Depression in Teens: The Warning Signs and How to Help Them Through - Karen Young

One of the things that can make depression so difficult to recognise is that the symptoms can be things we all struggle with from time to time – sadness, hopelessness, lethargy, lack of engagement. When these very normal human experiences happen in a combination, duration or intensity that start to interfere with day-to-day life (school, relationships), it’s possible that depression might be waving a heavy hand over your teen. 

During adolescence, the rates of depression skyrocket. According to the World Health Organisation, depression is the number one cause of illness and disability in adolescents. But there’s something else. Research shows that in half of all adults who have problems with their mental health, their symptoms showed up before age 14. 

Three-quarters had symptoms by age 24. This puts flashing lights around the importance of noticing when our teens are struggling and making sure they get the support they need. The earlier symptoms are caught, the easier it will be to stop those symptoms expanding into something bigger and more difficult to shift. What are the symptoms of depression in teens to watch out for? For a diagnosis of depression, a particular cluster of symptoms needs to have been there for at least for two weeks. 

These symptoms must include at least one of either a depressed mood, or a loss of interest or pleasure in things that were once enjoyable. Many times these will just be a normal part of adolescence and nothing at all to worry about, but if depression is happening, there will be other telltale signs. Here are some to watch out for: Happiness, anger, indifference – the many faces of depression. 

Depression doesn’t always look like sadness or withdrawal. Some of depression’s classic disguises are:
 • Anger or irritability. Depression often comes with lethargy, pain and/or hopelessness. Understandably, this can make people angrier, more irritable or more impatient than usual. 
 • Happy, but reluctant to spend time with friends or family. It’s takes a huge amount of strength to move through the day with depression hanging on. If your teen has depression they might use this strength to put on a happy face, but where there is depression, there is also likely to be increasing withdrawal. It’s very normal for teens to withdraw from family activities – it’s part of them experimenting with their growing independence. The thing to watch out for is if they withdraw more from friends and spend more time on their own than usual. 
 • Indifference. Depression doesn’t just steal happy feelings. Sometimes it can steal all feelings, which can make people seem flat or indifferent. In teens, it can be difficult to tell whether their indifference is just a normal part of adolescence or whether it’s something more. It’s not at all unusual for teens to seem more indifferent and there’s a good reason for this. 

Dopamine is the chemical that creates the feel-good when we get something we want, and in teens the baseline levels in the brain are lower than they are in adults or children, creating a sense of flatness. There is a way though, to tell the difference between normal adolescence and depression. 

Watch out for what happens when your teen does something that feels good or when they get something they want. When adolescents do something that feels good, the dopamine levels are higher than they are in adults, so the feel-good feels better. 

In depression, this doesn’t happen. There is a constant sense that nothing makes a difference, and the flatness or indifference doesn’t shift even when they are doing something that they would normally have enjoyed. Pulling back from people and activities that were once enjoyable. Depression takes away the sense of enjoyment from things that were once enjoyable. 

Watch out for your teen cancelling plans or making excuses to avoid the things they once wouldn’t have missed. Tiredness, lethargy, exhaustion. Depression is exhausting and can make people more tired than usual, even if they seem to spend more time sleeping. Depression hurts, literally. Depression is a physical illness, so sometimes the symptoms will show up physically. Watch out for unexplained headaches and migraine, stomach aches, back pain, joint aches and pains. 

Mood and pain share the same pathways in the brain and they are regulated by the same brain chemicals (serotonin and norepinephrine). When the balance of these neurochemicals is out, pain and mood might both be affected. Giving up on things that are important. 

The hopelessness, helplessness and lowered self-esteem that come with depression might see depressed teens giving up on school, friendships, or other things that are important to them. Change in physical movements and speech. Depression can speed up movement (restlessness, agitation, fidgeting, pacing, leg shaking or hand-wringing), or it can slow down movement and speech. Fuzzy thinking, difficulty concentrating and remembering. 

As well as draining physical and emotional energy, depression can also take a swipe at mental energy. Teens with depression might have difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisions. Slowed thinking might mean they take longer to collect their thoughts, which can show itself as slowed speech. Isolating from others. 

There’s nothing wrong with wanting some alone time, but when there’s a noticeable withdrawal, it might be a problem. This might be because being with people no longer brings joy (because nothing brings joy), or because fatigue, or having to put on a happy face when there is no ‘happy’ to hold it up feels too hard. 

Depression also has a way of convincing even the strongest of minds that they are a burden to those around them and that they are best keeping themselves to themselves. Change in sleeping habits. About 40% of young adults with depression have hypersomnia, which is excessive sleeping. 

Depression can make people oversleep, or wake earlier than usual and have trouble going back to sleep. Change in eating habits. 

Depression can create an emptiness that feels unbearable, and people might turn to food to try to fill the void. Eating habits can also change in the other direction, with people eating less. Change in grades. 

Depression brings fuzzy thinking, low energy and difficulty concentrating. All of this can make studying, listening and learning more difficult. The clue that this is happening will be a change in grades. Taking more, using more, doing more. 

Depression is more than sadness. It’s an inability to feel joy. This is confusing and frightening for anyone to feel, and as a way to find relief from that, or to distract themselves from their pain, teens might turn to all sorts of risky or addictive behaviour. They might be driven to do more of what has felt good before, or anything that helps them to feel – something. 

This might look like drinking, drugs, skipping school, gaming excessively, eating excessively or self-harm. Self-injury. All of us can only push down big feelings for a certain amount of time before they start to push for attention. 

Physical pain and emotional pain share the same pathways in the brain. When emotional pain feels too big or when it stops making sense, self-harming can be a way to find short but needed relief from the heaviness that comes with depression. Teens don’t do this to manipulate or to control the people around them – they wish they could stop too. They do it to make the pain go away. If you suspect your teen is depressed …

Depression is such a persuasive beast, and it can convince anyone it’s holding onto that nothing will make a difference. This hopelessness is a classic symptom of depression, and the very thing that gets in the way of healing from it. If you suspect your teen might have depression, the first step is getting a diagnosis so everyone knows what they’re dealing with. A doctor or mental health professional can help with this. 

Depression doesn’t always need medication, but it might. Having the support of a loving adult will be important for any teen who is trying to find their way through depression. If that supportive and loving adult is you, here are some things you can do to help your teen strengthen and heal: Help them find ways to connect with other teens. 

Healthy friendships can be comfort and protection against the messy times that can come with adolescence. The problem can be finding these friends. School isn’t the only source of friendship. In fact, sometimes school friendships can be a huge source of sadness, fear and hurt. If your teen is struggling with friendships at school, it’s easy for them to be drawn into believing that it will be like this everywhere, but it won’t. Explain that school comes with different pressures and different problems that won’t be found in other environments. 

There will be people out there who would love to know your teen. Their tribe is out there, but sometimes they might have to look beyond the school ground to find them. Encourage your teen to try activities or join groups to expose themselves to people who share a more similar view of the world than the people at school. Some ways to do this are through sport, drama, music, part-time jobs, art classes, cooking classes. 

