent of a person’s happiness is determined by circumstance (i.e., somewhat out of your control). A death or disaster or famine and illness can douse the happy spark. I have certainly had my share of circumstances and even considered suicide.
The final 40 percent chance at happiness is determined by your thoughts, actions, and attitudes (i.e., entirely within your control). You can see why Lyubomirsky titled her research, The 40 Percent Solution.
Wouldn’t it seem that the United States, which celebrates so much abundance and success, (27 Things Which America Is Ranked Number One) would also have the happiest people residing within its borders?
But it is not so. America recently ranked 18th in the U.N.’s “World Happiness Report,”
So why are so many unhappy? 
52 percent of students reported feeling hopeless, while 39 percent suffered from such severe depression.
At the University of Pennsylvania, there’s even a slang term for the grim mask of discontent that accompanies this condition: “Penn Face.” We could go further and diagnose a national case of “USA Face,”
Two years ago The New York Times reported the suicide rate is at a 30 year high and growing.
For middle-aged women, ages 45 to 64, suicide jumped by 63 percent over the period of the study, while it rose by 43 percent for men in that age range, the sharpest increase for males of any age. The overall suicide rate rose by 24 percent from 1999 to 2014, according to the National Center for Health Statistics, which released the study on Friday.

Call to Action
Help someone find their way.

 We need to know why.
Here is your chance to make a difference, There are many in need to hear suggestions from you, my readers and fans –– your personal suggestions using only the 40% solution.
In other words, how have you changed your thoughts or attitude in order to become happier?
 What actions have you taken that made you happier?
More money or education can only be your answer if you changed your actions in order to achieve more money or more education. (Taken a second job to pay for your education or volunteered in a field of your interest to learn more, etc.)
Do not answer religion.
Instead explain only how it changed your thoughts, your attitude or your actions. (Because of my religion I began to do,   my attitude changed toward ….?  I no longer thought…?)
Take this opportunity to reach out and help one another.  It is time to begin connecting with one another.
The raindrop never takes responsibility for the flood.





THE GRIEVING GIFT

Janice’s older sister, Margaret, wanted to believe that the L.A. doctors at Cedars Sinai Medical Center held a magical deck of cards, but after eight years of treatment they dealt their final card. The Hospice card. No miracles for Margaret. Janice reassures her big sister she will be there, holding her hand every step of the way.
On a death watch, you get to know things about a person you wish you didn’t. It is like a roller coaster ride. And like most rides, it brings us back to the place we began, reminding us of who we were and who we have become.
The twists and turns of Janice’s emotional journey transports her back through the repercussions of her teen pregnancy and into the present estrangement from her daughter, whom she has not heard from for the last sixteen years.
Coming to terms with the grief of losing her sweet Margaret, and dealing with her fear of a lonely future is too much for Janice to imagine. When Margaret’s soul goes to rest in L.A. heaven, how will Janice face the emptiness? Will there be such a thing as a Grieving Gift?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
The death of Judy Howard’s husband gave the author a wake up call. Life is short. Howard sold her pet grooming business, which she had operated since the age of eleven and engaged full throttle into her new passions of writing and traveling.
Judy Howard’s writing career expands across many genres, including memoir, romantic mystery, reality fiction, travel and young adult, and now with THE GRIEVING GIFT, an autobiographical novel.
In all of Howard’s books the theme is always the same - overcoming life’s difficulties.
Judy lives full-time in her Winnebago motorhome with her cat, Sportster,   traveling across the country as a motivational speaker and offering writing seminars.
When Judy and Sportster are not traveling, they spend their time in Sun City, California.



Oh, and don’t forget!! Readers’ reviews  keep writers motivated.

USEFUL LINKS 

Other books by Judy Howard: JUDY’S AMAZON  AUTHOR  PAGE


Sportster's Blog: The Cat's Perspective Of Reading, Writing And Life

Click on the link below to find out more about Judy's books.






Safe travels!
                   










CONTACT JUDY HOWARD

jhoward1935@gmail.com



                                                                                                             




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Wednesday, May 18, 2016

INSPIRATION AND MOTIVATION DAY


Today is Motivation Day.  People use words like Inspiration and Brave to describe me. Even my cat, Sportster has an electrifying personality.

