The definition of an optimist:
Someone, like me, who plans to get more done than time permits.
Or, having failed to achieve the impossible, someone, like me, who is sure everything will somehow get done anyway.
A more classical definition from the Mayo Clinic: Optimism is the belief that good things will happen to you and that negative events are temporary setbacks to be overcome.
In one study, adults shown to be pessimists based on psychological tests had higher death rates over a 30-year period than those who were shown optimistic. No doubt, the optimists were healthier because they were more inclined to take good care of themselves.
Unlike Voltaires Candide, Ive yet to be stripped of my optimism, although there are clearly forces in this country and the world that could subdue even the most ardent optimist.
I am a realist, after all, and I do fret over things I may be able to do little or nothing about directly: economic injustice; wars and the repeated failure to learn from history. But Ive found that life is a lot more pleasant when one looks at the bright side, seeing the glass half full and assuming that reason will eventually prevail.
Not just about being positive
Murphys Law Anything that can go wrong will go wrong is the antithesis of optimism. In a book called Breaking Murphys Law, Suzanne C. Segerstrom, a professor of psychology at the University of Kentucky, explained that optimism is not about being positive so much as it is about being motivated and persistent.
Segerstrom and other researchers have found that rather than giving up and walking away from difficult situations, optimists attack problems head-on. They plan a course of action, getting advice from others and staying focused on solutions. Whenever my husband, a dyed-in-the-wool pessimist, said, It cant be done, I would seek a different approach and try harder although I occasionally had to admit he was right.
Segerstrom wrote that when faced with uncontrollable stressors, optimists tend to react by building existential resources for example, by looking for something good to come out of the situation or using the event to grow as a person in a positive way.
I was 16 when my mother died of cancer. Rather than dwell on the terrible void her death left in my life, I managed to gain value from the experience. I learned to apply her lifelong frugality more constructively, living each day as if it could be my last, but with a focus on the future in case it wasnt.
And I adopted a very forthright approach to life, believing that if I wanted something badly enough, I could probably overcome the odds against me.
When I applied at age 24 for a job as a science writer at The New York Times, an interviewer said I was foolhardy to think I could be hired after just two years of newspaper experience.
If I didnt think I could do the job, I wouldnt be here, I told him.
It was just what he wanted to hear, and I was hired.
Learned optimism
Research has indicated that a propensity toward optimism is strongly influenced by genes, most likely ones that govern neurotransmitters in the brain. Still, the way someone is raised undoubtedly plays a role, too.
• Parents who bolster childrens self-esteem by avoiding criticism and praising accomplishments, however meager, can encourage in them a lifelong can-do attitude.
• With the right guidance, many attributes of optimism also can be learned by adults, Segerstrom and other researchers have found.
Noting that it is easier to change behavior than emotions, she avoids the popular saying Dont worry, be happy. Instead, she endorses a form of cognitive behavioral therapy: Act first and the right feelings will follow. As she puts it in her book, Fake it until you make it.
She wrote, People can learn to be more optimistic by acting as if they were more optimistic, which means being more engaged with and persistent in the pursuit of goals.
If you behave more optimistically, you will be likely to keep trying instead of giving up after an initial failure.
You might succeed more than you expected, she wrote.
Even if the additional effort is not successful, it can serve as a positive learning experience, suggesting a different way to approach a similar problem the next time.


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