This might not be easy – depression drains energy for everything. Point out to your teen that it’s not necessarily about the activity, but about expanding their opportunity to find the people who will love being with them – and for certain those people are out there. 

Meditation and exercise. Recent research has found that depression can be reduced by up to 40% in two weeks through a combination of thirty minutes of mindful meditation and thirty minutes of exercise (treadmill or static bike), twice a week. Encourage your teen to try anything that will get his or her heart pumping. If they’re depressed, they might not be jumping at the opportunity to exercise. It’s part of what depression does, so you might need to be a bit creative – let one of their chores be to take the dog for a walk, take a sibling to the park to kick a ball, or to walk with you at night-time to keep you company. 

For the meditation part, the Smiling Mind app is a free app that has guided meditations for teens. It’s an easy and no-hassle way to get started with mindfulness, which has been proven by a mountain of research to be helpful with depression. And while we’re on apps … 

A collection of 13 apps developed by researchers from Northwestern University has been found to reduce depression and anxiety by up to 50%. Keep it real. Push against the ridiculous ideas of how they ‘should’ look by helping them to develop a healthy idea of what ‘beautiful’ means. The concept of beauty isn’t the problem, the definition is. 

Our teens are barraged with unrealistic and very narrow versions of what ‘body beautiful’ means. Help them to expand this, and to nurture a healthy body image by pointing out the many different versions of body beautiful that you see. This important for teen boys too. When they feel heard they feel cared for. Teens, particularly girls, will connect listening with caring. 

They might not always listen to you, and that’s okay, but if they feel as though you aren’t listening to them, they might feel as though you don’t care. It’s easy to dismiss their worries or mood swings as part of the normal ups and downs of adolescence – and it absolutely might be – but it’s still important to let them know that you hear them, that you notice them, and that you’re there for them. Reduce gaming time – let them game with friends. 

True, it might feel easier to catch a falling star in a glass jar, but anything you do can make a difference. Research has found that teens who spend more than four hours a day gaming can be vulnerable to depression, but there is a way to turn that risk around – let them game with friends. Boys who spend time gaming with friends, or those who are connected to friends either online or in real life appear to be protected from the depressive effects of heavy gaming. 

Girls who spend a lot of time gaming and who are socially active online are less lonely and less socially anxious, but they also show lower self-esteem. The reason behind your teen’s gaming is important. Researchers suggest that if it seems to be an attempt to ward of loneliness or to cope with the world, it might be time to step in to reduce the time spent at the console. 

Otherwise, if it’s a way to socialise or to connect with others, either in person or online in interactive games, there’s less likely to be a need for concern. Every day say something positive, and find something positive in everything. Even when teens mess up there’s gold in there somewhere, but they (you) might have to work hard to find it. Whether it’s about the way they come to you for advice or to download, whether it’s the way they learn from their experience, or that they didn’t pick a worse choice – there will be something. 

Try to say something positive every day, even if they don’t seem to take it in. Depression gives teens plenty of reasons to feel ‘less than’, so it’s important to protect them by pushing back against it whenever you can. Be available, but not intrusive. 

As little people, children turn to their parents for comfort and protection when they scrape against the hard edges of the world. As teens though, they are driven by the very important developmental goal of separating from parents and family. There can often be pressure (from inside of themselves or outside), to deal with things on their own, or at the very least without their parents. This can be tough for everyone. Finding the balance between holding them close and respecting their need for autonomy and independence isn’t easy, but it’s so important. 

Let your teen know they can talk to you about anything at all. When they do, listen and absorb whatever they tell you, even if it’s shocking. The more they can feel you as a strong, steady presence through their turmoil, the more they’ll trust that you can be there for them, even when things are messy. All of their feelings are okay. Feelings that don’t get felt or expressed cause breakage. All feelings are valid and they are all okay to be there. 

It’s never feelings that cause trouble, it’s the way they are dealt with – or not dealt with. When feelings are pushed down or ignored, they’ll sprout little roots and they’ll grow. If teens don’t feel safe enough to feel anything they’re feeling – angry, confused, scared, guilty, jealous – the risk is they’ll cut themselves off from one feeling, then another and another. When they cut themselves off from bad feelings, it becomes easier to also cut themselves off from the good ones. Be available on their terms.

Depression can be relentless, convincing people that they aren’t worthy of love or worthy of the fight. Your teen might crave company and someone to talk to, but at the same time push everyone away. Anything you can to do let them know that you’re there for them on their terms will be important. Some ways to gently do this are by sitting with them and watching whatever they’re watching on tv, or popping into their room just before they fall asleep – it’s often a time when they’re feeling safe and bundled away from the world, and when they might give you a little window into theirs. 

Know their ‘normal’. There are so many different versions of normal. Your teen’s version of ‘normal’ will change during adolescence, but the more you can get a handle on whatever their ‘normal’ is – feelings, behaviour, habits – the quicker you’ll get a feel for when something is off. This can be particularly difficult during adolescence because they’re changing so much, but trust your instincts. If you’re in doubt, ask. ‘I notice you’re sleeping a lot lately. 

Do you feel as though you are?’ If they say it’s fine, trust it for a while. If it feels like things aren’t fine, be open to the possibility that you’re absolutely right. Trust your intuition and continue to be gently curious. You don’t have to fix them. See them and notice them but remember that you don’t have to fix them. 

None of us like feeling as though we’re a problem that needs fixing, which is how it can feel when people jump into problem-solving mode, even when it’s done with the most loving intent. Instead, listen with an open heart and an open mind and without judgement. Create opportunities for your teen, but express them incidentally and without expectation. Rather than, ‘You know if you exercised you’d probably feel better,’try, ‘I’m taking the dogs for a walk a little bit later if you want to come.’ 

And finally … Adolescence is a time of massive change, which can be confusing for teens and the people who love them. Adding to the confusion, ‘normal’ teenage behaviour and signs of a mental health struggle can look the same. Changes in sleep and eating patterns, moodiness, pulling away from family, irritability – these can all be a very normal part of adolescence, or they can be symptoms of depression. It’s important to let your teen pull away when they need to. The push for independence from family and parents is a really important part of adolescence, but it’s also important to stay gently curious, vigilant and available. 

The more we notice when those we love are struggling, or the more we listen to the heart whispers when something isn’t right, the more empowered we are to respond in a way that can heal and strengthen. 

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DEPRESSÃO NA VIDA DOS JOVENS (PALESTRA/WORKSHOP)
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Depression in Children

Depression is an illness that involves the body, mood, and thoughts and affects the way a person eats and sleeps, the way one feels about oneself, and the way one thinks about things. Depressive disorders are characterized by pervasive mood changes that affect all aspects of an individual's daily functioning. Rates of childhood depression have been rising in the last several years. 

Yet, information and awareness about childhood depression has not caught on at the same rate. Millions of people across the world wonder and doubt if children can get depressed. Many well-intentioned adults still believe that children ‘can’t get depressed. They are so young- what do they have to be depressed about? When we were that age, we were just happy’. 

