logo

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

New Research on Depression

Coming from a family full of depressed and anxious people this article was intriguing to me. There appears to be a very big difference between the brain of a normal person and the brain of a depressed person. Therefore, cognitive problems are more likely. Like difficulty concentrating, difficulty picking up social cues or poor memory. So the questions is, do these cognitive problems cause the depression? It’s possible. And this research also helps mental health professionals identify depression early so development can potentially be reduced. Read on and learn more.

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | Permalink

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Do You Talk To Yourself?

If you don’t maybe you should start. According to the following article it can help you prevent procrastination.

You know the drill… that negative self-talk we all end up saying in our heads. Well, it’s keeping you from moving forward. In fact I recently did a podcast interview with Linda Sapadin. She wrote the book “It’s About Time! The Six Styles of Procrastination and How to Overcome Them.” Our chat about negative self-talk backs up this article. Have a listen.

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | Permalink

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Will Obama be the first to use a BlackBerry in the White House?

According to an article in The New York Times, Obama is glued to his BlackBerry. But it may not be long before he is forced to stop cyber-communications all together… or not. Could you imagine? 

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | Permalink

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Swiss Time

So, I stumbled upon this article about the Swiss and their obsession with time. I had no idea how strict they were. I mean I had heard their trains always run exactly on time. But reading this article made me realize how complicated things can become if time becomes all we think about! Now don’t get me wrong, I think some things are important to be on time for. I am extremely sensitive to meeting times and being on time to business events. But I am not so sensitive when it comes to personal time with friends or family. I kind of see my personal time as an opportunity to NOT think about time. I guess because I am so conscience of time during work hours, I need a break on the weekend. Read on and see for yourself. 

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(2) Comments | Permalink

Thursday, January 03, 2008

A Clutter Too Deep for Mere Bins and Shelves

This is a great article from the New York Times. I have been gathering my own research to determine how many of my clients are overweight or suffer from depression/anxiety. I have found there is a definite pattern. I always preach that clutter has nothing to do with the clutter.  Now I have articles like this to back me up!

January 1, 2008

A Clutter Too Deep for Mere Bins and Shelves
By TARA PARKER-POPE

After the holidays, many shoppers load up their carts with storage bins, shelving systems and color-coded containers, all in a resolute quest to get organized for the new year.

The country’s collective desire to clean up is evident in the proliferation of organization-oriented businesses like the Container Store and California Closets. Reality shows like “Mission Organization” on HGTV and “How Clean is Your House?” on Lifetime feed a national obsession to declutter. The magazine Real Simple has even created a $13 special issue on cleaning house.

Getting organized is unquestionably good for both mind and body — reducing risks for falls, helping eliminate germs and making it easier to find things like medicine and exercise gear.

“If you can’t find your sneakers, you aren’t taking a walk,” said Dr. Pamela Peeke, assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Maryland and the author of “Fit to Live” (Rodale, 2007), which devotes a section to the link between health and organization. “How are you going to shoot a couple of hoops with your son if you can’t even find the basketball?”

But experts say the problem with all this is that many people are going about it in the wrong way. Too often they approach clutter and disorganization as a space problem that can be solved by acquiring bins and organizers.

Measures like these “are based on the concept that this is a house problem,” said David F. Tolin, director of the anxiety disorders center at the Institute of Living in Hartford and an adjunct associate professor of psychiatry at Yale.

“It isn’t a house problem,” he went on. “It’s a person problem. The person needs to fundamentally change their behavior.”

Excessive clutter and disorganization are often symptoms of a bigger health problem. People who have suffered an emotional trauma or a brain injury often find housecleaning an insurmountable task. Attention deficit disorder, depression, chronic pain and grief can prevent people from getting organized or lead to a buildup of clutter. At its most extreme, chronic disorganization is called hoarding, a condition many experts believe is a mental illness in its own right, although psychiatrists have yet to formally recognize it.

Compulsive hoarding is defined, in part, by clutter that so overtakes living, dining and sleeping spaces that it harms the person’s quality of life. A compulsive hoarder finds it impossible, even painful, to part with possessions. It’s not clear how many people suffer from compulsive hoarding, but estimates start at about 1.5 million Americans.

Dr. Tolin recently studied compulsive hoarders using brain-scan technology. While in the scanner, hoarders looked at various possessions and made decisions about whether to keep them or throw them away. The items were shredded in front of them, so they knew the decision was irreversible. When a hoarder was making decisions about throwing away items, the researchers saw increased activity in the orbitofrontal cortex, a part of the brain involved in decision-making and planning.

“That part of the brain seemed to be stressed to the max,” Dr. Tolin said. By comparison, people who didn’t hoard showed no extra brain activity.

While hoarders are a minority, many psychologists and organization experts say the rest of us can learn from them. The spectrum from cleanliness to messiness includes large numbers of people who are chronically disorganized and suffering either emotionally, physically or socially. Cognitive behavioral therapy may help: a recent study of hoarders showed that six months’ therapy resulted in a marked decline in clutter in the patient’s living space.

