The Denver Post

Are you an optimist? These questions may explain why

- By Eva Holland

Imagine you’re back in high school — fluorescen­t lights humming, hard plastic chairs, a classroom stuffy with hormones and anxiety — and you’ve just aced a test. Do you think to yourself, “I guess I got lucky today”? Or does your internal monologue say, “Damn, I’m good!”?

Now imagine that you’ve failed the test. Does the voice inside you whisper: “Of course. You’re so bad at this.” Or does it say, “Ugh — you just didn’t study hard enough.”

And which of these responses might brand you as an optimist?

You might think, for example, that the first response — crediting luck for a good outcome — is a sign of optimism, since it suggests good times ahead. ( After all, you’re lucky!) But the belief that a good result is thanks to elements out of your control actually indicates a pessimisti­c outlook.

And while the self- critical response to the bad outcome ( you didn’t study hard enough) might seem like a downer, it’s actually a product of positive thinking — since it suggests you believe that, if you take a different approach to future tests, you can expect a better result.

When we talk about optimism, it’s often easy to oversimpli­fy it as having a relentless­ly upbeat outlook. Optimists, we imagine, spend their time gazing at the bright side of life through rose- colored glasses, sipping glasses half- full of good cheer.

But the science suggests that optimism is best understood not as an unchanging attitude but as a pattern of responses — which taken together dictate how we view our prospects. Being optimistic is more complicate­d than blithely thinking, “Everything will turn out fine.”

Optimism and pessimism, it turns out, are all about the stories we tell ourselves after both our successes and our failures.

So ask yourself this: What kind of stories have you told yourself over the last few years — a stretch of time that even the most practiced optimist may have found challengin­g?

Because, as it turns out, those stories matter. And psychologi­sts have devised questions that can help us understand why.

In 2023, optimism can feel like a challenge. The pandemic is three years old and the planet’s climate future seems increasing­ly in crisis, to name just two outsized concerns. If ever there were a time to be pessimisti­c about optimism, it would seem to be right now.

Sure enough, a 2022 Gallup Poll found that the number of Americans who believe the next generation will enjoy a higher standard of living than their parents has fallen by 18% since 2019. That dramatic shift is understand­able. But it doesn’t have to be permanent.

When Dr. Martin Seligman was a young man on the verge of adulthood, at the dawn of the 1960s, he was a committed pessimist. “I toyed with writing about death and dying, and I wore black much of the time,” Seligman wrote in his autobiogra­phy, “The Hope Circuit.” “I was morbidly introspect­ive and through freshman year kept a handwritte­n journal of dark thoughts.”

Seligman had his reasons. His father, after a series of strokes, had become paralyzed and depressed, never recovering either physically or emotionall­y. On scholarshi­p at a private military academy where he didn’t fit in easily with his affluent classmates, Seligman

had been denied promotions and prizes, despite being at the top of his highschool class — slights that, years later, a former faculty member confirmed were manifestat­ions of antisemiti­sm.

At 18, Seligman would have seemed an unlikely character to become a future founder of the field known as positive psychology.

But he found his place and his people at Princeton University, he writes, and later settled into graduate research in psychology at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Seligman distinguis­hed himself for his work on the phenomenon of learned helplessne­ss: the idea, internaliz­ed to varying degrees by some of us, that nothing we do matters and so there is no point in trying. In other words — the opposite of optimism.

Seligman and other researcher­s examined this phenomenon through a series of experiment­s, such as exposing lab animals or human subjects to adverse conditions like a mild shock or an irritating noise. Sometimes they would provide a mechanism for the subjects to make the irritant stop; in other cases, there was no way for the subject to change their situation.

The aim was to see if people could either be taught to seek a solution or persuaded to give up trying.

But there was a group, Seligman found, that kept persistent­ly trying to improve their circumstan­ces, long after the other study subjects had quit. Seligman became fascinated by these subjects — who, it turned out, skewed more heavily optimistic when their attitudes were tested.

So Seligman decided to study them instead.

In the nearly 40 years since, he and his colleagues have examined the optimists among us: what makes us optimistic, what optimism looks like and the extent to which optimism can be learned. Now 80, he is still teaching, studying and publishing about the benefits of optimistic thinking — and advancing our understand­ing of how optimism works.

Beyond the most basic evolutiona­ry struggles, we know that, on the whole, optimism is good for us. Optimists tend to live longer, be more successful profession­ally and be less likely to experience depression and other illnesses.

When crises occur, Seligman’s research shows, optimism can even offer some protection against the onset of post- traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

“The first day that you join the United States Army, you take a 100- item test that we devised,” Seligman explained. “It asks you about optimism, pessimism, and about catastroph­ization,” an extreme form of pessimism that involves irrational anxiety over the worst possible outcome — for example, if your spouse doesn’t text you right back after work and you spiral into visions of a car accident or a funeral.

Seligman’s team followed a cohort of nearly 80,000 American soldiers who entered the military, completed the test and then deployed to Iraq or Afghanista­n for active duty between 2009 and 2013. ( The results of the study were published in a 2019 paper in the journal Clinical Psychologi­cal Science.)

“Five percent of the force is diagnosed with PTSD,” said Seligman, “and we asked, could you predict it? And the answer was, robustly, yes.” Seligman identified two risk factors for PTSD. One is severe combat and the other, he said, “is being in the worst quartile of pessimists.”

Can pessimism ever be a good thing? “Clearly it’s got utility because there is so much of it,” he said. But he’s only found one profession of those he’s examined ( he hasn’t studied journalism; I asked) where it seems to be a clear- cut advantage.

“Lawyers call it prudence,” he said. “But it’s basically trying to protect your client against all these awful unlikely things that could occur.”

In a study of a University of Virginia law school cohort, the pessimists were more likely to land on the law review and ultimately more likely to find better jobs. But, Seligman noted, lawyers also have higher than average rates of divorce, depression and suicide.

Always seeing the worstcase scenario, he explained, can be an advantage under the right circumstan­ces, but it can also come at a cost.

Personally, I’ve been feeling more pessimisti­c lately. Seligman’s descriptio­n of what we tell ourselves when we catastroph­ize — “when bad things happen to me, everything unravels” — felt uncomforta­bly familiar to me.

So it was helpful to speak to Seligman and Fox and to recognize these patterns in my own thoughts — to see myself generalizi­ng from the negative events in my world and ignoring or flinging caveats at the positives in my life. I recognized that these thought patterns are tangible and specific. So it feels like something I can address.

Seligman confirmed that hunch. We can, with some effort, alter our balance of optimistic and pessimisti­c thinking.

“It’s now a robust, replicated finding that you can teach people to, for example, argue against their most catastroph­ic thoughts with reasonable evidence and move pessimism into optimism,” he said.

Several recent metaanalys­es, which crunched data from dozens of studies using tens of thousands of study subjects, have examined the research on counseling techniques known as positive psychology interventi­ons, programs that help us reframe the stories we tell ourselves. These metaanalys­es found that the interventi­ons were consistent­ly beneficial.

“So there’s a technology,” said Seligman, “and it works.”

Whether you’re inclined toward optimism or pessimism, you have some control over your outlook. And that’s something to be optimistic about.

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 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ONS BY IGOR BASTIDAS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
ILLUSTRATI­ONS BY IGOR BASTIDAS — THE NEW YORK TIMES

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