Positivity: Top-Notch Research Reveals the 3-to-1 Ratio That Will Change Your Life
Positivity: Top-Notch Research Reveals the 3-to-1 Ratio That Will Change Your Life book cover

Positivity: Top-Notch Research Reveals the 3-to-1 Ratio That Will Change Your Life

Paperback – December 29, 2009

Price
$16.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
288
Publisher
Harmony
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307393746
Dimensions
5.17 x 0.58 x 7.95 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

"Written by one of the most influential contributors to this new perspective in science, Positivity provides a wonderful synthesis of what positive psychology has accomplished in the first decade of its existence. It is full of deep insights about human behavior as well as useful suggestions for how to apply them in everyday life." —Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Ph.D., author of Flow "Positively wonderful! Offers surefire methods for transforming our lives from so-so to joyous." - Daniel Goleman, author of Emotional Intelligence " Positivity is literally the feel-good book of the year, providing a scientifically sound prescription for joy, health, and creativity. Read one to two chapters daily as needed or until grumpiness subsides." —Daniel Gilbert, professor of psychology, Harvard University, and author of Stumbling on Happiness "Barbara Fredrickson is the genius of the positive psychology movement." - Martin E. P. Seligman, Ph.D., author of Authentic Happiness BARBARA L. FREDRICKSON, PH.D., is Kenan Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience and principal investigator of the Positive Emotion and Psychophysiology Laboratory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is a leading scholar within social psychology, affective science, and positive psychology. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1Waking Up to Positivity One’s own self is well hidden from one’s own self:Of all mines of treasure, one’s own is the last to be dug up. —Friedrich NietzscheTAKE 1The morning sun streams through your bedroom window and wakes you from a fitful night’s sleep. After a long string of gray and rainy days, you appreciate seeing blue sky. But soon enough you realize the alarm didn’t go off. You’re disappointed because you’ve been meaning to wake up extra early so you can have time to yourself before the kids wake up and the morning race begins. With what little time there is, you decide to skip your planned exercise routine, spend some more time in bed, and write in your journal. You write, I can’t believe I let myself down again by forgetting to set my alarm. How am I ever going to take charge of my days (and mylife!) if I can’t make this simple change? Without exercise, I’m going to feel like a slug today. Ugh. I’d better focus on why I write in this journal in the first place: to think about my larger goals and connect them to what I do each day. Is this really working? Is it worth my time when I could be sleeping? What I really should be doing with this extra time is checking for fires on e- mail or reviewing my ridiculously long to- do list. Isn’t our water bill past due? Where is it anyway? At this point you close your journal, get out of bed, go to your computer, and open your e- mail. Sure enough, you find that your co- worker, Sharon, needs input from you before she can submit her proposal, and she needs it by this afternoon. You’ll be stuck spending at least part of your morning preparing forms for her. Feeling angry at her imposition, you open the next e-mail to see that the project you spearheaded received preliminary approval and you’ve got forty- eight hours to make a final set of revisions. “ Fortyeight hours!” you say out loud. “Am I supposed to drop everything to make these revisions?” How am I going to fit this in?” The nanosecond of joy you felt on learning the good news is squashed by your concerns about clearing this last hurdle.Just then, your daughter, who’s nearly four years old, wakes up and calls, “Mommy!” You glance at the time: 6:42. You’ve told her time and again to wait quietly in her room until you come in for hugs and kisses at seven, and here she is, not listening, again. Your frustration is growing— far too many demands both at work and at home. Nobody understands how impossible your life has become with this career shift. You go to your daughter’s room, snap at herabout calling for you early, and then march off to make breakfast.The whole morning is a grim race, and everybody’s losing. You’d have been out the door on time had your seven- year- old son not misplaced his favorite shoes. Then starts the parental nagging: “Why can’t you just wear a different pair!? If those shoes are so important to you, why don’t you keep better tabs on them?” Now all four of you— the kids, you, and your husband— are racing around the house trying to find those @#$% shoes!Later, having dropped the children off at school— late again—you arrive at work— also late. The first person you see is Joe, your collaborator on the project that was just accepted. He’s smiling broadly. At times you appreciate Joe’s good spirits, but today his smile makes you suspicious. You think, He’s trying to butter me up soxa0I’ll do all the revisions! He approaches. “Did you hear the news? We got the money! We’re set for the year!” You say, “Yeah, but did you see that list of revisions— and just forty- eight hours to make them? I’ve also got to deal with Sharon’s proposal this morning.” Joe’s smile fades as he takes a moment to figure