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Industry NewsTake a real estate 'chill pill'Monday, August 2, 2010 Mood of the MarketInman News We Americans are not great with stillness. Most of us can do some physical stillness (especially while we sleep or watch television!) but when it comes to mental stillness, it's a whole different ballgame. Elizabeth Gilbert's book, "Eat, Pray, Love," has more than one hilarious/tragic passage about the mental warfare she engaged in -- with herself! -- while trying to simply sit still in meditation while visiting an ashram in India. As an avid yoga practitioner, I'm always amazed at how few people can lie still on their mats for the closing "savasana," or "corpse pose." It should be the easiest posture to do -- you just lie, super-still, on your mat, arms at your side. End of instructions. Nevertheless, even after the most rigorous, 90-minute practice of the hottest, sweatiest Bikram yoga session -- even after the teacher advising everyone that this stillness is the most beneficial "pose" of them all, because it allows all the freshly detoxed and oxygenated blood to flow through our bodies' blood vessels; and even after she literally pleads with the class to be quiet and still so as not to disturb their neighbors -- it's like they just can't help it. A whopping 30 seconds of stillness later, people start twitching their toes, wiping their eyes and rolling up their mats. This is exactly why day-trading -- and even obsessively watching the ticker ups-and-downs of your stock market investments -- is discouraged for all but the savviest of investors. Human nature is to do something, despite the fact that sitting still in a down market may be the winning strategy, more often than not. I'm still seeing many, many homeowner inquiries about walking away from their devalued homes. On the other end, there are many homeowners interested in doing work to improve and remodel their home, both to increase its value and their comfort in their tenure there (which will be longer-than-planned, due to the market). Then, she'd give them each a piece of Red Hots candy, which she had indoctrinated them to believe was, in fact, a "chill pill." They would stop their gyrations and sit right down on the floor, wind gone completely out of their sails in an instant from the placebo effect of the chill pills they held in their mouths. A little sweat won't hurt you. Copyright 2010 Tara-Nicholle Nelson Web Page Accessed: http://www.samcar.org//index.cfm/news/Take_a_real_estate_chill_pill_4656.htm |