Here’s the most relevant quote from
the article:
“Since that 2012 review, two
additional studies have come out that further point to the robustness of this
association. Rosalba Hernandez and colleagues focused on the American Heart
Association’s definition of cardiovascular disease (CVD), which involves
consideration of 7 metrics grouped into two categories: health behaviors (diet,
smoking, physical activity, BMI) and health factors (blood pressure, blood
sugar, total cholestrol). This was the first study to consider the association
between optimism and CVH as defined by the American Heart Association, and this
was also the first study to utilize a large sample of ethnically/racially
diverse sample of adults.
Using data collected from 5,134
adults aged 52-84 over an 11 year period, they found a significant association
between optimism and cardiovascular health (CVH), with the most optimistic
people showing twice the odds of having ideal CVH profiles. The association
remained significant even after controlling for socio-demographic variables
(i.e., age, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status, education, income, and
insurance status) and measures of psychological ill-being (e.g., depression),
again supporting the notion that a lack of ill-being doesn’t necessarily
indicate the presence of thriving.”
OK, so you’ve insisted on hanging
around. I’ll tell you why I find it so relevant.
An old friend of mine is becoming
ever more prone to pessimism. He’s always had an inclination toward mild fatalism though he’s married, has a family and fine career.
Still, he experiences the word no more strongly than any other:
No, I can’t do anything I might
enjoy.
No, I can’t get any meaningful
exercise.
No, I can lose any of the weight
I’ve packed on over the last year or so.
To put the cherry on the sundae of
this guy’s life let me tell you that he had an emergency angioplasty a couple
years back. The artery that was blocked is nicknamed The Widowmaker by
cardiologists.
You would think (and I thought)
that this and the other normal stuff of life in the 50s would wake my old
friend up to the need to take better care of himself. But it hasn’t…yet. I am
ever the optimist.
Another quote from the article is
this:
“When individuals are confronted
with challenge, they may succumb or they may respond in one of three ways: They
may survive (continuing to function, but in an impaired fashion), recover
(return to previous levels of emotional, social and psychological functioning),
or thrive (to go beyond the prior baseline, to grow and flourish). Through the
interactive process of confronting and coping with challenges, a transformation
occurs.”
I readily admit that for many years
I trended toward an acceptance of mere recovery as opposed to a quest to
thrive. I have since learned the error of my ways. Some days, perhaps more days
than I would care to admit, I have to beat back the temptation to accept simple
survival and recovery as good enough. But they’re not.
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