March 29, 2010

Why Positive Thinking Is Bad For You — Read If You Disagree!

Dr. Srikumar RaoPositive thinking is so firmly enshrined in our culture that knocking it is a little like attacking motherhood or apple pie. Many persons swear by positive thinking and quite a few have been helped by it. Nevertheless, it is not a very effective tool and can be downright harmful in some cases. There are much better ways to get the benefits that positive thinking allegedly provides.

Perhaps the statement that best exemplifies positive thinking is “When life hands you a lemon, make lemonade.” It seems so self-evident that this is a good thing that we never question the wisdom of the adage. But it does not take a whole lot of digging to unearth the flaws in this reasoning.

Srikumar S. Rao is the author of Happiness at Work: Be Resilient, Motivated, and Successful — No Matter What. He conceived “Creativity and Personal Mastery,” a pioneering course that that ranks among the most popular courses at many of the world’s top business schools. His work has been covered by major media including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, Time, Fortune, BusinessWeek, the London Times, the Guardian and the Daily Telegraph.

First, did fate really hand you a lemon or was this merely your initial, unthinking response? Second, is a lemon really a bad thing, something that you would rather not have, but now that you do have it you will somehow salvage something by making lemonade? Finally, it is quite stressful to be handed a lemon until such time as you figure out how to make lemonade. Do you really have to go through this phase?

Beware Labeling Things Good Or Bad

No matter what happens to us in life we tend to think of it as “good” or “bad”. And most of us tend to use the “bad” label three to ten times as often as the “good” label. And when we say something is bad, the odds grow overwhelming that we will experience it as such. And that is when we need positive thinking. We have been given something bad, a real lemon, and we better scramble and make some lemonade out of it and salvage something out of this “bad” situation.

How tiring and tiresome!

Blessings In Disguise

Now think back on your own life. Can you recall instances of something that you initially thought was a bad thing that turned out to be not so bad after all or perhaps even a spectacularly good thing? Like the time you just missed a train and had to wait a whole hour for the next one and it was horrible except that your neighbor also missed it so you talked for the first time and a beautiful friendship developed. You will find many instances in your life, some of them very significant such as the job you desperately wanted but didn’t get only to find that a much better one came by and you would not have been able to accept it if not for the earlier rejection.

Drop The Labels

Now lets propose something radical and revolutionary. Lets propose that, no matter what happens to you, you do not stick a bad thing label on it. No matter what. You are fired from your job…your mortgage lender sends you a foreclosure notice … your spouse files for divorce … or whatever. This seems so far-fetched as to be laughable. Of course these are horrible tragedies and terrible things to happen. Or are they? Is it possible, just possible, that you have been conditioned to think of these happenings as unspeakable tragedies and hence experience them as such?

Viktor Frankl in his book Man’s Search for Meaning narrates the tale of the beautiful girl of privilege who was grateful to be in a concentration camp because she was able to connect with a spiritual side of her that she never knew existed. Observations like this led Frankl into his life’s work of determining why, when faced with extreme adversity, some persons positively flourish while others disintegrate.

Many who rise so triumphantly never label what they go through as bad and lament over it. They simply take it as a given as if they were a civil engineer surveying the landscape through which a road is to be built. In this view, a swamp is not a bad thing. It is merely something that has to be addressed in the construction plan.

Why You Don’t Need Positive Thinking

And if you never label something as bad, then you don’t need positive thinking and all of the stress associated with getting something bad and experiencing it as such till you figure out how to make lemonade out of it simply goes away.

That is the huge pebble in the positive thinking shoe. “This is bad. Really bad. It’s a lemon. But somehow I will make some lemonade out of it and then perhaps it won’t be so bad.” First you think its bad and then you think you will somehow make it less bad and there is a strong undercurrent that you are playing games and kidding yourself. Some people succeed. Many don’t. And those who don’t are devastated that the model they were trying so hard to build caved in on them. That’s why positive thinking can sometimes be harmful.

Changing Your Labeling Mindset

Can you actually go through life without labeling what happens to you as good or bad? Sure you can. You have to train yourself to do this. You have been conditioned to think of things as bad or good. You can de-condition yourself. It is neither easy nor fast but it is possible.

