In my compare/contrast essay I wrote about football vs. ballet. As a dancer myself, I expected this paper to be a piece
of cake. I thought that all I would need to do is give my readers the facts on
how ballet is better and harder than football. Once I started researching both
ballet and football, I came to the conclusion that they are both extremely
similar to one another but they also have their differences.
Both football and ballet are very physically demanding but it different ways. Football, the players are constantly being rammed into each other and falling and getting bruises. While ballerinas get plenty of bruises, they push their bodies to the limit in a different way. They stretch until their muscles can't take it anymore. They push their muscles to the point of breaking. Ballet and football both put a tremendous amount of stress on the body.
It was amazing to see how two things that on the outside seem so different, but end up having many similarities that nobody has ever noticed before.
Friday, October 10, 2014
TED Talk: “How to
Make Stress your Friend”
I watcheda TED talk
by Kelly McGonigal on “How to Make Stress your Friend.” She is a psychologist and really opened my
eyes on how our minds and bodies can change things that are normally perceived as
something negative, to something positive.
She starts out by giving this idea that if we change our
mind and outlook on something that it can change how our bodies react. She
tells us about a survey that was taken with people who were asked if they had
high levels of stress in the last year and then asked them if they believed
that stress was harmful to health. They then checked public death records to
see who died. The people who had high levels of stress were 43% more likely to
die than those who had very little to no stress, but those 43% were the ones
who believed that stress was harmful to health. The people who didn’t believe
that had no greater chance of death then the people who had no stress at all. This
being said she brings up her next point.
She explains that if we take our bodies reactions to stress,
such as, when our heart starts pounding and our breathing starts racing, and
make them into something positive, that we can change how stress affects us.
Instead of getting anxious when these things start happening, we should embrace
them and realize that our bodies aren’t trying to make the situation worse,
they are trying to make it better. Our bodies are trying to help us by
preparing us for whatever obstacle we are facing.
I agree with what Kelly says and I think that this not only
applies to stress, but to life in general as well. Our outlook on things is
what really matters. If we can keep that positive, then we can overcome just
about anything.