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Reach out

March 29, 2021 Martha Collard
images-4.jpg

Nothing is so healing as the human touch. Bobby Fischer
 
The other day I read a story where a woman drove into an inoculation centre. When her turn came she stopped the car, got out and asked the nurse to remove her glove while she administered the shot.  The nurse asked ‘why?’. The woman responded that this was the first human contact she had had in a year.
 
The world is suffering from touch starvation. Humans need physical contact from other living beings. Without it, we suffer from depression and anxiety, stress, poor sleep and loneliness. Touch historically was a way of developing relationships, showing affection and reducing aggression between people. Newborns have stronger immune systems, gain weight faster and are calmer with regular touch. However with the advent of mobile phones and social distancing we have seen handshakes, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, back pats, and shoulder squeezes disappear even between friends and family. It is no surprise that mental illness is now the largest medical spend globally.
 
Our skin is our largest organ and one most taken for granted. It represents 15% of our body weight and within it are millions of sensory receptors.  When we hug for 20 seconds or more oxytocin is released reducing stress, blood pressure and  anxiety and enhancing our immune system. 
 
Today we are faced with a modern paradox. On the one hand we are told to social distance, stay 6 feet apart, avoid groups and avoid physical contact to stem the spread of the virus on the other we know the benefits of touch to our emotional and physical wellbeing.  
 
Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring all of which have the potential to turn a life around. anon
 
To touch is to come into contact with. While feeling is the sensation from touching.  How to find ways to connect with other living beings?  Here are some suggestions to maintain your physical, mental and emotional wellbeing during these unprecedented times.

  • Massage – full body or just foot, head or hands

  • Stoke a pet - or visit a pet shelter

  • Get your nails done

  • Visit a hair salon even for just a wash and blow dry

  • Learn to dance

  • Exercise

  • Hire a professional cuddler (apparently they do exist)

  • Hug someone (make sure they reciprocate though)

 
But at the end of the day I invite you to take the advice of Diana Ross and
Reach out and touch
Somebody's hand
Make this world a better place
If you can

In newsletter Tags touch, loneliness, touch starvation, mental health, mental wellbeing, skin, emotional health

Take time, connect

October 15, 2020 Martha Collard
Screenshot 2020-10-15 at 1.29.34 PM.png

A letter from a foreign land is like water to parched lips

This saying was inscribed in an arch in the old GPO. It's ironic that today we celebrate both world postal day and world mental health day. To me they go hand in hand. 

As I child I remember rushing to the mailbox after the postman made his rounds, opening the door with anticipation and my delight to find an envelope with my name on it.  At Christmas parcels wrapped in brown paper and tied with string were truly the world's most favourite things.

Today instantaneous messaging and imaging is the norm. The art of letter writing is left to bills and fliers, the spam of the postal world. Parcels arrive to the minute thanks to Fedex and DHL. 

While emails are easily deleted or buried deep in the inbox, a hard copy written long hand can be held, pinned onto a mirror or slipped under a pillow as tangible proof that someone cares.  If receiving a letter from a friend is one of the sweetest things in life Andy Rooney then sending a letter is like going somewhere without ever moving moving anything but your heart. Phyllis Theroux  

Covid creates ongoing social isolation and a sense of loneliness.  This week  I invite you to put pen to paper by making a deliberate connection. For every gift (letter) from a friend is a wish for your happiness. Richard Bach. 

In newsletter Tags connect, mental health, post
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