Lets say you break your leg. There is stuff you have to do like go to an orthopedist and get it set and go to therapy when the cast comes off. But all the rest of the stuff you pick up “Why did this have to happen to me? Bad things always come my way. I am in such pain. Who will hold the world up now that I am disabled?” is simply baggage. You don’t have to pick up this load and the only reason you do is because you were never told that you didn’t have to.

I am telling you now. Don’t pick up that useless burden. Don’t label what happens to you as bad. Then you won’t need positive thinking and much of the stress in your life will simply disappear. Poof! Just like that.

Thanks,

Srikumar

Editor’s Note: Srikumar Rao has recently published the book, Happiness at Work: Be Resilient, Motivated, and Successful — No Matter What. It’s pretty cool stuff. You can find out more about it over here »

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9 Responses to Why Positive Thinking Is Bad For You — Read If You Disagree!
  1. alexis
    March 30, 2010 | 9:32 am

    Well this is very new to me, and exciting! I want to read more on this !

  2. Larame
    March 30, 2010 | 5:40 pm

    Very Buddhist, and very helpful. However, how to present the concept to a 35 year-young woman, I know, who has to face one challenge after another, serious tough challenges.
    She is close to caving in, loosing her spirit and will to live. Positive thinking, labeling or not, law of attraction, a loving god etc is all but a mockery to her experience and perceived reality. I am a seasoned survivor and have to agree that life does not give her a fair share. Any ideas?
    Larame

  3. Alessandra
    March 30, 2010 | 6:35 pm

    i think one thing im not getting is, what are we to think of the “bad” thing? You just don’t label, or stress over it, and whatever the problem, it just disappears?

  4. Rahat
    March 30, 2010 | 3:47 pm

    Attitude is just a word coined by us human beings, positive or negative is just a prefix. To be precise, one must change the circumstances becoz that’s the best way to deal. Life has to be lived
    till one is destined to do so. So, why not live it to the fullest!!!!

  5. Heidi
    March 31, 2010 | 5:23 am

    Why do you think lemonade is better than the lemon itself? For some lemonade might be the bad.….

  6. VinnyC
    March 31, 2010 | 8:24 pm

    There are things that are genuinely bad. A lover dies. Your parents are murdered. So in your training you can still be at peace, accept it non judgementally, but I think it denies in some way your humanity, your need to grieve. Train yourself to be at peace no matter what happens. This is what the Buddists did in Tibet and they were slaughtered.

  7. Sara
    April 2, 2010 | 3:49 pm

    Enlightening and valueable stuff and yet misunderstood.Not labeling does not mean not grieving or not enduring or suffer a dificult process but to find the greatest message or learning experience out of it, for a greatest out come that is the best for our highest being.
    Is the easies way to flow in this lifetime, or may not, as only few of us relate to this concept, so once you apply it, you’ll find your self loneline and misunderstood sometimes, but, you’ll feel very rewarded to your self and helpful to others at times, too.And Joyful when you find people that think this way.
    I’ve been grieving process througout my live. When I were 15, I was raped, not one but 2 times, and Today I understand why I understand why I appreciate so well relationships, and understand, why my family is so special to me, in ways that otherwise I will never understand and enjoy.many may not understand why I may thanks the criminals if I saw them today.

  8. Jenny
    April 11, 2010 | 1:18 am

    Thank you, Professor Rao! I am in the middle of a divorce after sixteen years of marriage and the experience is giving me a profound, daily opportunity to practice exactly as you preach. :) There are times when this new life feels like a vast, dark ocean that is about to engulf me. And yet even at my most uncertain and despairing, I would never label what I’m going through as “bad.” How am I to know? And that is really it, i think: to dwell patiently in the space of “I don’t know,” with a slight smile if possible, even when one’s heart is breaking…

  9. Colleen
    April 14, 2010 | 2:06 pm

    Larame — your comment starts with a label. Then it continues in a similar vein with each point showing me that your mental “blinkers” are firmly in place. Then you ask us, “any ideas?” Answer: yes — read this powerful teaching again, slowly, with an open attitude that will honour and serve you best. I would like to also answer your comment, “life does not give her a fair share”. Every bit of our experience for better or for worse, is the result of our own Mind. A huge chunk of this operates at the sub-conscious level where our paradigms (programming) exist and over-ride a lot of our conscious thought energy. Our paradigms dictate our perceptions, therefore our expectations, therefore our results. We can learn how to change our paradigms.

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