The Tyrannical Culture of Positivity

Man consoling friend“Take a look at the bright side,” we tell our loved ones when they’re feeling down. “See the cup half full, not half empty.” We help lift our friends by saying, “Cheer up! Don’t dwell in the negative. Be grateful. Think about all that you have.” If it seems our friends suffer from low self-esteem, we extol their virtues and exclaim, “People are attracted to positivity in others. Think positive thoughts and good things will happen to you.”

We draw upon a large base of common wisdom in order to combat the slings and arrows of existence. And some of the time, we do all right. When a person carries a cheerful spirit into a room, there is a terrific splendor that is contagious. We support one another. We lend one another positive strength when needed.

With all its potential for good, positive thinking can at times act as an oppressive tyrant, an enemy of happiness. After all, if the solution were so straightforward, if we could think our way into happiness, then our world wouldn’t be riddled with chronic misery. The mandate to be positive and cheerful in our culture is so pervasive and powerful, even people in psychotherapy feel a tremendous burden in simply communicating uncomfortable feelings to their therapists. Everyday popular treatment of emotions is hardly hearing someone out.

The darker social message of an individual who insists on surrounding himself or herself exclusively with positive energy sounds something like this: “Don’t whine. You sound like a baby. Get over it.” The culture of positivity often forgets the need for the yin and yang, the harmony of opposites. It can squash the voices of hurt, dissent, disagreement, and injustice. Even more oppressive: “You are weak. You’re taking on a victim mentality. Don’t be a victim.” The unwitting oppression marginalizes the voices of victims—victims of trauma, of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse.

The fact is painful experiences can be uncomfortable to listen to. Nobody wants to upset their friends and family with feelings of discomfort. So, people become terrified of identifying as a victim. They deny trauma they have endured in order to spare “burdening” loved ones. They fear being considered weak because they are being asked to do something impossible—to get over it and move on. But in the case of trauma, the attempt to forget about it is the problem. Those who are identified as “victims” in our culture display exceptional bravery, refusing to act as though their hurt has disappeared, succumbing to the majority’s desire for them to get over it. One cannot simply “move on.” To live a fully human life, one must embrace the good and the bad in themselves and others.

At times a person needs to endure a feeling, state, or mood in order to grow. What the person needs is compassion–a trusted other to listen while he or she endures.

It is true that some people dwell in cycles of negativity. But how do we know when we should or shouldn’t attempt to lift them from their sorrows? The key is learning how to listen. At times a person needs to endure a feeling, state, or mood in order to grow. What the person needs is compassion—a trusted other to listen while he or she endures his or her difficulties. Attempts to redirect the other toward positivity may be well intended, but may also lack compassion. Advocating a shift into a positive perspective may be received by the other as dismissive, even uncaring, depending on whether the listener is truly attuned to his or her friend’s needs. After all, how can you truly listen to someone if you’ve already decided what he or she should feel and how he or she should think?

Having compassion means feeling with someone—finding one’s way across the barrier of alienation. Having a need to redirect a friend’s emotions may indicate a difficulty or unwillingness to join him or her in a troubled state. Some may fear being “pulled down” by another’s troubles. Underneath the demand for oneself and others to stay positive is a terror about what lay on the other side of life, the darker side. Under the driven, fiery force of positive thinking lay immense anxiety. Ultimately, that fear inhibits a more fruitful joy—that of authentic connection, an enduring togetherness in the wholeness of life.

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  • Jazzy

    March 4th, 2013 at 10:48 AM

    I can kind of see where you are coming from with this- sometimes when all you want to be is a little down it is aggravating to always have to listen to someone telling you that you need to be positive and look a little more on the bright side.
    But I also know that a lot of how we feel and how we function has a great deal to do with mind over matter. If you will it to be so then that’s what it could be. It does help to sometimes take the edge off just to look at something from another point of view and realize that there is still the chance to make something good happen out of something bad.

  • Indigo

    March 4th, 2013 at 11:14 AM

    I am all for walking through the pain that is current in your life. If a child has an incurable disease, a lover finds another, or a job is lost leading to financial ruin, there will be pain. I think the person should stay in that pain and walk through it. But, I do think there is a time when you’ve walked through the pain and you must get to the other side of it. The point of pain is to heal, not to sit in continuous misery b/c something bad happened at some point in your life. Yes, walk through the pain, but make sure you do walk through it. Don’t stay stuck in it.

  • kelli k

    March 4th, 2013 at 11:16 AM

    it is so true that nobody wants to hear when you are upset not even people who are supposed to by ur friends. one time i was really hurting when somebody had cheated on me and everyone said i should just get over it but all i wanted to do was to talk about it. my mom was really good and listened to me all the time but my friends just wanted to tell me to look at the brite side all the time

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