Culture & Manipulation

The Power of Pessimism

 Written by Shabby in Pink

Nothing upsets me more than people who are convinced, and try to convince others, that I am a negative person. On the contrary, I am extremely positive and have a happy, optimistic outlook on life.

I'm confident if I were to meet each one of you here I would find that most of you, if not all, are enjoying your journey in life just as much as I am. Does that mean that none of us have problems? No. Do we encounter daily challenges and hardships that weigh heavy on our hearts and souls from time to time? Absolutely!

So why are we perceived as negative and pessimistic? Simple – we say negative things about Mary Kay and its sales force – period. We are talking and writing about the things we have seen and heard in our Mary Kay journeys that are/were not positive, therefore we MUST be negative people. This is so wrong and judgmental. While I was researching "positive attitudes" I came across the little article below and could not believe how well it summed up exactly how I feel about the blind optimism and "positive-all-the-way-all-the-time" attitude some in Mary Kay preach to the masses.

Believe it or not, it is not always good to be hopelessly overconfident about ALL situations in life! Sometimes, pessimism can be a GOOD thing. Yes… there… I said it! And I feel positively great about it!

The power of pessimism

Being overly-optimistic can lead to disaster. Convinced that the Titanic was unsinkable, Captain Edward J Smith ignored three warnings on April 15th 1912 that he was steaming straight into major ice-sheets.

Some 1517 people perished where a more pessimistic skipper might have taken a more southerly route to avoid the icebergs, or reduced speed (the ship was going almost flat out) to give himself room for manoeuvre. If you catch yourself thinking that you are invulnerable, or even "unsinkable", it's worth reflecting on the consequences if things go wrong. "There's a narcissism that can go along with an extreme optimistic style," Reivich warns.

Some people have such a positive explanatory style that they come to believe that they are indestructible. Their motto is "it can't happen to me". But if you climb cliffs without ropes, if you go wind-surfing without a life-jacket, if you have casual sex without using condoms, then you are taking inappropriate risks. If any of these activities go wrong, then the consequences won't be restricted to "not me", "not permanent," "not everything" outcomes.

So if you have a pessimistic style, it's not as simple as just swapping the negative side of the continuum for the positive. Instead, your goal should be to think outside the box of your explanatory style, broadening the array of information that you consider so that you're seeing situations as they really are with both flexibly and accurately.

Most of us have encountered the blind optimist who is always expecting the silver lining to shine though, always blaming others for what goes wrong, always convinced that they can change anything for the better, airily dismissive of real-world negative consequences like bankruptcy, job loss, or relationship breakdown.

"That brand of optimism does not facilitate problem solving, it interferes with it. So optimism is a wonderful motivator but it needs to be wed to reality," says Reivich.

Copyright: Centre for Confidence and Well-Being

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