Wellness club
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ|April 2024
Can spending one per cent of your day focusing on your wellness make you 99 per cent happier? A self-professed self-help addict tries the new 10-minute micro habit hack to see if it’s the secret she’s been missing.
MARIANNE POWER
Wellness club

I once spent a whole year of my life living, breathing and, in many cases, crying my way through self-help books. Each month, I picked a new book and did absolutely everything it told me to do in the hope that it would transform my broke, hungover, periodically depressed existence.

In the name of conquering my fears I jumped out of planes, did stand-up comedy and modelled naked. I spent a month getting rejected every day as a part of a masochistic form of self-help called Rejection Therapy.

I even tried running across burning coals in the hope that the flames would rid me of my anxiety.

Spoiler alert: It didn't happen. Not at all. By the end of the year I had not turned into a cross between Buddha and Beyoncé; instead, I was exhausted and overwhelmed by all the crazy things I'd done.

I learned that when it comes to wellness, less really is more.

Fortunately, the self-help world seems to be catching up to this approach with a new book that embodies this ethos: The 1% Wellness Experiment by life coach Gabrielle Treanor. Its premise is that you need not devote hours to working on your wellbeing; you can improve your life by taking just one per cent of your day - equal to about 10 minutes - to focus on your mental health.

Micro-gain-getter

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2024-Ausgabe von Australian Women’s Weekly NZ.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2024-Ausgabe von Australian Women’s Weekly NZ.

Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.

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