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Most Common Lifestyle Health Risks, Self-Test for Denial Truth for Healthy Living |
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"To begin dealing with something important, we first need to know it exists." Self-Test for Subconscious, Honestly Unknown to Us, Denial of Lifestyle Risks to Health Smoking (Chewing, Dipping, Patching Nicotine), Other Dependencies, Chronic Psychological Stress, Overeating/Excess Body Weight Important: Although created to help adults dependent on nicotine, this assessment is of equal value to people who no longer or never used it. The same unknown resistance to sufficient awareness of truth, denial, that disables and destroys cigarette smokers threatens adults with other addictions or dangerous levels of stress or body fat. This test for the unrealized defensiveness commonly called 'denial' and as it relates to lifestyle health is a recent addition to this author's list of health-improving, wellness-promoting assessments. Please keep in mind that no results of such testing tell absolute facts. They indicate important possibilities for you to consider. Truthful StatementsBased on his 40 years of first-hand clinical health care experience and study done when hardly anyone else was doing something similar, the author of the program Nicotine Dependence Relief and Recovery is entirely convinced that the following statements are true. Those four decades of experience and study allowed him to discover and be the first to tell the essence of what each statement reveals. Please read all of them before going further.
Rate How Different or New and Believable to YouA. Now, please answer this question. Overall, how new to you or different from what you've seen and heard before, discovered and told by some other source, were those statements? Lump together and average those statements on a scale from one (1) to seven (7) . . . with seven (7) being essentially new or different. You haven't seen or heard the essence of what they say originating from (uncovered and told by) someone other than the author of this test. A rating of one (1) means there's essentially no difference. You've seen or heard all of them. And they were discovered and said by another source. Of course, feel free to choose a number between one (1) and seven (7).
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a number: Overall, Not Different / New to Me ... 1 ... 2 ... 3 ... 4 ... 5 ... 6 ... 7 ... Overall, Essentially Different / New to Me B. Next do this rating of overall believability by choosing a number from 1 to 7. Feel free to choose a number between 1 and 7. Overall, Not Believable to Me ... 1 ... 2 ... 3 ... 4 ... 5 ... 6 ... 7 ... Overall, Essentially Believable to Me
Answers to this test for exceedingly dangerous health risk denial: The 12 statements read and rated are essentially, not totally, new or different and believable. Ratings of 6 or 7 are the most accurate answers. The higher the numbers you chose, the less of the denial you have that threatens you and your helping to save the lives of other adults and protecting children.
Most respectfully, you could not have seen or heard anything close enough to the statements you rated and originating from another source. Given the real-world and specialized clinical experience, published insights and 40 years of study that went into those truthful statements they would be believable and highly so. A rating of 5 or less says defensiveness. One of the 12 'truthful statements' briefly introduced a teenager-like part of the human brain that starts, almost always before the age of 25, and keeps people smoking (dipping or chewing). And when they stop it causes them to relapse. It does that by denying the presence of present or potential risks to personal health. That part is more 'primitive' (far less directed by what's learned from day-to-day experiences) and sometimes makes adults behave more like teens. At a deep level of thinking the teen-like or primitive part of you is already dismissing the most useful elements of what the truthful statements teach. That takes away much of the considerable potential to help make and keep you and other adults healthier and happier. A rating of 5 or less says you're telling yourself and don't realize it that using this website's information won't help because you already know the more useful information here, when you don't. Teenagers and the teen-like part of adults can easily and understandably confuse something different and new that makes sense for what they already know. They subconsciously figure something such as, 'What I just read (heard) is reasonable and probably accurate. That means it's not original and different from what I've been told. So few things are new that I must've heard or read it some where else.' There is more. The terrific and teen-like element of adults often doesn't believe what other people found - through learning gained from practical and applicable experience - that has repeatedly proven to be true. What's the point? If you already know or suspect these results probably apply to you, please avoid wasting this opportunity. Keep from allowing a terrific but less experienced portion of your mental capacity or personality get away with risking your health and happiness. Continue and learn as much as possible from what you find here and become unwilling to keep too much of this needless and unknown defensiveness: lifestyle health risk denial.
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