Just for George Noory's Coast to Coast AM Listeners

Thanks for listening to George Noory's interview with Eldon Taylor. We hope you enjoyed the show and benefitted from the information Eldon shared. 

Gratitude

Owning a Gratitude Attitude

A gratitude attitude opens doors to you that may not otherwise be available. It enhances your relationships, improves self-esteem, and adds many other riches to your life. The data suggests that grateful people live longer healthier and happier lives.

When you live in a state of gratitude, life can seem to become magical.

To assist you in beginning your gratitude journey today, we are happy to offer you a complementary downloadable copy of the InnerTalk program Owning a Gratitude Attitude. Simply use the coupon code Noory. (Please note: the coupon is good for $25.95 - the price of the single downloadable version. If you select any of the other variants, you will be charged for the difference in price and shipping and handling if appropriate.)

This is a limited time special offer that expires at Midnight on Wednesday, November 15th. If you listened to the show after that date and would still like to get the Gratitude Attitude program, please email us at innertalk@innertalk.com.


Forever Young

We are surrounded by the idea that old age means deterioration, slowing down, pain, etc. for if we don't hear it in the media, we certainly hear it from friends, family, acquaintances and colleagues. While it's impossible to avoid all of this negative messaging, there is something we can do about it. When you have the frame of mind that says 'Age is just a number,' and 'I WILL achieve my dreams,' then nothing can hold you back. Try our Forever Young album and see for yourself!

Forever Young consists of 9 programs. For greatest ease and flexibility of use, all of the subliminal titles come in the nature format only.

Forever Young is valued at $287.55 value, but you can get it for just $149.95. Click here for more details.


The Art of Younging by Eldon Taylor

Years ago, I developed a strategy and technology for younging. I based my work and theories on the work of others who had shown the critical role perception and expectation have on aging. Let me unpack what I learned. 

Forever Young

Living Long

Living long and remaining healthy is something we all want. Ask the teenager if they would like to live to be 100 and the likely answer is an emphatic "No!" Unfortunately, that is due to their expectation or attitude toward age and old people. All too often aging takes a toll that betrays our best and instead reveals the lack of attention we gave to our health when we were younger. This is the image that so many young people see, and this is the image that they therefore put in their heads as the expectation for what will happen to them when they too grow old. Thus the statement, "Only the brave grow old." Now, ask a 99-year-old if they wish to live to be 100 and the answer is typically "Yes!" So, what's the lesson here?

Cultural Expectations

There are at least two levels to be considered regarding aging—expectation or attitude. The first comes down to the fact that the hard research shows that our expectations often come true. Consider this by way of example. Years ago, I did some research regarding the role of the mind in wellness, and it eventually led to my book, Wellness: Just a State of Mind. One of the studies I came across was most interesting and relevant to the whole matter of my beliefs regarding aging and, for that matter, dying. In this case, the Chinese birth sign was used to compare death with the expectation factor. According to the Chinese system of astrology, each birth sign provides information about the individual in terms of their occupational proclivities, talents, interests, and even the eventual cause of death. According to researcher David Phillips, the data showed a clear relationship between the astrological sign and the cause of death. In other words, if you were born believing that you'd die of cancer because that's what your sign said, then cancer is what you died of.

Attitude

Attitude is part and parcel of expectation. Our attitude influences us daily. When our mood is down our body bears witness to it. It's no wonder people approach us and ask, "What's wrong?" when we are feeling blue. Our attitudes are telegraphed by our facial expressions, our body posture, tension, and other physical characteristics as we go through life. Let me remind you that the body analogously has two budgets, one for growth and one for defense. When we keep the body in a state of vigilance, anxious or angry, sad, or blaming, and so forth, we essentially spend our budget on defense. The body pays a very real price for this!

One of my favorite stories is about a friend of mine who played disk jockey for a 50-year reunion. He told me that he prepared all the music from around the year of graduation and only when he saw folks arriving with canes and limps, hunched over, and moving along as though they were old and tired, did it dawn on him that the music he had selected was all dance music. What was he to do?

Well, there wasn't anything he could do to change his music, so he went on and played it. His smile can give away the ending to this story, for in his words, "They limped in and danced out!"

Memory Dependent

Our memory and expectation both play large roles in how we age. Dr. Ellen Langer of Harvard University demonstrated this years ago when she took a group of older people to a cabin in the woods where they were separated from everything modern. Indeed, they were surrounded with magazines, music, automobiles and more, all from the circa vintage of their early twenties. When the week was over and the subjects were returned, they were post tested for length of gait and more. By every measurable means, they had reversed their aging process and were leaving the cabin younger than when they arrived!

Maintaining an optimistic and positive attitude then becomes as important to our health as exercise and diet. Our attitude impacts what we find stressful and how we desensitize stressful stimuli. Our attitude also directly influences our sleeping patterns.

From an overall perspective, we must understand that it is the thoughts in our head, our attitude if you will, that determines much of our health. With the proper attitude, we find exercise fun and rewarding. With a healthy outlook on life, we enjoy good nutrition and pass on the fast foods and fattening sweets. With an optimistic attitude we have every right to expect a long healthy life full of smiles and laughter. With the right attitude we find sleep easy and natural at days end. With an attitude of respect and love toward ourselves, we find our body remains young, fit, and healthy!

Self-Sabotage

Self-sabotage exists because of a belief. Our attitudes are mirrors, tiny examples of our beliefs. Our beliefs are intricately connected like spider silk forming a giant web–they do not exist in isolation. Touch any one belief and the entire web is disturbed and this can be why it seems so difficult sometimes to make a change. That said, new research confirms that of all the things a person can do to improve the quality of their life, nothing is as powerful as a personality change, but making this change unaided can be challenging to say the least.

Back to my own work—we conducted a 'younging' experiment in a pilot study with volunteers. The results were remarkable both from the written reports and the before and after pictures. My advice—cancel those old stereotype images you might hold about aging, and you might just surprise yourself at how young you become.

As always, thanks for the read and I appreciate your feedback.

Eldon Taylor


Forgiving and Letting Go

Another key aspect to staying young, fit, and healthy is learning how to forgive. When you subscribe to our InnerTalk InTouch newsletter, you can also get a copy of Eldon's Forgiving and Letting Go--a $39 value. Subscribe here.