Alongside misunderstanding is stigma and the idea that mental illness is a taboo subject. What we now know: Childhood depression is a real, distinct clinical entity. It is a serious health condition, which if left untreated, increases risk of future, prolonged and more severe depressive episodes. Untreated depression in childhood and adolescence can pose risk of suicide. 

Depression often has biological, psychological and social underpinnings. An individualized treatment plan that explores and addresses each of these aspects, works best. Effective treatment options for childhood and teen depression have been widely tested, proven and established, through several scientific studies over the years. 

Childhood depression can be hidden and therefore, easily missed. Timely recognition and treatment can be life-changing and life-saving. The barriers surrounding mental health stigma are beginning to give way due to powerful social movements and discussions that address realities of mental health. Who is Affected by Depression in Childhood or Teenage? Depression can affect anyone. However, children or teens who have immediate family members with a history of depression or other mood disorders (such as bipolar disorder) are more likely to suffer from depression, often due to a genetic predisposition. Predisposition implies greater likelihood; it does not mean that the child or teen will necessarily experience depression. 

Children with chronic or severe medical conditions are at a greater risk of suffering from depression. Common Signs of Depression in Childhood or Adolescence Depression in childhood/adolescence can manifest somewhat differently than it does in adults. Irritability and/or anger are more common signs of depression in children and teens. 

When depressed, younger children are more likely to have physical or bodily symptoms, such as aches or pains, restlessness, distress during separation from parents, as they may not have the emotional attunement and/or expressive abilities to talk about their emotions. 

Other signs of depression in children and teens, can be: Loss of interest in usual fun activities Withdrawal from social or usual pleasurable activities Difficulties with concentration Running away from home or talking about running away from home Talking about death or dying, giving away (or talking about giving away) favorite possessions, writing goodbye letters Sleep increase (or decrease) Appetite/weight changes (more likely an increase, in depressed teens) Occasionally, new or recent onset agitation or aggression Comments indicating hopelessness or low self-worth Not all of the above-mentioned symptoms have to be present for a diagnosis of depression. 

Symptoms usually occur on most days, for at least 2 weeks, in order to meet criteria for depression. When seeing a professional to explore a diagnosis, you can utilize online health resources to prepare meaningful questions to ask a doctor in order to facilitate productive conversation for treatment. 

Be prepared!

Múcio Morais
PALESTRAS SOBRE DEPRESSÃO INFANTIL
www.muciomorais.com
contato@muciomorais.com 

PRINCÍPIOS FUNDAMENTAIS PARA A BOA CONVIVÊNCIA FAMILIAR - Múcio Morais

A Base de uma família feliz está em ter cada membro da família em franco crescimento, cada um em sua fase, em seu tempo, mas todos devem estar crescendo. Crescer é doloroso. Crescer é desafiante. Causa medo às vezes. Traz conflitos. Envolve sentimentos e pensamentos bons e ruins. Leva ao confronto com aqueles que já passaram de fase e por isso acham que a fase do que vem atrás é mais fácil, não é. É tão difícil quanto a sua próxima fase. 

QUEM TEM MEDO DA CRISE - MUCIO MORAIS

BEM QUE TE AVISEI, comentava um amigo com o outro em frente ao Gerente do Banco, fiquei curioso e me coloquei em posição de escuta, do que será que este amigo avisou o outro? Então este narrou rapidamente ao gerente, pois é, eu disse pra ele que era a hora de fechar as portas, que a CRISE estava brava, mas ele insistiu, eu disse que a equipe dele era medíocre, mas ele não acreditou, eu disse pra ele que o barco ia afundar e deu nisso. MAS QUE AMIGO, pensei comigo, nenhuma solução, nenhum incentivo, nenhum projeto, nenhum argumento válido, apenas ajudou a empurrar o outro para o precipício. 

Marketing de Guerra - Múcio Morais

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TÉCNICAS DE ENTREVISTA - ENTENDENDO O PROCESSO - Múcio Morais

É a primeira entrevista que se aplica ao candidato a emprego. Normalmente é solicitado que o candidato preencha o formulário de emprego. 

Devemos observar o seguinte ao iniciar a entrevista: MECANISMO DE DEFESA O candidato está a procura de satisfazer as suas necessidades, logo, procura formar uma cadeia de forças de auto proteção (defesa de suas fraquezas). Seu objetivo é vencer a batalha da entrevista, o candidato sente seu "eu" ameaçado pelo entrevistador, que lhe afigura como um investigador de sua vida privada. 

Updated Consensus Report on Diabetic Nutrition Therapy - Adam Chalela

An updated consensus report from the American Diabetes Association has pushed focus towards diabetic nutrition therapy as a viable alternative to classic pharmacotherapy. Recent studies have led to the publication of a consensus report by the American Diabetes Association (ADA) of optimal nutrition therapy for adults with diabetes or prediabetes. The last consensus report on diabetic nutrition therapy was published in early 2014 and did not target the prediabetic population. As diabetes grows to be one of the most prevalent disease states across the United States of America the ADA has shifted their focus towards overall prevention through utilization of lifestyle modifications, including physical exercise and diet changes. 

Diet modifications have had increased recognition over the past years as playing a key role in quality diabetic therapy, as they can assist patients in achieving weight loss goals, maintaining blood glucose values within guideline directed goals, and improving risk factors for developing secondary cardiovascular complications. 

The ADA utilized the current definition of nutrition therapy as defined by the National Academy of Medicine when outlining specificities for diabetic nutrition therapy. The National Academy of Medicine defines nutrition therapy as the treatment of a disease or condition through the modification of nutrient or whole-food intake.

”When applied to a patient with diabetes, healthcare providers should consider up to date, evidence based information from studies that enrolled populations of patients with diabetes when recommending dietary modifications. 

The ADA emphasizes that registered dietician nutritionists should be the primary providers of diabetic nutrition therapy and that primary care providers should refer all patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes to these specialists for an individualized nutrition plan. Patients over the age of 65 can have Medicare cover the costs of this specialized therapy as it is an entitled benefit. Numerous studies have demonstrated the efficacy of diabetic nutrition therapy as compared to current standard of care medication regimens. Diabetic nutrition therapy as provided by a registered dietician has been shown to improve HbA1C by up to 2% in patients with type 2 diabetes and by up to 1.9% in patients with type 1 diabetes within a 3 to 6 month study period. With this data, it can be deduced that diabetic nutrition therapy can reduce overall pill burden in patients with diabetes which can minimize associated side effects by eliminating the need of medication therapy for glycemic control. 

The ADA’s updated 2019 consensus report on diabetic nutrition therapy does not specify any ideal macronutrient breakdown for the average patient with diabetes or prediabetes and found through systematic review that macronutrient intake does not significantly differ between the average person without diabetes and the average person with diabetes. 

Macronutrient breakdown should be individualized to the patient’s specific goals whether it be overall carbohydrate reduction to reduce blood glucose values or gradual weight loss, and should be the starting point of the registered dietician’s plan. 

