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Re: Best Friends Club

The salad was cucumber, dill, avocado, cherry tomato’s, danish fetta, spring onion, red onion, and pinenuts
The chicken was marinated in a lemon herb dresssing them cooked on bbq
All with a lemon, mustard, olive oil, garlic dressing over the top of it all @ENKELI @Oaktree @Glisten @tyme

Re: Best Friends Club

@ArraDreaming now you’re just being cruel 🤣

It’s shite cooking for one.

 

Re: Best Friends Club


@PeppyPatti wrote:

Dear MJG017 

Thanks for your response. I understand what you're saying about not choosing our emotions. We often feel things deeply, and it can be challenging to manage those feelings.
However, I believe that while we can't control how we feel, we can control how we react to those feelings. It's about taking a moment, recognizing the emotion, and then choosing a response that aligns with our values and goals.
It's a skill that takes practice, but it can lead to healthier and more fulfilling relationships. .....

 

This is something I'm working on. 


@PeppyPattiYou're so right about controlling our own reactions.  I've recently discovered the idea of the 'hand model of the brain'.  I've mentioned it a couple of times, but i'm not sure where exactly.  Basically our hand represents out brain with the wrist as the brain stem.  The thumb is the emotional brain and is tucked into the palm.  The fingers are the thinking brain and are usually closed into a fist covering the emotion brain (thumb).  If our emotion brain becomes to dominant, through trauma for example, then the thinking brain (fingers) open up and expose the emotional brain, which then makes decisions based on emotional reactions without really thinking about it.  I've seen this referred to as "flipping your top" or "flipping your lid".  So if this happens a lot then we need to learn to take a bit of time, let the thinking brain regain control by protecting the emotional brain (fingers close around the thumb) and we can then make more rational calm decisions, not based on emotional reactions. 

 

I learnt about this from some training about working with children who have experienced a lot of trauma, therefore their emotional brain dominates.  But I've found it very helpful for myself and it sounds like you are way ahead of me but it is something we are both working on it.  I just found this hand model a nice way to visualise it and it helps me a lot to understand why I feel the way I do at times... and make the decisions I do, especially when stressed.

Re: Best Friends Club

@MJG017 how are you?

Did you find any good board games? Any you would recommend for kids under 10? 🙂🫂

Re: Best Friends Club

@Oaktree @MJG017 @Glisten @tyme @Shaz51 @rav3n 

How's everyone tonight?

Currently making dinner after a busy weekend working and spending time with the kids.

Hope you are all well

Re: Best Friends Club

Hey @Healandlove !

Re: Best Friends Club


@Healandlove wrote:

@MJG017 how are you?

Did you find any good board games? Any you would recommend for kids under 10? 🙂🫂


Hi @Healandlove, Yeah I picked up a couple.  As for games for kids under 10... it really depends on the type of games they like.  Other than the classics like Uno and Game of life, games I know kids that age have liked are Fluxx, Muffin Time, Ticket to Ride Jr (non jr versions if they really like it), Sushi Go, Takenoko, Dixit, Exploding Kittens, Codenames.  This list may give you some ideas as well... https://boardgamegeek.com/geeklist/331509/kids-on-board-games-geeklist-february-2024

Re: Best Friends Club

@MJG017 

 

I still enjoy game of life. I have it on the shelf.

 

@tyme 

 

How did the chat go? Sorry I was really tired and went and had a nap. Had a couple of late nights lately

Re: Best Friends Club

Good very chill tonight @Oaktree talked about all kinds of stuff

Re: Best Friends Club

Hey @Oaktree ,

 

It went really well. We had some important topics pop up, so feel free to pop around to:

1) Agoraphobia - Looking to hear your experiences 

2) Dependence and Recovery