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April 142014

The Latest in Positive Psychology
Don't overlook the link to the TEDx talk at the bottom of the article!

The Upside of your Darkside

 

Over the last decade and a half the science of positive psychology has yielded some delicious fruit. Research has resulted in reliable ways to increase happiness, a better knowledge of the links between health and happiness, and greater attention to resilience to name just a few major findings. The unintended downside of this new science is that the focus on positivity can, at times, seem oppressive. There is a tendency to treat happiness, optimism and other positive states as if they are the only useful states. 

 

For the past three years my colleague, Todd Kashdan, and I have been hard at work on a counter-argument. We believe that guilt and anger can be as useful as joy, that mindlessness can be as beneficial as mindfulness, and that small social nudges can be as effective as outright authenticity. What's more, hundreds of studies from every corner of psychology seem to support the idea that there is an "Upside of your darkside." (also the name of our forthcoming book: http://tinyurl.com/lo2njx3 ). 

 

At the heart of our thesis is the idea that people are increasingly avoiding unpleasant and seemingly uncomfortable states and-- in doing so-- limit their full potential. Some religious traditions, such as Catholicism, have long tried to leverage a bit of discomfort (as in the case of fasting during Lent) to help build character. This seems to be a sentiment that is receding in popularity in modern times. Yes, you certainly ought to seek out success, pleasure, meaning and joy. But you should not try to avoid all discomfort. Instead, you should seek to be flexible; shifting between positive and negative states as is appropriate.  

 

A terrific example of the potential harms of avoiding your darkside can be found in our legacy to our children. Most parents actively seek intellectual challenge for their children at school. Parents seem to have an intuitive sense that challenge, struggle, confusion and perseverance will pay off with better learning. At the same time, however, these parents seek a lack of challenge for their kids in social and emotional realms. They want their children to be accepted, happy, and have high self-esteem. It is as if there is a special form of blindness (and I struggle with this myself) in which we cannot see the clear benefits of having to struggle socially in order to learn skills related to navigating complex social relationships. Why would intellectual discomfort be acceptable but emotional discomfort be seen as so poisonous? 

 

The solution may be found in getting comfortable with discomfort. Welcoming a little hardship and accepting and tolerating it may help people to reach their full potential. Schools, modern parents, and society in general poorly equip us for dealing with hardship. Increasingly we are taught to reframe negatives as positives. Todd and I argue for something more radical: we think you should simply accept a few negatives. It may be that happiness is not the ultimate human condition. It may be that wholeness is. And wholeness includes the ability to use the full range of human psychological experience. 

  

 You can view my recent TEDx talk on the related concept of "comfort addiction." It is drawn directly from Chapter 2 of The Upside of Your Darkside http://tinyurl.com/qbzdjw5  

 

 

  
--Dr. Robert Biswas-Diener
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Best,
 Dr. Robert Biswas Diener and Positive Acorn