Although chronic disorganization is not a medical diagnosis, therapists and doctors sometimes call on professional organizers to help patients. One of them is Lynne Johnson, a professional organizer from Quincy, Mass., who is president of the National Study Group on Chronic Disorganization.

Ms. Johnson explains that some people look at a shelf stacked with coffee mugs and see only mugs. But people with serious disorganization problems might see each one as a unique item — a souvenir from Yellowstone or a treasured gift from Grandma.

Many clients have already accumulated numerous storage bins and other such items in a futile attempt to get organized. Usually the home space is adequate, she says, but the challenge is in teaching them how to group, sort, set priorities and discard.

Ms. Johnson says she often sees a link between her client’s efforts to get organized and weight loss. “I think someone decides, ‘I’m not going to live like this anymore. I’m not going to hold onto my stuff, I’m not going to hold onto my weight,’” she said. “I don’t know that one comes before the other. It’s part of that same life-change decision.”

On its Web site, www.nsgcd.org, the group offers a scale to help people gauge the seriousness of their clutter problem. It also includes a referral tool for finding a professional organizer. But since the hourly fees can range from $60 to $100 or more, it may be worth consulting a new book by Dr. Tolin, “Buried in Treasures” (Oxford, 2007), which offers self-assessments and advice for people with hoarding tendencies.

Dr. Peeke says she often instructs patients trying to lose weight to at least create one clean and uncluttered place in their home. She also suggests keeping a gym bag with workout clothes and sneakers in an uncluttered area to make it easier to exercise. She recalls one patient whose garage was “a solid cube of clutter.” The woman cleaned up her home and also lost about 50 pounds.

“It wasn’t, at the end of the day, about her weight,” Dr. Peeke said. “It was about uncluttering at multiple levels of her life.”

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | Permalink

Friday, August 03, 2007

Erasable Copy Paper

While sifting through a pile with a client recently I found an article about erasable copy paper. It’s an article from the Richmond Times Dispatch in December 2006. “Scientists at Xerox research centers announced that they have developed technology to print on pages where the text will disappear after 16 hours. The “erasable paper” relies on chemicals that change color when exposed to a printers light and then gradually disappears in 16-24 hours. Xerox spokesperson Bill McKee said the paper can be reused between 20 to 50 times.”

This is an amazing new tool. Consider what you would get done in a day if you knew the type on your paper would soon disappear. In the article it states that this invention would be a great benefit for security purposes. But imagine how many fewer piles you would have in your office if the text would no longer be there tomorrow. I recommend managers and executives use this tool to motivate their staff to get work done. It is also a great way to reuse our resources and reduce the amount of paper we use in a year. Companies would save tons of money with a resource like this.  Kudos to Xerox!

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Permalink

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

The Mobile Office

These days almost everyone I know is mobile. They work from home, from coffee shops, from their car. This makes it even more important to be organized. This article below includes some great tips for those who know first hand the stresses of working from home or without an office. To all my friends at Capital one, this one’s for you.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/SpecialSeries/story?id=3339220&page=1

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Permalink

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Ouch Points

If you are disorganized or know someone who is, this information from shrm.org may motivate you at work.

Workers Grind Teeth Over Rambling Meetings

Meetings that are disorganized strike more of an “ouch point” with workers than meetings that start late or consist of attendees who straggle in, according to a new monthly study examining Americans’ tolerance thresholds for common scenarios in their personal and professional lives.

“Everyone has a pet peeve about even the smallest of tasks that have to be carried out on a daily basis,” Jeff Resnick, president of Opinion Research USA, said in a press release. “In the world of business, the Ouch Point series helps organizations identify these issues and rectify them for their key stakeholders.”

Top 10 meeting ouch points are:

• Disorganized, rambling meetings, cited by 27 percent of respondents.

• People who interrupt peers and try to dominate a meeting, 17 percent.

• Cell phone interruptions, 16 percent.

• People who fall asleep in meetings, 9 percent.

• Lack of bathroom breaks, 8 percent.

• Long meetings with no refreshments, 6 percent.

• People arriving late or leaving early, 5 percent.

• People who check their hand-held devices during meetings, 5 percent.

• Meetings that start late, 4 percent.

• No minutes of the meeting outcome, 4 percent.

“Structured business meetings with a closely followed agenda are often the most productive, particularly when attention spans can be short,” Resnick noted. “Our first Ouch Point survey indicates that a disorganized meeting is a disengaged meeting that will rarely result in the desired outcomes.”

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Permalink

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Hooked On Storage

Recently I took a teleclass about the pros and cons of storage units. Then a friend sent me this article. The statistics are pretty interesting. Are we simply living in smaller spaces? Or are we addicted to stuff?

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/08/garden/08storage.html

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Permalink

Get-Organized-Now Hysteria

We are bombarded daily with thousands of decisions. It has become extremely difficult for us to manage clutter, maintain a low stress level and work reasonable hours. So what is one to do? There is no magic answer. However, perhaps this article will give you some ideas. Read on efficiency wannabe’s.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17522665/site/newsweek/

Posted by Sara Bereika in • Articles
(0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Permalink
Page 1 of 1 pages