The $11 billion self-help industry is built on the idea that you should turn negative thoughts like "I never do anything right" into positive ones like "I can succeed." But was positive thinking advocate
Norman Vincent Peale right? Is there power in positive thinking?
Researchers in Canada just published a study in the journal Psychological Science that says trying
to get people to think more positively can actually have the opposite effect: it can simply highlight how
unhappy they are.
The study"s authors, Joanne Wood and John Lee of the University of Waterloo and Elaine Perunovic
of the University of New Brunswick, begin by citing(引用) older research showing that when people
get feedback which they believe is overly positive, they actually feel worse, not better. If you tell your
depressed friend that he has the potential of an Einstein, you"re just underlining his faults. In one 1990s
experiment, a team including psychologist Joel Cooper of Princeton asked participants to write essays
opposing funding for the disabled. When the essayists were later praised for their sympathy, they felt
even worse about what they had written.
In this experiment, Wood, Lee and Perunovic measured 68 students" self-esteem. The participants
were then asked to write down their thoughts and feelings for four minutes. Every 15 seconds, one
group of students heard a bell. When it rang, they were supposed to tell themselves, "I am lovable."
Those with low self-esteem didn"t feel better after the forced self-approval. In fact, their moods
turned significantly darker than those of members of the control group, who weren"t urged to think
positive thoughts.
The paper provides support for newer forms of psychotherapy (心理治疗) that urge people to
accept their negative thoughts and feelings rather than fight them. In the fighting, we not only often
fail but can make things worse. Meditation (静思) techniques, in contrast, can teach people to put
their shortcomings into a larger, more realistic perspective. Call it the power of negative thinking.