Authors: David Hamilton
6
. Sarah Grogan,
Body Image
, Routledge, 2008
7
. R. Rodgers and H. Chabrol, âThe impact of exposure to images of ideally thin models on body dissatisfaction in young French and Italian women',
Encephale
2009, 35(3), 262â8
8
. I. D. Stephen and A. T-M. Perera, âJudging the difference between attractiveness and health: does exposure to model images influence the judgments made by men and women?',
PLOS ONE
2014, 9(1), e86,302
1
. Kristin Neff discusses many benefits of self-compassion in
Self-Compassion: Stop Beating Yourself Up and Leave Insecurity Behind
, Hodder, 2011.
2
. J. G. Breines, M. V. Thoma, D. Gianferante, L. Hanlin, X. Chen and N. Rohleder, âSelf-compassion as a predictor of interleukin-6 response to acute psychosocial stress',
Brain Behaviour and Immunity
2014, 37, 109â14
3
. T. W. W. Pace, L. T. Negi, D. D. Adame, S. P. Cole, T. I. Sivillia, T. D. Brown, M. J. Issa and C. L. Raison, âEffect of compassion meditation on neuroendocrine, innate immune and behavioural responses to psychosocial stress',
Psychoneuroendocrinology
2009, 34(1), 87â98
4
. B. Shahar, O. Szesepsenwol, S. Zilcha-Mano, N. Haim, O. Zamir, S. Levi-Yeshuvi and N. Levit-Binnun, âA wait-list randomized controlled trial of loving-kindness meditation programme for self-criticism',
Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy
2014, 16 March, epub ahead of print
5
. B. Fredrickson, M. Cohn, K. A. Coffey, J. Pek and S. M. Finkel, âOpen hearts build lives: positive emotions, induced through loving-kindness meditation, build consequential personal resources',
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
2008, 95(5), 1,045â62
6
. P. Pearsall, âContextual cardiology: what modern medicine can learn from ancient Hawaiian wisdom',
Cleveland Clinical Journal of Medicine
2007, 74(1), S99â104. The research this
paper described as an example of âHard Marriage, Hard Heart' was: T. W. Smith, C. Berg, B. N. Uchino, P. Florsheim and G. Pearce, âMarital conflict behavior and coronary artery calcification', paper presented at the American Psychosomatic Society's 64th Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, 3 March 2006
7
. C. A. Hutcherson, E. M. Seppala and J. J. Gross, âLoving-kindness meditation increases social connectedness',
Emotion
2008, 8(5), 720â24
8
. J. W. Carson, F. J. Keefe, T. R. Lynch, K. M. Carson, V. Goli, A-M. Fras and S. R. Thorp, âLoving-kindness meditation for chronic low back pain',
Journal of Holistic Nursing
2005, 23(3), 287â304
9
. P. Arnstein, M. Vidal, C. Wells-Federman, B. Morgan and M. Caudill, âFrom chronic pain patient to peer: benefits and risks of volunteering',
Pain Management Nursing
2002, 3(3), 94â103
1
. See Chapter 12: âLetting Go of the Past' in David R. Hamilton, PhD,
Why Kindness is Good for You
, Hay House, 2010. The individual references cited there are: R. D. Enright, E. A. Gassin and C. Wu, âForgiveness: a developmental view',
Journal of Moral Education
1992, 21, 99â114; C. V. O. Witvliet, T. E. Ludwig and K. L. Vander Laan, âGranting forgiveness or harbouring grudges: implications for emotion, physiology, and health',
Psychological Science
2001, 121, 117â23; J. P. Friedberg, S. Suchday and D. V. Shelov, âThe impact of forgiveness on cardiovascular reactivity and recovery',
International Journal of Psychophysiology
2007, 65(2), 87â94; M. Waltman, D. Russell and R. Enright, âResearch study suggests forgiving attitude may be beneficial to the heart', paper presented at the American Psychosomatic Society Annual Meeting, 5â8 March 2003, Phoenix, Arizona; D. Tibbits, G. Ellis, C. Piramelli, F. M. Luskin and R. Lukman, âHypertension reduction through forgiveness training',
Journal of Pastoral Care and Counselling
2006, 60(1â2), 27â34; M. E. McCulloch, L. M. Root and A. D. Cohen, âWriting about the benefits of an interpersonal transgression facilitates forgiveness',
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
2006, 74(5), 887â97
1
. P. van Lommel, R. van Wees, V. Meyers and I. Elfferich, âNear death experience in survivors of cardiac arrest: a prospective study in the Netherlands',
The Lancet
2001, 358, 2,039â45
2
. See
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-death_experience
3
. L. J. Standish, L. Kozac, L. C. Johnson and T. Richards, âElectroencephalographic evidence of correlated event-related signals between the brains of spatially and sensory isolated human subjects',
Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine
2004, 10(2), 307â14
4
. Cited in R. Sheldrake,
Seven Experiments That Could Change the World: A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Revolutionary Science
, Fourth Estate, 1994
5
. Cited in R. Sheldrake,
The Sense of Being Stared At
, Century Hutchinson, 2003
6
. Ibid.
7
. R. Sheldrake, L. Avraamides and M. Novak, âSensing the sending of SMS messages: an automated test',
Explore
2009, 5(5), 272â6
Photographer: Stephen Mulhearn
David R. Hamilton
gained a first-class honours degree in chemistry, specializing in biological and medical chemistry, and a PhD in organic chemistry. After graduating in 1995, David spent four years working for one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, and also served as an athletics coach and team manager for one of the UK's top athletics clubs. He left both roles in 1999. In 2000 he co-founded Spirit Aid Foundation, an international relief charity helping children whose lives have been affected by war and poverty. In 2002, as a director of Spirit Aid, he helped produce a 9-day, 24-event festival of peace in Glasgow. He served as a director of Spirit Aid until the end of 2002. From 2004 until 2005, he taught chemistry and ecology at James Watt College of Further and Higher Education, and tutored chemistry at the University of Glasgow.
In 2005, he self-published his first book,
It's the Thought That Counts
, which was published by Hay House in 2006. David is now the author of eight books, all published by Hay House. He has been featured on TV and radio and been the subject of numerous national newspaper articles. He spends most of his time writing, giving talks, and leading workshops. David also writes a regular blog for
Psychologies
magazine and
The Huffington Post
.