Our inner thoughts directly affect our outer life, which is why it’s essential to make sure that you are directing your thoughts in as positive a way as possible. Building optimism helps you develop a buffer zone against stress, setbacks and disappointments. It gives you staying power and resilience when your future is fogged with uncertainty. It helps you protect your health and overall quality of life. Optimism has long been considered to be a major asset across such diverse fields as business, politics, academics, leadership, athletics and health – but we’ve never put our finger on the reasons why, making the notion of a “soft” one. Now science is backing the charge towards a more optimistic workplace, and world.
Eye opening information has surfaced on the impact of optimism. Some results include determining that: Positive emotions and optimistic thinking lead to higher pay and better evaluations from supervisors. Pessimistic salespeople sell less and have higher turnover than optimists – and that the most effective executives use positive words four times more often than negative words. With those kinds of results, it is well worth your time and energy to examine and possibly alter your thought patterns towards a more positive path.
"Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all."
Dale Carnegie
Our inner thoughts directly affect our outer life, which is why it’s essential to make sure that you are directing your thoughts in as positive a way as possible. Building optimism helps you develop a buffer zone against stress, setbacks and disappointments. It gives you staying power and resilience when your future is fogged with uncertainty. It helps you protect your health and overall quality of life. Optimism has long been considered to be a major asset across such diverse fields as business, politics, academics, leadership, athletics and health – but we’ve never put our finger on the reasons why, making the notion of a “soft” one. Now science is backing the charge towards a more optimistic workplace, and world.
Eye opening information has surfaced on the impact of optimism. Some results include determining that: Positive emotions and optimistic thinking lead to higher pay and better evaluations from supervisors. Pessimistic salespeople sell less and have higher turnover than optimists – and that the most effective executives use positive words four times more often than negative words. With those kinds of results, it is well worth your time and energy to examine and possibly alter your thought patterns towards a more positive path.
True optimism is not to be confused with positive thinking. What makes optimism particularly effective is not merely repeating positive statements to ourselves. While the message that Norman Vincent Peale, the father of the “Power of Positive Thinking” conveyed was instrumental in changing many peoples’ lives, positive thinking is just the first step in becoming truly optimistic. That is to say, you have to BELIEVE what you are telling yourself. If you are repeating positive thoughts to yourself, but don’t actually believe them, take a step back and choose different positive phrases. Make it sincere and believable, not just a wish.
We’re Optimistic About Our Optimism Levels, But…
About three out of four people in the
Some Optimistic Approaches
Here are three “key” ways to approach situations optimistically.
Optimism is an often-untapped resource for performance improvement. Let it pervade all of your thought patterns in order to take advantage of the life-changing possibilities it offers. True optimism will brighten your spirit, strengthening your performance and position you to give far more back to the world.