THIS IS from the article of Lynn Alison in Newsmax in April 2021 with some added personal comments. Kindness not only makes us feel good but makes our health good too.
A research at the University of Sussex, England, found that areas of the brain literally lit up with bonus oxygen when subjects helped out someone. That’s the emotional high we get when we render kindness to someone, and here’s the five ways being kind can enhance our well-being as well:1. Being kind releases
feel-good hormones. It boosts your serotonin levels which increase feelings of
satisfaction and well-being, according to Quiet Revolution. It also releases
oxytocin, the “love hormone,” according to Cedars Sinai. It is the hormone that
helps us form social bonds and is released when we are physically intimate.
Oxytocin also helps lower blood pressure and can support cardiovascular
health. Being kind makes you happy and others happy. We
should heed St. Mother Teresa’s advice, “Be kind and merciful. Let no one
come to you without coming away better and happier.”
2. It increases lifespan.
According to author and researcher Christine Carter, Ph.D.: “People who
volunteer tend to experience fewer aches and pain. Giving help to others
protects overall health twice as much as aspirin protects against heart
disease. People who are 55 and older who volunteer for two or more
organizations have an impressive 44% lower likelihood of dying earlier. This is
a stronger effect than exercising four times a week.”
3. Kindness creates more
energy. Carter, a sociologist, and senior fellow at UC Berkeley’s Greater Good
Science Center, says that half the participants in one study reported they felt
stronger and more energetic after helping others. “Many also reported feeling
calmer and less depressed,” she said. This reminds me of the remark
made by the late U.S. Bishop Fulton Sheen, whose process of sainthood is
underway, when he said, “Love gives me energy (referring to his love for God
and people).” Bishop Sheen would still be able to give a number of
homilies in a day when he has already done many other duties as a
bishop.
4. Being kind lowers anxiety. A
University of British Columbia study on happiness found that a group of highly
anxious people who performed at least six acts of kindness each week for a
month showed significant improvement in positive moods, relationship
satisfaction, and social avoidance over the four weeks of the study. Two
big benefits here: cure anxiety and overcoming shyness in dealing with
others. Amazing things happen when we focus on the needs of others
instead of just concentrating on ours. Love indeed is the answer to our
many problems.
5. Kindness prevents illness.
Inflammation in the body is responsible for all sorts of illnesses. According
to Quiet Revolution, a study of adults aged 57 to 85 found that “volunteering
manifested the strongest association with lower levels of inflammation.”
The virtue of kindness is defined as
an action that makes life easier or more comfortable for others. In this
article by Ms. Alison, her definition of kindness can be equated to compassion
for others. Kindness and compassion are all about caring for
others. But we should not confuse kindness with love. Love is a
higher virtue and kindness is just one manifestation of it. Kindness is
love, but not all acts of love are kindness.
ove by definition is to seek what is
best for others. But sometimes what is best for others might hurt
them such as correcting them or disciplining them for their
wrongdoing. That’s the time we apply love instead of
kindness. Or more specifically the so-called “tough
love”.
A parent who does not reprimand his
or her child for playing computer games the whole day and as a result neglects
his school work, with the excuse that the parent does not want to inconvenience
the child (supposedly an act of kindness), is not truly loving the child
because the parent is not doing what is best for him. In 1 Corinthians 13
we read, “Love is patient, is kind…” but it also rejoices in the good (by
correcting others). Sometimes we have to correct loved ones, to help them
avoid greater suffering in the future. And oftentimes this is how God
treats us, because He wants us to have the greatest good: to be holy, to become
saints. (ECC)
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