General strategies recommended by the ADA include incorporating more whole foods and non-starchy vegetables into the diet and avoiding refined carbohydrates and processed foods, though the greatest HbA1C lowering effects are observed in diets that reduce overall carbohydrate intake. 

For even greater outcomes, such as lowering HbA1C and minimizing risk factors for cardiovascular disease, the ADA recommends to incorporate intensive physical activity into diabetic nutrition therapy. It is important to consider the effects that diabetic nutrition therapy has on specific medication regimens. For example, patients on an intensive insulin regimen may need their total daily dose of insulin reduced once initiated on a nutrition plan that specifically reduces carbohydrate intake with each meal. If left unmanaged, the insulin regimen can pose an increased risk of precipitating hypoglycemic events. 

The start of any diabetic treatment plan begins with education, and if it’s possible to achieve desired goals such as weight loss, HbA1c improvements, or cardiovascular disease risk reduction without the need for added medication burden, that avenue should be highly considered. 

Practice Pearls All patients with diabetes, whether it be type 1 or type 2, should receive diabetic nutrition therapy. Registered dietician nutritionists are the best providers of diabetic nutrition therapy. Nutrition treatment plans are not homogeneous within the diabetic population and should be tailored to the individual’s specific goals. 

Good health, Múcio Morais.

Reference: Evert AB, Dennison M, Gardner CD, et al. Nutrition therapy for adults with diabetes or prediabetes: a consensus report. Diabetes Care 2019; 42(5):731-754. DOI: 10.2337/dci19-0014. Adam Chalela, B.S. Doctor of Pharmacy Candidate USF College of Pharmacy

A Step-by-Step Guide to Depression Recovery

"Depression is an emotional state that may or may not be abnormal and that has many possible causes. 

The most severe form of clinical depression is major depressive disorder," says Rajnish Mago, MD, director of the mood disorders program at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, Pa. "Women are twice as likely as men to develop major depressive disorder." Only one out of three people with depression ever seeks medical help. 

But with the right diagnosis and treatment, depression recovery is possible. FEATURED Want to boost your brain capacities? Take Total Brain's Mental Health and Fitness Assessment! Learn More Step One: Know the Signs and Symptoms of Depression The first step in beating depression is to recognize the symptoms. Says Dr. Mago, 

"Not all these symptoms are present in every person who has major depression, but many of them are:" Persistent sadness Changes in sleep, appetite, and energy Lack of interest and difficulty concentrating Feeling guilty, hopeless, and empty If you have some depression symptoms, it's important to know that not all depression is abnormal. 

"Symptoms of depression can occur in normal people who suffer a loss, and the most typical example is bereavement. A major depressive disorder is differentiated from normal sadness by being more severe and persistent than is warranted by the circumstances,

" Mago says. You might have a major depression if you have symptoms of depression all the time and they last for at least two weeks. If you are having persistent thoughts of suicide or death, you should get help right away. Step Two: Get Help for Depression "If you think you may have depression, the next thing you should do is to seek assessment from a mental health professional or from your family doctor. 

Be open about describing your symptoms and to the possibility that they may indicate some form of depression," advises Mago. 

There is no lab test that can tell a health care professional if you have depression. The diagnosis is based on your symptoms. "In most cases, a few basic laboratory tests should be done to rule out the possibility that another medical condition, most typically underactivity of the thyroid gland, may be causing the depression," says Mago. Step Three: Get the Right Depression Diagnosis Different types of depression may require different kinds of treatment. 

"The therapist should assess the type of depression, differentiating between a normal sadness due to a significant loss, bipolar depression, and different types of unipolar depression,

" says Mago. Common types of depression include: Major depression. This is also called clinical depression, major depressive disorder, or unipolar depression. Dysthymia. This type of depression is similar to major depression, but not as severe. Postpartum depression. This is a serious type of depression that affects about 13 percent of women who are pregnant or new mothers. Another possible diagnosis is bipolar disorder. 

Although this is a condition distinct from depression, bipolar disorder was once known as manic depression because it alternates between periods of depression and excitability. In most cases, depending on the type of depression you have, the next step in beating depression is starting treatment. "Patients presenting to their family doctor are likely to be prescribed an antidepressant unless they request a referral for psychotherapy. 

For mild or moderate depression, psychotherapy can be as effective as medication. If possible, the combination of an antidepressant and psychotherapy is warranted in some patients," explains Mago. Step Four: Understand the Types of Depression Treatment Finding the right kind of treatment is an important step. Treatments can be used alone or in combination, and will depend on your diagnosis and response to the treatments you are started on. 

Here are some of the possibilities: Psychotherapy. This is therapy that uses talk instead of medicine. Types of psychotherapy include cognitive behavioral therapy and interpersonal therapy. 

Medications. If you have a more severe type of depression or you are not responding to psychotherapy alone, your doctor may prescribe an antidepressant. These medications may take up to six weeks to work. Electroconvulsive therapy. In severe cases where medication and psychotherapy are not working, ECT is highly effective. Step Five: Assess Your Depression Treatment As you continue the steps toward recovery from depression, you should know that 80 to 90 percent of people diagnosed with depression can be treated successfully. But it is not unusual to have some treatment adjustments along the way. 

"With the first trial of an antidepressant medication, about one third of patients show excellent improvement, one third have substantial but incomplete treatment, and one third have little or no improvement. 

Of patients who have incomplete response, the majority go on to have substantial improvement with a change in the antidepressant, addition of another medication to the antidepressant, or addition of psychotherapy," says Mago. Step Six: Get Complete Care for Depression "In recent years it has been realized that patients with clinical depression should be treated till they are have virtually no symptoms at all. 

Otherwise they remain at higher risk of becoming depressed again in response to stresses in their life," notes Mago. It's also important to remember that there are steps you can take for yourself to beat depression and keep it from coming back. 

These include lifestyle changes such as a healthy diet and regular exercise. You should also educate yourself about depression and establish a good support system. With the proper steps, you can beat depression.

PALESTRAS 10 PASSOS PARA AJUDA-LO A VECER A DEPRESSÃO
PALESTRANTE MUCIO MORAIS
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What is Anxiety Attacking Depression?

In numerous medical and psychotherapy journals, the unquestionable linkage between anxiety and depression may be well stated. 

A patient can easily be overwhelmed by the emotions of anxiety and depression, because it frequently develops in a cycle and turns these seemingly innocent negative emotions in to A patient that feels anxiousness for almost each minute of his life may become depressive. 

Most especially if your person is dealing with continuous anxiety and panic over issues that can easily be managed. And once the mind of the patient enters the depressive state, the sufferer then develops a weak emotional state which then gets to be all over again a panic attack. 

Here is a short article that may be able to allow you to find out how anxiety attacking depression can affect you. Everybody get each year one or more times within their lives depression and anxiety. We all appreciate how it feels to get depressed or frightened, and that we are commonly competent at handling these unimportant emotional episodes by confronting the difficulties who haveinstigated us to possess such depressing feelings to start with. 

If people don’t understand how to handle these feelings properly, the outcomes of hysteria and depression can be harmful about the emotional well being of somebody.

