Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Stop Saying These Three Words Now and Youll Instantly Be a More Positive Person
Stop Saying These Three Words Now â" and You'll Instantly Be a More Positive Person Hereâs something thatâll make you think twice: âThe majority of American conversations are characterized by a complaint,â says Scott Bea, Psy.D., a psychologist at the Cleveland Clinic. It makes sense. Human brains have whatâs called a negative bias. âWe tend to notice things that are threatening in our condition,â says Bea. It goes back to our ancestorsâ time when being able to spot threats was crucial to survival. And before you say that you really try not to complainâ"you meditate, you think positive, you always try to find the goodâ"youâre likely more guilty than you think. After all, when was the last time you said that you had to do something? Maybe you had to go grocery shopping. Or you had to work out. Maybe you had to go to your in-laws after work. Itâs an easy trap we all fall into from time-to-timeâ"but itâs one that can not only make our perspectives on life a little more blue, but also likely negatively impact brain chemistry, notes Bea. Fortunately, a tiny language tweak can help: Instead of saying âI have to,â say, âI get to.â Itâs something that companies like Life Is Good, which sends positive messages through all kinds of apparel and goods, encourage their employees and customers to do. (Related: This Method of Positive Thinking Can Make Sticking to Healthy Habits So Much Easier) Hereâs why it works: ââI have toâ sounds like a burden. âI get toâ is an opportunity,â says Bea. âAnd our brain responds very powerfully to the way we use language when we talk and the way we use language in our thoughts.â After all, while saying you have to do something will likely help you do it (youâll make it to that spin class, for example), framing the behavior as something you get to do helps you lean into it with a bit more enthusiasm (and help you appreciate the fact that youâre able to work out in the first place), says Bea. âIt brings a sense of opportunityâ"and a welcoming of the experience, which has a positive benefit for us. Itâs the difference between a threat and a challenge,â he says. âVery few people are up for a good threat and most of us are up for a good challenge or opportunity.â (Related: Does Positive Thinking Really Work?) Even more: Emerging psychotherapies, including something called acceptance and commitment therapy, focus on small language tweaks like this to help people beat tough times, he notes. So while positive thinking (and all the perks that come with it) is about positive thoughts, itâs also about positive attitudes, which can, in turn, cultivate gratitude and appreciation, encouraging even more positive behaviors and, yep, thoughts, too. Complaints on the other hand? They can leave us feeling more vulnerable and threatened in the world, furthering a cycle of negativity and fear. To that extent, âI have toâ isnât the only phrase you should drop. Bea says that we tend to categorize ourselves with language in broad, sweeping terms that are often exaggerations. We say: âIâm lonelyâ or âIâm unhappyâ versus âIâve had some lonely momentsâ or âIâve had a few sad days recently.â All of that can color the way we experience life, he notes. While the former can seem overwhelmingâ"almost impossible to beatâ"the latter leaves more room for improvement and also paints a more realistic, tangible picture of the situation at hand. (Related: The Science-Backed Reasons Youâre Legitimately Happier and Healthier In the Summer) The best part about these simple changes? Theyâre smallâ"and you can start doing them, stat. Plus, they feed off of each other. Says Bea: âGratitude forces you to put a filter on subsequent days to start looking for things for which youâre grateful, and thatâs not typical of human beings so it kind of creates a systematic program.â And thatâs a program we can get behind.
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