Check out this research shared by Gary E. Stevenson.
In the 1970s, researchers set up an experiment to examine the effects of diet on heart health. Over several months, they fed a control group of rabbits a high-fat diet and monitored their blood pressure, heart rate, and cholesterol.
As expected, many of the rabbits showed a buildup of fatty deposits on the inside of their arteries. Yet this was not all! Researchers had discovered something that made little sense. Although all of the rabbits had a buildup, one group surprisingly had as much as 60 percent less than the others. It appeared as though they were looking at two different groups of rabbits.
To scientists, results like this can cause lost sleep. How could this be? The rabbits were all the same breed from New Zealand, from a virtually identical gene pool. They each received equal amounts of the same food.
What could this mean?
Did the results invalidate the study? Were there flaws in the experiment design?
The scientists struggled to understand this unexpected outcome!
Eventually, they turned their attention to the research staff. Was it possible that researchers had done something to influence the results? As they pursued this, they discovered that every rabbit with fewer fatty deposits had been under the care of one researcher. She fed the rabbits the same food as everyone else. But, as one scientist reported, “she was an unusually kind and caring individual.” When she fed the rabbits, “she talked to them, cuddled and petted them. … ‘She couldn’t help it. It’s just how she was.’”1
She did more than simply give the rabbits food. She gave them love!
At first glance, it seemed unlikely that this could be the reason for the dramatic difference, but the research team could see no other possibility.
So they repeated the experiment—this time tightly controlling for every other variable. When they analyzed the results, the same thing happened! The rabbits under the care of the loving researcher had significantly higher health outcomes.
The scientists published the results of this study in the prestigious journal Science.2
Years later the findings of this experiment still seem influential in the medical community. In recent years, Dr. Kelli Harding published a book titled The Rabbit Effect that takes its name from the experiment. Her conclusion: “Take a rabbit with an unhealthy lifestyle. Talk to it. Hold it. Give it affection. … The relationship made a difference. … Ultimately,” she concludes, “what affects our health in the most meaningful ways has as much to do with how we treat one another, how we live, and how we think about what it means to be human.”3
Consider the implications of applying these findings to ourselves as well as others.
Far too often, we're far too hard on ourselves. How many times have we looked in the mirror and been critical and judgmental toward what we see? How many times have we berated ourselves because we "messed up" and couldn't live by the restrictive food or exercise rules we set for ourselves? How much of our self-talk tears us down?
How many times have we thought or said similar things to others?
Our negativity is killing us. If we can't be loving toward ourselves because we think we deserve it, can we begin by being kinder for the sake of our health? To paraphrase Dr. Harding - Take yourself and your unhealthy lifestyle. Talk kindly. Give yourself affection. The relationship will make a difference. Ultimately, what affects your health in the most meaningful ways has as much to do with how you treat yourself, how you live, and how you think about what it means to be human.
Like that of the loving researcher in the story, our kindness can positively impact our health and the health of others. So let's be nice - to others and to ourselves.
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Fascinating !!!