Being overwhelmed by anxiety attacking depression could cause a onetime joyful and normal person to turn into somebody who has lost interest in living. Negative feelings can emerge with an exhausted and lethargic disposition, constant headaches or perhaps worse, suicide.

THRE THINGS NOT TO SAY TO A DEPRESSED PERSON

Major depressive disorder (often referred to as depression) is a type of but serious mood disorder. Depression causes symptoms that negatively impact the way a person thinks, feels, and copes with day to day activities like eating, sleeping, or working. 

Depression is seen as a a persistent pattern of sadness (or irritability in kids) or lack of pleasure in most activities almost all of the day, virtually every day, forat least a couple weeks. 

Depression normally include a wide range of symptoms (instead of every person experiences every symptom), including: Changes in eating designs, including weight reduction or weight gain Rest unsettling influence (trouble falling or staying unconscious or sleeping late) Musings of death or suicide, including suicide endeavors If you want learn more about this i want to explain in this video watch here Because anxiety and depression are directly associated with the other, extremely common for those struggling with this issue to get both at the same time, despite the fact that onewould have in all probability a reduced degree as opposed to other. Patients with anxiety attacking depression contain the inclination to be put through panic and anxiety attacks on the more regular basis. 

Panic attacks may be harmless rather, if the trigger that causes a panic attack can be isolated to a single or two important events within the life of your person, like not being ready for an essential examination or needing to speak publicly unplanned. However, a panic attack that gets out of control can wreak mess on the emotional state and physical wellness someone. 

Panic attack sufferers generally complain of experiencing agonizing symptoms like out of control sweating, extreme tremors on limbs and irregular heartbeat, all of which might be mistaken as signs No you might love to cope with anxiety and depression on a daily basis as it could prevent somebody from living an ordinary and full life. 

Though individual installments of both feelings are just the main emotional roller coaster that has to proceed through in daily life, it should be given serious attention after theepisodes become regular and more serious as the name indicated. 

Do not think twice in searching for medical help if you think maybe your anxiety attacking depression gets worse. The strength is inside you to take charge of how you feel and how you can successfully win the battle against negative emotions. 

PALESTRA 10 PASSOS PARA SUPERAR A DEPRESSÃO
Múcio Morais Palestrante Motivacional - 
FoneZap 31 99389-7951. 
contato@muciomorais.com 

Recomeço – O difícil caminho para uma nova vida a dois - Múcio Morais

Recomeçar é um processo natural, um fator que incide em diversas áreas da vida, mas quando o recomeço está na busca de um novo relacionamento amoroso, a questão esbarra em nossos sistemas mais sensíveis, crenças e valores são colocados em xeque, sentimentos e impressões são manifestados de forma contundente, medo, dúvida, preconceitos, angústias, ansiedade. 

Questionamentos saltam pela mente, quem? Como? Porque? Onde? Pra que? Será? Posso? Quero? Quando? Penso que existem postos-chave que devem ser observados nesse processo, é sobre eles que quero discorrer neste artigo. 

MODELOS DE RELAÇÕES PASSADAS PODEM SER UM PROBLEMA Um dos processos pelo qual um novo casal passa é o ajuste do modelo de relacionamento herdado de relações anteriores, ainda que o motivo do rompimento da antiga relação tenha sido este modelo, existe a possibilidade de inconscientemente repeti-lo, modelos de resposta a determinados comportamentos podem assustar ou causar dificuldades em uma nova relação, exemplificando: 

Uma mulher que em sua relação anterior mantinha-se em alerta com as relações de seu parceiro com outras mulheres, no trabalho e no dia a dia, exercendo algum tipo de vigilância, coisas como ligar diversas vezes ao dia, atender as ligações com a pergunta: ONDE VOCÊ ESTÁ? OU COM QUEM VOCÊ ESTÁ? Corre o risco de transferir este modelo para a nova relação, não me cabe aqui discutir a pertinência ou não deste modelo, mas as dificuldades que se pode ter quando aplicado ao novo companheiro que poderá ter saído do uma relação por esta razão ou não ter experimentado este tipo de controle, sentindo-se assim desconfortável. Seja cuidadoso e avalie suas reações e modelos de comportamento a dois para não repetir velhos erros. 

GENERALIZAÇÕES Todo homem é assim! Toda mulher é assim! Embora possa concordar com algumas características comuns a homens e mulheres, é preciso tomar cuidado com as generalizações, as pessoas são diferentes, percebem o mundo de forma diferente, avaliam e respondem de formas diversas, portanto o que era ruim para um, pode ser bom para o outro, o que era inadmissível para um, pode ser essencial para o outro, aprenda a esperar e admitir as diferenças evitando comparações, receba a nova relação com curiosidade e boas expectativas, aja com cautela, converse, pergunte, observe. 

O PACOTE VEM COMPLETO Ao entrar numa nova relação, estamos entrando em um novo mundo e levando o nosso próprio mundo para fundir-se ao da outra pessoa. O Pacote costuma vir com filhos, amigos, parentes, vizinhos, atividades diversas, crenças, práticas esportivas e religiosas, animais, hábitos, gostos e muito mais. Procure conhecer a dar-se a conhecer, converse sobre "o pacote" inteiro e o quanto cada elemento desse pacote interfere na vida daquela pessoa, e, mais importante ainda, que papel ou o quanto cada elemento irá interferir na vida do casal, tanto na fase de conhecimento quanto numa possível relação permanente. 

Imagine-se um asmático sentado no sofá de sua nova namorada com cinco gatos no colo, melhor saber se o amor que ela sente pelos gatos poderia ser substituído por algo menos agressivo. Imagine-se ainda em um restaurante e após o jantar seu parceiro mal consegue andar pelo efeito do álcool, como você se sentiria? Para alguma mulheres isso seria o fim, para outras seria tolerável, pois bem, é bom conversar sobre tudo para não ter surpresas, o novo mundo pode não ser adequado ao seu e se você ja errou nesse quesito está aí uma boa oportunidade para acertar. 

PRINCÍPIOS E VALORES Um amigo que estava recomeçando sua vida amorosa me contou o seguinte episódio: saiu com uma linda mulher que havia conhecido em uma festa, foram jantar em um simples porém aconchegante restaurante na orla de uma linda cidade Brasileira, a conversa estava agradável, olhares delicados e insinuantes, a música suave ao fundo banhava de romantismo e ternura aquele momento, uma rosa exalava seu perfume e a linda dama parecia uma princesa sob a luz pálida e as sombras do candelabro, perfeito, tudo lindo, até que em meio às palavras doces e elogios trocados ela lhe disse: 
               💘Querido, vou te contar uma coisa engraçada, posso?
 
