Quick Fixes: Happiness in a Bottle
Copyright © 2003 Priya
Shah

This is the age of the Quick Fix - the magic bullets
that claim to take away our sorrows, our tiredness, our sadness.
You need look no farther than your mailbox to see
the range of remedies - prescription drugs and supplements - being
plugged for everything from stress to low energy.
In the age of modern-day stresses, of recessions and
depressions, most people find it hard to resist the cure-all promises
of "safe and natural" products.
From those that claim to calm a hyperactive child,
to those that give you a much-needed energy boost, or revive a sagging
love life, quick fixes are everywhere.
And the fact that the people selling them are raking
in a fortune shows that there is indeed a great demand for these products.
There's no doubt that supplements provide genuine
relief to those who suffer from organic disease. And some may provide
a 'safer' alternative for those who cannot tolerate prescriptions.
But with more and more people reaching for a "safe"
pill just to get through the day, taking supplements to cope with
life is becoming the norm rather than the exception.
Most of us simply don't have the time or the inclination
to address the root cause of our stress. Besides it costs considerably
more to consult a therapist than to buy a bottle of kava-kava from
an online store.
But quick fixes are a short term solution. And by
using them as coping strategies, we risk slipping into a never-ending
cycle of psychological dependence, while ignoring the root cause of
our stress.
Stress - resulting from the way we react to situations,
from the emotions, behaviour patterns and habits that are part of
our mental makeup.
Changing the attitudes or habits of a lifetime is
never easy. We must find coping strategies - support from friends,
family, community, religion, spirituality - and our own inner strength.
We need to use whatever works best for us, to avoid
slipping back into the cycle of stress and despair.
The solutions are often there right in front of us
- if we care enough to look for them. You could find them in a book,
a church, a family reunion, a new love.
Often the answers are right there in your mind, but
you have to CHOOSE to accept them.
Solving a problem takes three conscious steps:
- Awareness: Realising that we have a problem
- Acceptance: That we have to do something about it, and
- Action: Taking concrete steps to resolve it
Once you start to eliminate the root cause of your
stress, you´ll find yourself reaching less and less for that
magic pill, that upper, that quick fix.
A pill might give you a few moments of bliss. But
when you eliminate the attitudes and behaviour that keep you down,
the peace it brings will last you a lifetime.
Priya Shah edits The
Glutathione Report and a Natural
Health Portal.
This article may be reprinted as long as the resource box is left
intact and all links are hyperlinked.

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