Be very particular about who you spend time with. Surround yourself with loving, supportive, positive people. People who are negative, demanding or just plain mean are toxic. They are toxic not only to your physical health, but also to your mental health and to your soul. This is easier than it sounds. Once I started eliminating toxic people from my circle, I also started bringing more positive people into my life. I was careful to stop relationships when I realized someone was toxic to me.
The hardest decision for me was to divorce my husband. Amazingly, soon after the divorce my life really started to come together. I made good decisions; I received better and more effective treatments; my overall quality of life improved and my pain started decreasing. Surround yourself with positive people as much as you can. Be a positive, supportive person for others. I promise this one decision will change your life more than you can imagine.

Exercise

How can you increase time with positive people and decrease or eliminate negative people from your life? (Are there places you could go, boundaries you could set, time not spent any more with certain people?)

Sidebar Tip

To meet more healthy people join groups where healthy people are already gathering. Women’s organizations, health/community agencies, religious settings. Try something completely different. I met my second husband at a Rotary Club. I would have never attended one before but I was expanding my horizon of healthy people.

Author's Bio: 

Rebecca Rengo, shows you how to improve your health & decrease your pain. She is giving away FREE pain relief Secrets. To get access to these powerful and practical secrets that can help you transform your life – go to www.painreliefexplained.com now.

Rebecca Rengo, MSW, LCSW, is author of Beyond Chronic Pain: A get-well guidebook to soothe the body, mind & spirit. She has been a Pain Relief Coach, Author, Speaker , Psychotherapist and Educator for over 25 years. She has presented internationally and been featured on television and radio and in publications. Rebecca is current president of the Missouri Pain Initiative and on adjunct faculty at Washington University. For more information visit: www.painreliefexplained.com or www.beyondchronicpain.com