Ele muito solícito e tomado pela emoção do momento respondeu delicadamente: Sim querida, diga, ela então lhe disse: sabe querido, tenho quase um faqueiro em casa roubado desse restaurante, além de algumas taças e até um saleiro, não diga nada, mas já estou com um garfo dentro da bolsa, fique quieto senão, eles desconfiam de nós! 🚨

Preciso dizer com que cara meu amigo ficou? Aquela mulher achava engraçado roubar, cleptomaníaca? Quem sabe! Mas meu amigo não estava definitivamente disposto a descobrir, entrou para um jantar romântico, escoltando uma dama e poderia sair algemado, escoltado pela Polícia. 👮

É muito importante que se eleve o nível das conversas, que se fale filosoficamente sobre tudo que envolve a vida, é necessário perceber o nível de evolução humana, os princípios e valores que norteiam os comportamentos daquela pessoa, sua sensibilidade ou falta dela, seu idealismo ou comodismo, enfim, sua visão da vida. 

ALGUMAS FRASES DE SABEDORIA 

 "A diferença entre namoro e casamento é a diferença entre as imagens de um catálogo de sementes e o que nasce depois de plantado." James Wharton

"Relacionamentos são como Roma. Difícil de começar, incrível durante a prosperidade dos anos dourados, e insuportável durante a queda. Então, um novo reinado virá e o processo todo se repetirá, até que apareça um reinado como o do Egito – que prospera e continua a florescer. Este reinado se tornará seu melhor amigo, sua alma gêmea, e seu amor." Helen Keller "

As pessoas com as quais nos relacionamos são sempre um espelho refletindo nossas próprias crenças, e simultaneamente nós somos espelhos refletindo as delas. Assim, o relacionamento é uma das mais poderosas ferramentas para o desenvolvimento – se olharmos honestamente para nossos relacionamentos, nós conseguiremos ver muito sobre como nós os criamos."Shakti Gavain” 

 "Dê a sua diferença, aceite a minha diferença, unifique todas as diferença em um todo maior — esta é a lei do crescimento. A unificação das diferenças é o eterno processo da vida — a síntese criativa, o mais supremo ato da criação." M.P. Follet 

 Quando duas pessoas, honesta e sinceramente, abrem seus Baús, podem descobrir coisas que para um nada valiam muito e para o outro são tesouros preciosos. Podem ainda, com o tempo, juntarem os conteúdos em uma única caixa e formarem um único tesouro que irá demonstrar sua fortuna e enriquecer a outros com o brilho da influência. 

Espero que ajude, Abraços a todos 

Múcio Morais – 
Palestrante Motivacional – 
www.muciomorais.com –
contato@muciomorais,com -  
Tel. 31 99389-7951

EXERCÍCIOS DE AUTOCONHECIMENTO - MÚCIO MORAIS



Em nossa última ODP (Oficina de desenvolvimento pessoal) comecei a tratar da questão autoestima
e autoconhecimento, a relação entre esses processos da individualidade é impressionante. Como o gostar de si mesmo está intrinsecamente ligado ao conhecer a si mesmo e vice versa. 
O autoconhecimento deve nos levar às respostas dos porquês? Das razões para gostarmos ou não de nós mesmos, dos mapas de avaliação e julgamento e do peso que as impressões recebem em nosso sistema interior de justiça. 

O autoconhecimento é uma viagem única, individual e indelegável. Cada um tem seu método. Pode acontecer num estalo, no decorrer de um longo caminho, por meio da meditação, da religião. Pode vir também após um grande trauma, guerra, sequestro ou momento de euforia, como o nascimento de um filho. Não há um único método. 

Autoconhecimento é uma graça alcançada. Robert Wong – headhunter Propus um exercício muito interessante aos participantes, durante aqueles três dias, eles tirariam um tempo específico para escrever uma carta para si mesmos, uma carta onde teriam alguns direcionamentos, tais como: 

 1. Demonstrar gratidão por…

 2. Avisar sobre… 

 3. Sugerir que… 

 4. Pedir um pouco de… 

 5. Reconhecer que… 

 6. Valorizar a… 

 7. Mostrar compreensão sobre… 

 8. Exigir que…
 
 9. Desejar que… 

 10. Bronquear com… 

 Os outros temas da carta são livres… 

Eu já tinha visto muitas reações emocionais como resultado de descobertas de si mesmo, mas o que vimos nessa ODP foi impressionante, uma comoção muito forte tomou conta de todos, fizemos grandes descobertas, trouxemos a tona um monte de emoções seguidas um senso de urgência impressionante, na verdade esse é mesmo o objetivo já que nesta fase da oficina fazemos um planejamento de vida. 

Vou lhe fazer um desafio, escreva uma carta para si mesmo, use as direções que dei acima e após cumpri-las, sinta-se livre para falar mais consigo mesmo, depois coloque em um envelope e guarde por dois ou três dias, se puder envie pelo correio para si mesmo, mas o ponto é, leia somente dois ou três dias após escrevê-la. 

Ao ler reflita sobre cada ponto, se quiser anote pensamentos, ideias, projetos que lhe vierem a mente, acredite no quanto o seu remetente conhece você e perceba a utilidade que este exercício trará ao seu autoconhecimento e a sua autoestima. 

Não quero me estender muito para não estragar a surpresa. 

"Segundo Michael Marmot, autor de uma pesquisa publicada no British Medical Journal, a baixa autoestima pode encurtar a vida . Pessoas deprimidas têm uma expectativa de vida reduzida, com diminuição da atividade do sistema imunológico e, consequentemente, maior risco para várias doenças, como por exemplo infartos, acidentes vasculares cerebrais (derrames), doenças respiratórias e alguns tipos de câncer.

"Este texto não é um artigo", é o meu compartilhar de um momento especial com meus clientes e amigos em uma de nossas ODP´s, Oficina de Desenvolvimento Pessoal, caso queira participar ou obter informações, por favor, faça contato pelo site: www.muciomorais.com / 
e-mail:contato@muciomorais.com 

 Abraço a todos,

Múcio Morais

MÚCIO  MORAIS PALESTRANTE
DESENVOLVIMENTO HUMANO
31 99389-7951
www.muciomorais.com
contato@muciomorais.com

Coronavirus has accelerated three of the key geopolitical trends - Ian Bremmer

The global order was in flux well before the COVID-19 crisis. Coronavirus has accelerated three of the key geopolitical trends that will shape our next world order… which will await us on the other side of this pandemic. 

The first trend is deglobalization; the logistic difficulties brought to light by the current crisis are already pointing to a shift away from global just-in-time supply chains. Yet as economic difficulties mount, the inevitable growth of nationalism and “my nation first” politics will push companies to localize business operations that favor national and regional supply chains. 

The third trend, China’s geopolitical rise, has been more than three decades in the making. But while China has successfully transformed itself into an economic and technological superpower, no one expected it to become a “soft power” superpower. This crisis can change that, if China’s crisis diplomacy continues and the perception endures that Beijing has been far more effective than the rest of the world in its response to the outbreak. 

Of course, just because China appears to be faring better doesn’t mean it actually is. There’s a reason people take Chinese numbers with a grain of salt. This general distrust was further fueled by the initial Chinese cover-up of the outbreak, which enabled its global spread. Donald Trump and his administration are leaning into this narrative as an election strategy and to deflect attention from their own handling of the pandemic. 

