Leicester Mercury

Could you be at risk of ‘toxic positivity’?

No-one wants to dwell on the negative, but not facing tough emotions could be harmful, LIZ CONNOR learns

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SINCE Rhonda Byrne’s The Secret became an internatio­nal bestseller, people have been obsessed with the power of positive thinking.

The 2006 book gained fame for popularisi­ng the ‘Law of Attraction’ – the idea that thinking negatively or positively can attract more of these things into our lives.

But a growing school of thought suggests this relentless brand of positivity can have a harmful side.

What is toxic positivity?

“Toxic positivity is going straight to those feelings that we naturally want more of, like joy and happiness, and wanting to bypass the emotions that are more difficult to sit with,” says John-Paul Davies, psychother­apist, counsellor and author of personal developmen­t book, Finding A Balanced Connection. “The reason there’s a toxicity to it is that feelings are responses to things that are happening around us, so they need to be given space,” he explains.

Dr Lynda Shaw, a change specialist, chartered psychologi­st and cognitive neuroscien­tist (drlyndasha­w. com), adds that there’s no such thing as good and bad feelings. “All emotional states are valuable to our human experience, and anxiety, anger and fear are primitive ways of keeping us safe and well.”

Why can it be harmful?

“To move through pain, you need to feel it – and positive thinking can become toxic if you’re pressuring someone to always see the bright side of things,” notes John-Paul.

Dr Paul McLaren, a general adult psychiatri­st at Priory Hospital Hayes Grove (priorygrou­p.com), says: “While statements like, ‘Yes but look at all the good things you have’, have their place, they can be harmful to someone who is dealing with feelings which are appropriat­e and understand­able – for example during periods of grief, or because they are suffering a depressive illness and really have very little choice about how they feel.”

Studies have found that hiding our feelings can cause significan­t psychologi­cal distress, and putting a happy spin on things can have a deeper effect on our psyche, messing with how we regulate emotions.

“If you had a chronic physical pain that you ignored, it could quickly get worse over time without treatment – and the same can be true with our mental health,” says Dr Shaw, who warns that burnout, disrupted sleep, prolonged grief or even PTSD can play into this.

While John-Paul says managing things like fear is important when ‘negative’ emotions become all too consuming, he believes it’s healthy to process your feelings, whatever they are – and anger and sadness can sometimes be useful too.

“Feelings also give us messages about whether something is OK or not OK about what we’re feeling.

“Anger tells us when our boundaries have been crossed, so if we avoid [feeling] those things, we lose the benefit of knowing what’s important to us and where our values lie. There’s worth in that, both when it comes to our physical and psychologi­cal safety.”

Plus, experts say that feeling pain is extra meaningful, as it can make happy times all the more enjoyable.

“Suffering gives us perspectiv­e, and some might argue, a greater ability to see and notice the joyous and positive experience­s in life,” says psychologi­st Dr Courtney Raspin (courtneyra­spin.com).

“The focus has moved too far onto ‘being positive’, and for good mental health, and should shift to ‘creating meaning’ through all of life’s ups and downs.”

ROSS KEMP tries to hide his terror as a massive 12ft python wraps itself around his leg before its owner explains that if it was hungry it could kill him.

The tough-as-boots filmmaker is on the trail of the Tiger Kings of Britain who keep exotic and dangerous animals as pets.

From lions, tigers and bears in back gardens to snakes in boxes in a three-bed terraced house, it makes for jaw-dropping television.

On a tour of lorry driver Gary Smith’s reptilian home in Derby, Ross asks: “Why would you keep a venomous snake?”

“I like the adrenaline,” says

ITV, 9pm

Gary, who has been bitten 15 times.

“You have to be on your guard 24/7.”

Gary, who doesn’t even need a licence for the nearly 50 snakes in his home, adds: “Would you like to touch its teeth?”

“No, no, no, I’m fine thank you,” says Ross.

There’s more intense pet ownership going on in Chipping Norton, where Ross meets Jim Clubb, owner of five tigers and a pair of black leopards.

In Salcombe, Devon, Ross meets 47-year-old single mum Christine Courtney, who three years ago left a lucrative, highpressu­re job in the city and set up as a trader and breeder of dangerous wild cats.

And in Cambridges­hire, 50-year-old farmer Andy Johnson owns 300 deer, 150 cattle and several ostriches, plus a collection of crocodiles.

He says the crocs are an environmen­tally friendly alternativ­e to incinerato­rs for dealing with dead livestock – and even hopes to be fed to a crocodile when he dies.

 ??  ?? Always look on the bright side? It may not be the best approach according to some experts
Always look on the bright side? It may not be the best approach according to some experts
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 ??  ?? Psychother­apist John-Paul Davies
Psychother­apist John-Paul Davies
 ??  ?? BRITAIN’S TIGER KINGS – ON THE TRAIL WITH ROSS KEMP
Ross Kemp meets exotic pet owners
BRITAIN’S TIGER KINGS – ON THE TRAIL WITH ROSS KEMP Ross Kemp meets exotic pet owners

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