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Sunday, July 20, 2008
Jackie Gingrich Cushman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Disney World, Where Dreams Come True
by Jackie Gingrich Cushman
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This week, my family and I visited Walt Disney World.  I first visited the amusement park in 1978, when I was 12.  My father, Newt Gingrich, after losing twice, had won his third U.S. congressional race.  Always a trend setter, he announced at the victory party that he would take his family to Disney World to celebrate.

That first trip was magical. My memories revolve around the monorail, the video room, small speed boats and the Small World ride.  In 5 trips since then, I have attempted to replicate many of these fond childhood memories.  But my most recent trip to Disney World has led me to rethink my thoughts about childhood memories.

Childhood beliefs are funny things. Our perception of our own childhood is based not only on events that happened, but on our recollections and beliefs regarding the impact of those events on our lives.  Often those memories are less reality and more impression.  As we grow older, we begin to wonder what was real and what was constructed to fit our version of reality?

In a recently released report, “Asparagus, a Love Story: Healthier Eating Could Be Just a False Memory Away,” (Laney, C. Experimental Psychology, 2008; vol 55: pp 291-300), researchers tested the hypothesis of whether a false positive belief about childhood could affect adult behavior.  The answer they came up with was yes.

In two experiments, involving a total of 231 adult participants, researchers suggested to the participants that as children, they had loved to eat asparagus. About half thought that this false positive belief was true.  Among them, their fondness for asparagus increased, as did a “greater desire to eat asparagus in a restaurant setting, and a willingness to pay more for asparagus in the grocery store.”

In other words, the belief that a positive event occurred in our childhood could affect our current tastes and our current actions. “These results demonstrate that adults can be led to believe that they had a positive food-related experience as children,” the authors concluded, “and that these false beliefs can have healthy consequences.”

If this holds true for beliefs and actions regarding food, what other beliefs might we be able to alter and what other actions might we be able to initiate simply by remembering things a little differently?  Could we plant false positive beliefs in our own minds with the goal of changing our actions and outcomes?

Walt Disney World bills itself as a place “Where Dreams Come True,” a place where magic and reality coexist.  Often cast members (as the staff are called) recount stories that might not be true, but assist in Disney’s mission of making dreams come true.   On this trip, one of the cast members warned my children that if they hit the red button on Dumbo, it would leave the ride and fly over the Magic Kingdom.  After a few minutes of thought, they asked if this were really true.  But the cast member would not say, leaving my children to make up their own minds. Continued...

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About The Author
Jackie Cushman is a freelance writer who lives in Atlanta, Georgia. Her column also runs later in the week in the Northside Neighbor.
 
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Subject: Disney World
Where the phones are answered by Indians, in
India. I mean, talk about a slap in the face.
If Disney can't hire Americans, then no one
will.

Disney owns half the kid world. I admire so
much that Disney produces, make no mistake,
whether it is the entertainment parks, the
movies, the books. But Disney has decided to
buy up the kid world and it is getting scary.

When they bought out Baby Einstein I decided
that was enough. Where is the room for the little guy. Pixar belongs to Disney, every
fairy story ever published for the last 5
years (and there are a million) has been put out
by Disney.

Bring back the magic, Disney, by being less not
more and by hiring AMERICANS. I have also noticed that they hire an enormous number of
retirees which is not a bad thing in itself, and
probably a good thing. But it might be just
another way to put more money in their coffers
because retirees come cheap.

I love disney...
...and to tell the truth, I half expected some drivel about gays in Disney or some such and I was happily surprised when it wasn't. But... I really can't find the point to the article either. I am all for the occasional non-political discussion. We have lots of finance stuff on TH and a travel or movie or lifestyles type of article would be appreciated by most. This article just has no real point. No offense to the author, but that is my not so humble opinion.
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