I believe everyone who crosses our path,   who touches us, those whom we have shared moments with, whether good or bad,   become a part of us. They change us.  Our encounters are like pouring thick cream into a black cup of coffee, the contents become forever altered. The action itself may be long forgotten, yet the mug carries the combination into eternity.

I recently reconnected with my best friend from high school, Jan Gingold. We shared a love for horses and were inseparable. Saturdays and Sundays,  sun up to sundown, we rode anywhere and everywhere, breathing in nature and feeling the freedom, racing down abandoned country roads. That time with my best friend nurtured my love for freedom, the outdoors and adrenaline rushes. Today, when I am asked to name an enjoyable moment in my life, I recall my time with Jan.

We cannot always control who shares  our journey, walking along with us for a while. Are those  interactions divinely guided and predestined? We might never know, but what I do know is those events  change us, hopefully like rich cream.

 But, maybe not. Sometimes it is more like sour milk.

During my 70 years, I faced the shame of a teenage pregnancy in the fifties and the aching guilt of an estrangement from my teenage daughter, which lasted sixteen years.  I’ve endured   despair, watching three people whom I loved fight futilely against cancer, the last, my granddaughter, who succumbed only a month ago at the age of twenty-eight.  So how can I swoosh  into a room with an explosion of energy?

I am motivated to change the world. And I fear I will not reach my goal.  

The desire to make a difference, is it a lofty goal?   Many days I believe my dream  is like the nonsense of a young girl’s fantasy  to marry the prince.

 Everyday I  wake up afraid, yet every day I am driven to overcome the fear, because if I do not believe in the dream, then change will never have a chance.

Dreams and imagination are seeds for a better world.

Every day I sit down to write. To inspire. To motivate.  To make a difference. Every day I search for the inspiration to motivate others.

What are you afraid you might  not achieve? What do you care about? What makes you get up in the morning?  What are your dreams?

Here are my mine.

I want to save the lives of 22 veterans a day. That is the number who lose their lives on home soil to suicide.  I want them to find honor, to rise above their anguish by using their stories to reach out to others. The public needs to know. What was it like? What happened? What is it like now?   By traveling across the country presenting writing seminars and motivational workshops, I hope to help veterans and their families to find the courage to tell their stories, their history and speak of their sacrifices.

 I want to save our youth from the ugly world of t human trafficking, which generated an estimated $7 billion to $9.5 billion per annum as of 2004. The average age a girl disappears into the grasps of sex traffickers is twelve.  Human trafficking is thought to be one of the fastest-growing activities of trans-national criminal organizations.

With so much at stake, motivation is everything. Discover what you care about and light your fire.


I was recently interviewed by Jim Hitt​  of the Diamond Valley Writers Guild​. If you are one of the 80% who have thought about writing a book, please listen  and then mark Saturday, May 28th on your calendar. I will be speaking on the subject of "What Makes  A Good Story?" Whether you are a seasoned author or an aspiring writer, you will come away INSPIRED  and MOTIVATED.

SEE INFORMATION BELOW.

 
The Diamond Valley Writers Guild

The DVWG meets from 9-11 a.m. on the fourth Saturday of each month from January – October, at the Hemet Public Library, 300 E Latham Ave, Hemet, CA 92543. We invite our audience to engage speakers during their presentations, to discuss and question the topic at hand for the greatest amount of feedback and interaction. Speakers will sign and sell books after the meeting. Hope to see you there.

MAY 28, 2016

Judy and Sportster
Judy Howard and Sportster

“Getting Started on Your Bestseller”
with Bestselling Author Judy Howard

“I should write a book!” How many times have you said that? Here’s your chance to answer that yearning – to check it off your bucket list! On Saturday, May 28, 2016, 9:15-11 a.m. at the Hemet Public Library, Judy Howard, author of Coast to Coast with a Cat and A Ghost, Going Home with a Cat and a Ghost, and Masada’s Marine, will reveal the secrets of writing a book you can’t put down.

Judy will cover the critical elements of plot, structure and character development. Informative handouts will be provided. If you’d like to see more about Judy and her commitment to writing,
click here for the video.