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Optimism
Intelligent Optimism Wins In Today's World
By Eileen McDargh
The reality of today's world
seems to leave little room for optimism. Almost every news story
can lead because it does bleed. We hear of critical food shortages
in Africa, daily gang deaths on city streets, the profiteering
from child pornography, and the climatic disasters prompted by
global warming. Health care costs move up faster than a hummingbird
in flight and more children now spout profanities as a regular
part of speech. With such negativity, no wonder a 2004 U.S. government
survey found that depression afflicts one in 10 adults 14 days
a month or more.
You probably get depressed
just reading the opening paragraph. But wait! There is hope.
Not the cock-eyed optimism that became fodder for a song from
the musical South Pacific, but rather what psychologists in France
are calling "intelligent optimism." Such optimism does
not deny the reality of today's world, but rather seeks to LEARN
how to fashion a life amid such difficulties. Martin Seligman,
the psychologist who had made optimism and happiness his life's
work, would agree with the French: optimism can be taught.
Consider these basic steps:
(1) Focus on what you can control.
Don't get carried away by circumstances you cannot change. You
might not change global warming but you can control your energy
consumption. You can't stop the downsizing in your company but
you can arm yourself with marketable skills.
(2) Reframe the event so that
you are not a victim. There is always another way to view a situation.
The flight cancellation that caused me to miss (and forfeit)
a major engagement was not "planned" to "get"
me. It just was. My choice is to figure out what I can do to
help the current client and what I will put in the place of the
cancelled work.
(3) Think "enough".
When we concentrate on what we don't have, we miss all the many
things we do have. The truth of the matter is that if you are
reading this article, you do have enough computer power. You
do have enough intelligence. You do have enough time.
(4) Cultivate optimistic responses.
Like a farmer tending a field, optimism will never grow unless
it is watered, fed, weeded and nourished. We all have days in
which negativity can take over. And, sometimes, that is a WISE
response because it keeps us grounded in reality. Just make sure
it is reality and not the imagination making extraordinary leaps
into conjecture. Weed out that conjecture. Ask what you can DO
to see a result that gives you a sense of power. If we don't
cultivate such intelligent optimism, be aware of reality and
willing to find options, then we might do what Alexander Graham
Bell warned. "Stare so long at the closed door we fail to
see the one that is opening."
(5) Remember the power of generations.
Children of depressed parents are more prone to depression. Children
of optimists are more prone to be optimists. What do you choose
to pass along? Even if your parents were negative, you can break
the cycle with stopping, freeze-framing a situation, listening
to the negative self talk, and then literally giving yourself
a different message. Yes, this takes practice but you can make
it a habit if you work it over time.
Ultimately, intelligent optimists
understand that change and chaos are given. They know that "this
too shall pass". In the meantime, they CHOOSE to take whatever
action they can within their own sphere of influence and then
settle back. It is enough.
(c) 2005, McDargh Communications.
Publication rights granted to all venues so long as article and
by-line are reprinted intact and all links are made live.
About the Author:
Named by Executive Excellence
Magazine as one of the top 100 thought leaders in business, Eileen
McDargh, CSP, CPAE authored one of the first books on work/life
balance. Numerous books and articles later, Eileen serves the
meetings industry as a popular international keynoter and on
the Board of Directors of the National Speakers Association.
You can find products and services offered by Eileen at http://www.EileenMcDargh.com
Optimism |