The Aging Mask- A Lifestyle Medicine Podcast
The Aging Mask is a Life Style Wellness Podcast, where Lifestyle Medicine meets curiosity, learning and great conversation.
The Aging Mask is a Podcast dedicated to exploring the transformative power of Lifestyle Medicine. Here is where I will share with you what I have learned, and continue to learn as an "Ayurvedic Health Counselor".
Life Style Medicine is a complete healing system focused on giving you the tools and practices to create greater health and happiness on a daily basis by using your innate healing ability. We will also discuss, and do a deep dive into the
six (6) most important pillars of health; which are; sleep, movement/physical activity, healthy emotions, meditation, nutrition and self-care.
There is no" one size fits all" prescription for your well- being, it is experiential, which means the choices you make about your experiences shape your body and mind, including your choices about food, personal relationships, sensory experiences, sleep, work social interactions and daily routine. As you shift your experiences, your biology will shift because your biology is the metabolism of experience.
Please join me for engaging and educational discussions that highlight how every aspect or your lifestyle contributes to your overall health and happiness!
The Aging Mask- A Lifestyle Medicine Podcast
Superstitions: We Don't Believe...But We Still Do Them
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The word superstition originally was used to describe an excessive fear of supernatural forces. Today the description of superstition is:
A belief or behavior meant to influence luck or avoid harm, without scientific proof. This doesn’t mean they are meaningless, because Psychologically Superstitions give us something very real. They give us a sense of control, and you know WE humans do not like uncertainty. We like to feel like we have some say in what happens next, even when we don’t. We hope, sometimes without realizing it, that if we do the “thing” the right way, everything will turn out ok.
You know that space between hope and fear? that is where superstition lives, and I want to explore it along with you.
Most superstitions trace back to ancient cultures trying to make sense of the world they could not explain.
Before science, before medicine, before we understood weather or illness or coincidence, people creating meaning through patterns:
They believed that:
_spirits lived in nature
_words had power
_and people believed that certain actions could protect them, or harm them, So those beliefs became superstitions, and over time those superstitions turned into rituals.
Even though we have science, data, and explanations for almost everything, superstitions haven’t disappeared, they have adapted, you see them everywhere now, just in different forms:
Instead of…
*The Black Cats Superstition
*Walking under a Ladder is bad luck
*And Broken Mirror
Superstitions new modern form is: We hear them in the way we "speak".
We now say things like:
_Don’t jinx it
_ that’s bad karma
_just my luck
_that’s a sign
We have modernized our language, but the behavior is exactly the same.
Today, people don’t use superstitions in the way they were originally intended. People once believed that superstitions could actually influence outcomes-like prevent harm or bring good luck- but in modern times, they are less about changing what happens- and more about helping us feel calm, grounded and alittle more control in uncertain moments. This doesn’t mean they are useless- instead they function more as:
*a tool for managing anxiety
* creating a sense of control as I mentioned
*and they are used to mentally prepare us for something important.
Superstitions today have become small rituals that help us feel calm-
Maybe that’s why they have lasted.
Superstitions stick around for 3 reasons:
#1 As humans We look for patterns,
#2- We seek control & comfort in uncertainty,
#3-we are drawn to meaning & mystery- even when we know it might not be real- we don’t fully believe in them-but we also don’t fully let them go.
They have survived centuries, across cultures and across generations, not because people are irrational, but because they serve real psychological functions: reducing anxiety, creating routine, and binding communities together. Superstitions are in a sense , humanities oldest coping mechanism. The specific beliefs change with culture and era, but the underlying need never really does change.
We all want to feel safe- in control- and we want to believe that our actions matter- So we knock on wood- cross our fingers, and say things “just in case”. Again; Not because we fully believe, but because a small part of us still wonders…what if it does work??
Enjoy!
Joanne Demers
The Aging Mask- A Lifestyle Medicine Podcast
(949) 236-1529
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