β27-07-2024 05:05 PM
β27-07-2024 05:05 PM
This article, with 260 citations, appears in The Canadian Vetinary Journal, of all things.
Stoewen DL 2017, Dimensions of wellness: Change your habits, change your life. Can Vet J, vol. 58, no 8, pp. 861-862, here.
It's actually aimed at veterinarian well being, which explains what's going on.
Stoewen refers to what I call occupational wellbeing, as "vocational" wellness, which is quite good, and defines it as follows, which is also quite good:
My only caveat is a need to be clear that "work" is not necessarily confined to a career, but is rather about your life's work or calling, which may well include a career, or not, or both.
β27-07-2024 05:37 PM
β27-07-2024 05:37 PM
@Shaz51 @Faith-and-Hope @Glisten @swift1 @creative_writer @Captain24 @Oaktree @Glisten @MDT , @Ainjoule , @Snowie Glisten @tyme
I have nine faithful guides,
Each one keeps me whole;
Environmental keeps my world clean and green,
Social weaves bonds tight and serene.
Financial plans with prudence and care,
Vocational seeks purpose in the work I bear.
Emotional and Intellectual,
They walk beside me, true;
Spiritual, Physical, and Behavioral,
Make up the caring crew.
Behavioral shapes habits, day and night,
Together they balance my life just right.
Adapated from the poem "The Elephant's Child" by Rudyard Kipling (1902), part of his collection Just So Stories. The lines refer to the six fundamental questions that are said to guide inquiry and exploration:
"I keep six honest serving-men
(They taught me all I knew);
Their names are What and Why and When
And How and Where and Who."
These six questions are often used as a framework for critical thinking, problem-solving, and investigative processes across various fields. They help in gathering comprehensive information and understanding different aspects of any situation or problem.
β27-07-2024 05:41 PM
β27-07-2024 05:41 PM
@Glisten Tomaatti thank you for this, I am looking forward to reading.
I have some minestrone and cup a soups but no real soup. I had porridge for lunch π
β27-07-2024 06:19 PM - edited β27-07-2024 06:21 PM
β27-07-2024 06:19 PM - edited β27-07-2024 06:21 PM
@Shaz51 @Faith-and-Hope @Glisten @swift1 @creative_writer @Captain24 @Oaktree @Glisten @MDT , @Ainjoule , @Snowie Glisten @tyme
A 2015 article in the British Medical Journal Open, with 618 citationsβ¦
...notes, in part:
The dimensions clustered around six key themes: βmental well-beingβ, βsocial well-beingβ, βphysical well-beingβ, βspiritual well-beingβ, βpersonal circumstancesβ and βactivities and functioningβ. A seventh set of dimensions were identified that attempted to measure βwell-being overallβ in a global sense. Table 2 contains a brief description of each theme, and the number of dimensions linked to each. The majority of dimensions were linked to βmental well-beingβ, followed by βsocial well-beingβ and βactivities and functioningβ
Hereβs table 2:
I have bolded the connections to the nine wellbeing types of the tutti frutti model:
Mental well-being. Dimensions linked to the theme of mental well-being assess the psychological, cognitive [= intellectual [6]] and emotional [5] quality of a personβs life. This includes the thoughts and feelings that individuals have about the state of their life, and a personβs experience of happines
Social [2] well-being
Activities and functioning. The focus of this theme is the behaviour [9] and activities that characterise daily life. This involves the specific activities we fill our time with (vocation [4]), and our ability to undertake these tasks
Physical [7] well-being
Spiritual [8]
Personal circumstances. These dimensions are related to the conditions and external pressures that an individual faces. This involves numerous environmental [1] and socioeconomic concerns such as financial [3] security.
Wow!
β27-07-2024 06:25 PM - edited β27-07-2024 06:27 PM
β27-07-2024 06:25 PM - edited β27-07-2024 06:27 PM
I like minestrone; and am partial to cup-a-soups. I have porridge for breakfast, which is also good for the soul, in my experience.
β27-07-2024 06:48 PM
β27-07-2024 06:48 PM
β27-07-2024 08:56 PM - edited β27-07-2024 08:57 PM
β27-07-2024 08:56 PM - edited β27-07-2024 08:57 PM
@ENKELI , @Explorer7 @Glisten , @tyme , @Oaktree @Shaz51
I'll add porridge to physical wellbeing, as the 299th suggestion.
Porridge, often made from oats, is not only good for physical health but can also be considered beneficial for the soul in a metaphorical sense. Here are some reasons why:
In summary, while porridge is excellent for physical health due to its nutritional profile, its comfort, versatility, and role in daily routines can also provide emotional and mental benefits, making it "good for the soul" in a broader sense.
I suspect having a bowl of porridge may end up being the only suggestion with its own page π
β27-07-2024 11:36 PM
β28-07-2024 10:42 AM - edited β28-07-2024 12:00 PM
β28-07-2024 10:42 AM - edited β28-07-2024 12:00 PM
From here, to print 100 copies of a paperback book with 150 pages and a colour cover would cost about $1,700, or $17 a book. Add, I guess, $3 postage, and that's $20 to anywhere in Australia. All that said I'd probably go and see a local printer and get it done by them.
β28-07-2024 11:42 AM
β28-07-2024 11:42 AM
Hi ππΌ @Explorer7 the link you posted says Page Not Found π€·πΌββοΈ
But it be worth while transferring all this wonderful information that you provided in your posts, into a pdf document.
You have done us all, an outstanding service by collecting all this information.
It would be great to turn it into an app.
G
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