China won’t take this lying down, making it increasingly likely that once the world emerges from the current pandemic, we will be plunged into a new cold war, this time between the United States and China. New world order or not, some things just don’t change. 

IAN BREMMER is president and founder of Eurasia Group.
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PALESTRA "MERCADO E OPORTUNIDADES"
PALESTRANTE MÚCIO MORAIS
www,muciomorais,com
contato@muciomorais.com
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COVID-19 will leave a lasting imprint on the world economy - Sergio Rebelo

COVID-19 will leave a lasting imprint on the world economy, causing permanent changes and teaching important lessons. Virus screening is likely to become part of our life, just like security measures became ubiquitous after 9/11. It is important to invest in the infrastructure necessary to detect future viral outbreaks. This investment protects economies in case immunity to COVID-19 turns out to be temporary. Many economies adopted versions of Germany’s Kurzarbeit (short work) subsidy during the pandemic. This policy keeps workers employed at reduced hours and pay, with the government compensating some of the shortfall in wages. By keeping matches between firms and workers intact, the economy is better prepared for a quick recovery. It is important to improve the implementation of these policies and make them a permanent part of our economic recovery tool kit. Remote work is likely to become more common. We had some evidence that working from home is at least as productive as working at the office. However, many companies were reluctant to embrace remote work. Now that many have tried it with good results, remote work might be here to stay. The pandemic crisis has accelerated the pace of digital transformation, with further expansion in e-commerce and increases in the pace of adoption of telemedicine, videoconferencing, online teaching, and fintech. Companies with international supply chains are dealing with shortages and bottlenecks. We are likely to see many of these companies reshore some of their production. Unfortunately, this trend will not create many jobs because most of the production is likely to be automated. Governments will be bigger after playing the role of insurer and investor of last resort during the crisis. Public debt will balloon, creating financial challenges around the world. The most important lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic is the importance of working together on problems that affect the entire human race. We are much stronger united than divided. SERGIO REBELO is a professor of international finance at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

The world after the first wave of COVID-19 must be more inclusive - Sharan Burrow

The world after the first wave of COVID-19 must be more inclusive, resilient, and sustainable. Today, we live in a world in which inequality between and within countries has grown as a result of businesses’ race to the bottom and working poverty among a vast portion of the global workforce. Too many countries suffered the external shocks of COVID-19 without universal social protection, robust public health systems, a plan to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, or a sustainable real economy with quality jobs. 

The Bretton Woods conference occurred while a war was still raging and helped formed the basis of a postwar social contract. Similarly, we need to craft an ambitious reconstruction plan while working to end the pandemic. International support is a matter of collective survival and an investment in the future of health, the global economy, and multilateralism. 

The choice is ours, and the actions of the IMF and the multilateral system will be a deciding factor. Our goal for recovery should be full employment and a new social contract. Public investment in the care economy, education, and low-carbon infrastructure can form the backbone of stimulus that reduces inequality. 

Wage policy, collective bargaining, and labor market regulation can revive demand and income while putting an end to a business model that allows companies to take no responsibility for their workers. Debt should be addressed through a relief process focused on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and enduring economic growth for every country. 

Shortsighted fiscal consolidation hindered debt management and reduction after the global financial crisis and would again leave us even less able to deal with future health and economic crises. 

Shared prosperity can be the fruit of a COVID-19 world marked by shared ambition and global solidarity. SHARAN BURROW is general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation.

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PARTE INTEGRANTE DA PALESTRA: O MUNDO PÓS COVID-19
MUCIO MORAIS PALESTRANTE

fone/zap: 31 99389-7951
www.muciomorais.com
contato@muciomorais.com 
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In The Pandemic Is a Portal - Jean Saldanha

In The Pandemic Is a Portal, Indian author Arundhati Roy writes, “Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next.

” The way multilateralism operates will have to change to reflect this very different world. The COVID-19 pandemic has been testing the limits of global cooperation. Support for developing economies in particular remains inadequate. 

They were hit early by the global economic downturn, including through record capital outflows and tightening financial conditions. Facing the worst humanitarian crisis since World War II, these economies are experiencing unprecedented pressure on their already limited fiscal capacity to tackle urgent public health and social needs. 

Choices made now will have far-reaching consequences. Reliance on more of the same is untenable and ignores the scale of human suffering unleashed by the pandemic. A fitting UN-led reform agenda must include the IMF in addressing the structural problems that have driven debt vulnerability across developing economies. 

Such an agenda must shift development finance away from market-friendly reforms and incentives for private investment. It must abandon the dogma of austerity. Furthermore, rich countries must finally meet their official development assistance commitments. Power imbalances in global institutions must also be corrected to give fair recognition to the needs and rights of the two-thirds of the world’s population who reside in the Global South. If the international community fails to respond decisively now, the 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement will be fatally derailed. 

A new multilateralism—in which reform of the Bretton Woods institutions will play a key role—is needed now and must be based on a vision of development that puts human rights, gender equality, and climate at its center. JEAN SALDANHA is director of the European Network on Debt and Development

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PARTE INTEGRANTE DA PALESTRA 
"ROMPIMENTOS E INOVAÇÕES PARA O MUNDO PÓS COVID-19"
MUCIO MORAIS - PALESTRERANTE

www.muciomorais.com
contato@muciomorais.com
Fone/zap: 31 99389-7951
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The world after COVID-19 - James Manyika

The world after COVID-19 is unlikely to return to the world that was. Many trends already underway in the global economy are being accelerated by the impact of the pandemic. This is especially true of the digital economy, with the rise of digital behavior such as remote working and learning, telemedicine, and delivery services. Other structural changes may also accelerate, including regionalization of supply chains and a further explosion of cross-border data flows. The future of work has arrived faster, along with its challenges—many of them potentially multiplied—such as income polarization, worker vulnerability, more gig work, and the need for workers to adapt to occupational transitions. This acceleration is the result not only of technological advances but also of new considerations for health and safety, and economies and labor markets will take time to recover and will likely emerge changed. With the amplification of these trends, the realities of this crisis have triggered reconsideration of several beliefs, with possible effects on long-term choices for the economy and society. These effects range from attitudes about efficiency versus resilience, the future of capitalism, densification of economic activity and living, industrial policy, our approach to problems that affect us all and call for global and collective action—such as pandemics and climate change—to the role of government and institutions. Over the past two decades, in advanced economies, responsibility has generally shifted from institutions to individuals. Yet health systems are being tested and often found wanting, while benefits from paid sick leave to universal basic income are getting a second look. There is potential for a long-term shift in how institutions support people, through safety nets and a more inclusive social contract. As history has shown, choices made during crises can shape the world for decades to come. What will remain critical is the need for collective action to build economies that deliver inclusive economic growth, prosperity, and safety for all.

How the pandemic has changed the world - DANIEL SUSSKIND

In March 2020, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, an influential figure in British intellectual life, described the COVID-19 catastrophe as “the nearest we have to a revelation for atheists.

” At the time I thought the comparison was apt. It captured the biblical sense of shock that many of us felt in the face of such a sudden, extreme, and swiftly accelerating crisis. 

