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Sunday, December 31, 2017

2017/2018

Na transição convencionada do tempo de mais um ano, gostaria de agradecer a todos os AMICOR, amigos e eventuais visitantes por me facilitarem a sensação de estar acompanhado, tendo com quem trocar experiências e conteúdos de nossas mentes.
Em 2017 colecionamos vários números redondos: AMICOR fez 20 anos, minha esposa e eu completamos 60 anos de casados, nossa filha mais nova seus 50 anos e 25 de casada, nossa neta 20 anos, meus pais - se vivos estivessem - 90 anos do casamento, 30 da Disciplina de Promoção e Proteção da Saúde III (adulto e idoso) que criei ao retornar para a Faculdade de Medicina, e haveria mais ainda a lembrar...
Em 2018 já antevejo celebrar 40 anos da pesquisa sobre pressão arterial e outros fatores de risco na população adulta do Estado, e 60 anos de formatura de nossa turma na Medicina da UFRGS...
Saúde e Felicidade a todos!







Photo
CreditAndrew Chuani Ho

New Year’s Eve is a time to set goals: to eat better, to save more money, to work harder, to drink less. It’s Day 1 on the road to a “new you.” But this road, as we all know, is difficult to follow. Humans are notoriously bad at resisting temptation, especially (as research confirms) if we’re busy, tired or stressed. By Jan. 8, some 25 percent of resolutions have fallen by the wayside. And by the time the year ends, fewer than 10 percent have been fully kept./.../
From an evolutionary perspective, the fact that exercising willpower doesn’t come naturally to us makes a lot of sense. For millenniums, what led to success wasn’t the ability to study for exams, save for retirement, go to the gym or wait for a second marshmallow. For most of our evolutionary history, none of these self-focused goals mattered or even existed. It’s far more likely that what led to success was strong social bonds — relationships that would encourage people to cooperate and lend support to one another, which helped to ensure that their sacrifices would be returned time and again when required in the future.
But to establish and maintain relationships, people would have had to be fair, honest, generous, diligent and loyal. They would have had to be perceived as good partners. In other words, they would have had to behave morally./.../
More than a decade’s worth of research backs up this picture. Studies from my lab, for example, show that gratitude directly increases self-control. In a version of the marshmallow test adapted for adults, we had people take a few minutes to recall an event that made them feel grateful, neutral or happy. Next, we had them answer a series of questions of the form “Would you rather have $X now or $Y in Z days?” with Y always being bigger than X, and Z varying over weeks to months. From these questions, we could calculate how much people discounted the value of the future./.../
What these findings show is that pride, gratitude and compassion, whether we consciously realize it or not, reduce the human mind’s tendency to discount the value of the future. In so doing, they push us not only to cooperate with other people but also to help our own future selves. Feeling pride or compassion has been shown to increase perseverance on difficult tasks by over 30 percent. Likewise, gratitude and compassion have been tied to better academic performance, a greater willingness to exercise and eat healthily, and lower levels of consumerism, impulsivity and tobacco and alcohol use./.../

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