Wisconsin Public Psychiatry Network Teleconference (WPPNT)
• This teleconference is brought to you by the Wisconsin Department of Health Services
(DHS), Division of Care and Treatment Services, Bureau of Prevention Treatment and Recovery and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Psychiatry.
• Use of information contained in this presentation may require express authority from a
third party.
• 2019, Pelin Kesebir, Reproduced with permission.
1
WPPNT Reminders
• Call 877-820-7831 before 11:00 a.m. • Enter passcode 107633#, when prompted. • Questions may be asked, if time allows. • To ask a question, press *6 on your phone to un-mute yourself. *6 to
remote. • Ask questions for the presenter, about their presentation. • The link to the evaluation for today’s presentation is on the WPPNT
webpage, under todays date: https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/wppnt/2019.htm
2
Pelin Kesebir, Ph.D.
What Is a Healthy
Mind? &
How Can You Cultivate It?
3
What Is Happiness?
“If only I could have everything I want
and get rid of everything I don’t want, then I’d be
happy”
4
5
Happiness is a skill that can be cultivated.
6
“The fountain of content must spring up in the mind, and he who has so
little knowledge of human nature as to seek happiness by changing anything but his own disposition will waste his
life in fruitless efforts.”
Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) 7
A Healthy Mind: The Fountain of Happiness
More than anything else, our well-being is determined by our mind.
To transform our world, we need to transform our minds.
8
A healthy mind is a function of what we attend to and how we interpret the things that we attend to.
A Healthy Mind: A Matter of Attention & Interpretation
9
Attention
Attention is like a spotlight. What it illuminates streams into our mind
and becomes our reality.
Where we focus our attention has a direct bearing on our happiness.
10
Individual Differences in Attention Predict Well-being
11
Individual Differences in Attention Predict Well-being
12
Attention & Happiness
Developing greater control over our attention is foundational to reshaping
our mind and becoming happier.
A Wandering Mind Is An Unhappy Mind
Attention can be trained to facilitate orientation to more positive and less
negative stimuli.
13
Having Our Radar Out for the Positive
To enhance our happiness, we need to train ourselves to attend
more to the good around us.
14
Appreciating the Ordinary
How was it possible, I asked myself, to walk for an hour through the woods and see nothing worthy of note?
I who cannot see find hundreds of things to interest me through mere touch. I feel the delicate symmetry of a leaf. I pass my hands lovingly about the smooth skin of a silver
birch, or the rough, shaggy bark of a pine. In spring I touch the branches of trees hopefully in search of a bud…
If I were the president of a university I should establish a compulsory course in “How to Use Your Eyes”. The
professor would try to show his pupils how they could add joy to their lives by really seeing what passes unnoticed
before them. 15
Paying Attention to the News
16
Paying Attention to the News
17
16 Bad Things Decreasing
18
16 Good Things
Increasing
19
What Do You Put In Your Mind?
We should be as careful about what we put into our minds as about what we put into our mouths.
What do you want to swim in your consciousness?
What do you want to take root in your mind?
20
Happiness: A Matter of Interpretation
To different minds, the same world is a hell and a heaven. — Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
Happy people perceive, interpret, and think about the same events in more positive ways than do unhappy people.
21
Positivity
“A pervasive mode of appraising, viewing, and perceiving life from a positive stance”
22
23
24
Positivity
Positivity is inextricably linked to greater well-being.
Positivity can be learned.
All positivity cultivating techniques involve the exercise of interpreting the
world with a more charitable perspective.
25
26
27
3 Tips for a Healthy Mind
• Take good care of your body
• Accentuate the positive
• Practice mindfulness
28
Thank You 29