We “have been coasting along for more than half a century,” he remarked, and all at once “we are facing the fragility and vulnerability of the human situation.

” Now, a few months on, Rabbi Sacks’ comparison with revelation still seems fitting, but for a different reason, and one that matters for thinking about a world after COVID-19. 

 This crisis is alarming, in part, because it has several new and unfamiliar features. A global medical emergency caused by a virus we still do not fully understand. A self-inflicted economic catastrophe as a necessary policy response to contain its spread. And yet as time has passed, it has also become clear that much of what is most distressing about this crisis is not new at all. Striking variations in COVID-19 infections and outcomes appear to reflect existing economic inequalities. 

Remarkable mismatches between the social value of what “key workers” do and the low wages they receive follow from the familiar failure of the market to value adequately what really matters. The happy embrace of disinformation and misinformation about the virus was to be expected, given a decade of rising populism and declining faith in experts. 

And the absence of a properly coordinated international response ought to have come as no surprise, given the celebration of “my country first” global politics in recent years. 

The crisis then is a revelation in a far more literal sense—it is focusing our collective attention on the many injustices and weaknesses that already exist in how we live together. If people were blind to these faults before, it is hard not to see them now. What will the world look like after COVID-19? 

Many of the problems we will face in the next decade will simply be more extreme versions of those that we already confront today. The world will only look significantly different this time if, as we emerge from this crisis, we decide to take action to resolve these problems and bring about fundamental change. DANIEL SUSSKIND is a fellow in economics at Balliol College, Oxford University, and author of A World Without Work.

 (Allen Lane, 2020)https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2020/06/how-will-the-world-be-different-after-COVID-19.htm 

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PALESTRA O MUNDO PÓS COVID-19
MUCIO MORAIS PALESTRANTE
www.muciomorais.com
contato@muciomorais,com
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MOTIVAÇÃO E DISCIPLINA - MÚCIO MORAIS

SINTESE DA PALESTRA
Múcio Morais
Manter o sentido daquilo que se faz para atingir objetivos exige determinação, disciplina e ritmo, cada vez que cedemos ao desânimo ou simplesmente paramos para pensar, perdemos nossa energia para as próximas ações. 

Quanta gente vive do quase, da alegria desavisada da bola na trave, sem conhecer a esfuziante explosão do gol. 👏

As pessoas sempre souberam que a persistência e a perseverança são fatores determinantes para o sucesso, e, quando falo de sucesso, não estou falando do conceito deturpado passado pela mídia e seus protagonistas, falo da realização em qualquer nível daquilo que se propõe, falo do sucesso de indivíduos e diferentes aspectos da vida, daí o velho ditado: "Se no início você não conseguir, tente de novo". 

Pessoas de sucesso possuem um nível enorme de perseverança, não apenas quando as coisas ficam difíceis, mas mesmo quando os outros recomendam que parem; Li recentemente um relato de uma mãe que teve dois filhos envolvidos no mundo das drogas, por 15 anos ela buscou todo tipo de ajuda e alternativas, procurou tratamentos, envolveu-se pessoalmente na questão, se informou, estudou e hoje comemora a vida de dois cidadãos recuperados e perfeitamente inseridos nos contextos sociais. Sucesso, mas o preço foi, dentre outras, a persistência e a perseverança. 

 "Paciência e tenacidade de propósito valem mais que o dobro do peso da sua inteligência." Thomas Huxley 

Persistência, perseverança, integridade, determinação, dedicação, autoconfiança e a capacidade de se entregar distinguem pessoas que fazem grandes e pequenas coisas com suas vidas daqueles cujos sonhos morrem com eles. 

Quando você tem estes ingredientes, e isso é desenvolvido, decidido por você mesmo, num dia você não tem e no outro você tem, (é decisão mesmo). Nesse momento você passa a não levar em conta o que os outros dizem, ou o que o modismo dita, você não permite mais ser dominado. 

Torna-se o condutor de seu próprio destino e permanece fiel a sua visão. Treine diariamente sua mente inconsciente para se tornar mais forte e determinado. Diga a si mesmo o que quer e onde pretende chegar. Repita isso durante o dia. E, o mais importante, dê passos, mantenha-se no caminho, nas realizações diárias que reforcem sua vontade de chagar lá. 

Diga, mas faça, caso contrário você não poderá acreditar em si mesmo. Essa conversa de que o universo conspira a favor ou contra é no mínimo uma “simpatia da modernidade” dar personalidade ao universo é o fim da picada, dizer que o universo faria isso ou aquilo por você, basta você desejar é uma crença, pra mim, somente comparada ao poço dos desejos, como fez O humorista Benny Hill, copie e cole no seu navegador, link: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x48fy2  *Assista, vale a pena.

A personalidade viva e ativa que irá conspirar contra ou a favor de você é VOCÊ MESMO! O Universo é nossa habitação, não nosso mentor, é um lugar, não uma pessoa, segue leis naturais, lógicas, não um processo mental, elaborado, pessoal, tem reações químicas e físicas, não emoções. Para quem já está com os próximos passos da vida planejados, vão ai algumas dicas que chamo de os sete nãos. 

Não dê importância a pensamentos que tentem interromper sua caminhada, no máximo anote para futura avaliação. Depois de anotado, elimine-o da mente. Não interrompa por nada sua seqüência de ações programadas. 

Não mude o foco para si mesmo. Começar a pensar nas próprias condições, em todos os sentidos, pode fazê-lo perceber boas desculpas para parar. Não faça julgamento precipitados, julgar etapas, exceto pelo desempenho, pode jogar por terá a conclusão do seu projeto. Não pare para resolver questões menores, anote e projete. Ignore emoções negativas. Projete a alegria da vitória e interiorize esta emoção transformando-a em energia para seguir em frente. 

E lembre-se de aproveitar o caminho, nem sempre o melhor está na chegada, aproveite a viagem pela vida, contemple cada estágio, aproveite o máximo que puder, para muitos de nós o sucesso será a própria viagem. 

 Abraço a todos!

Múcio Morais

CONTRATE ESTA PALESTRA PARA SUA EQUIPE
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MUDANDO A SUA REALIDADE - MÚCIO MORAIS

"A definição de insanidade é fazer a mesma coisa repetidamente e esperar resultados diferentes." Benjamin Franklin Quantas pessoas estão infelizes e frustradas com própria realidade. Vivendo situações desagradáveis, desconfortáveis e o pior, sem perspectiva de melhoria. 
Algumas realidades são tão profundamente vividas e aceitas que determinam um estado definitivo, isso na mente das pessoas, insistir em um determinado padrão de pensamento pode torná-lo um modelo sólido de percepção e por conseqüência de definição da realidade pessoal. 

ESCOLHENDO UM TREINAMENTO DE FORMA CONSISTENTE

ESCOLHENDO UM TREINAMENTO DE FORMA CONSISTENTE - (DICAS) Múcio Morais

O mercado empresarial passa hoje por um momento de conscientização, diversos conceitos estão perdendo, as mudanças vêm a reboque de fatores ...