out how to respond to your negativity. ***Sound familiar? If you’re like most people, you probably recognize this kind of morning all too well: Can’t do anything right. Can’t give myself the time I need. Can’t stick with my goal of journaling. Can’t stand that Sharon is making her emergency my emergency. Can’t fathom how I’ll meet a forty- eight- hour revision deadline. Can’t get on the same page with Joe. Can’t even teach my kids to stay in bed until 7:00 a.m. Can’t get through the morning “race” without yelling and fussing. Can’t get the kids to school on time. And if I can’t get myself to work on time—how in the world am I going to meet all these demands? We all know negativity; it looms large and is easy to spot. Negativity pervades your self- talk and your judgments. It bleeds into your exchanges with your kids and your colleagues, eroding goodwill between you. Making matters worse, unchecked negativity breeds healthdamaging negative emotions— anger, contempt, and depression— that seep into your entire body. You can feel your simmering bitterness eating away at your stomach, raising your blood pressure, and turning your shoulder and neck muscles to stone. Even your face feels hard and tight, which may be why others steer clear if they can. What’s more, you move through your day as if you have blinders on. You find fault and blame everywhere. You see no solutions. Everything is painfully predictable. Negativity comes on fast and strong, hitting like a sledgehammer. And none of us is immune to it.So what about positivity? Compared to negativity, positivity seems pale and weak. It’s hardly the mirror image of negativity. Positivity seems so puny that at times we don’t even notice it.But what if positivity matters?And what is positivity anyway?Let’s start with what it isn’t. Positivity doesn’t mean we should follow the axioms “Grin and bear it” or “Don’t worry, be happy.” Those are simply superficial wishes. Positivity runs deeper. It consists of the whole range of positive emotions— from appreciation to love, from amusement to joy, from hope to gratitude, and then some. The term ispurposely broad. It includes the positive meanings and optimistic attitudes that trigger positive emotions as well as the open minds, tender hearts, relaxed limbs, and soft faces they usher in. It even includes the long- term impact that positive emotions have on your character, relationships, communities, and environment. Although some of this may sound like the vocabulary of greeting cards, the term positivity points to vital human moments that have now captured the interest of science. And the new scientific discoveries about the importance of positivity are stunning.Your mild and fleeting pleasant states are far more potent than you think. We know now that they alter your mind and body in ways that can literally help you create your best life.So let’s roll back time and do a retake on that same morning of yours, this time with positivity. Rest assured that no matter how good you are at negativity, you’re also capable of positivity. As you read, keep in mind that, like negativity, positivity goes beyond self- talk. Although subtle, it too infuses your mindscape and outlook, heart rhythms and body chemistry, muscle tension and facial expressions, and your resources and relationships. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • World renowned researcher Dr. Barbara Fredrickson gives you the lab-tested tools necessary to create a healthier, more vibrant, and flourishing life through a process she calls "the upward spiral."
  • You’ll discover: • What positivity is, and why it needs to be heartfelt to be effective • The ten sometimes surprising forms of positivity • Why positivity is more important than happiness • That your own sources of positivity are unique and how to tap into them • How to calculate your current positivity ratio, track it, and improve it With
  • Positivity
  • , you’ll learn to see new possibilities, bounce back from setbacks, connect with others, and become the best version of yourself.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(448)
★★★★
25%
(187)
★★★
15%
(112)
★★
7%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Positivity for privileged upper-middle class white women with happy, healthy families and great jobs

The opening of this book features a comparison of how a "typically" negative day can be dramatically different if a little positivity is injected into it. What unhinged my jaw was the stunning disconnect between the authors' example of a bad day with the reality of of the average western adult (whom I presume is the intended target audience).

The author believes that waking up a bit late on a sunny day, being called into your happy, healthy childs bedroom 10 minutes earlier than you prefer for a cuddle, commuting to your high paying job and having a task passed over to you that is going to take up a bit more of your personal time than usual is a "bad" day. This, as far as I'm concerned, is pretty strong evidence for naivette. If she really believes this was an example of a typical bad day there's not a great deal of real-life advice she can give, unless of course you are a privileged, upper-middle class white woman with a happy, healthy family and a great job (maybe THAT was the target audience of the book, hmmm).

After this incredibly blinkered and alienating opening, the book does improve a little. The author goes on to discuss (ad nauseum) the benefits of positivity in a number of chapters and there are some nuggets of fascinating, if not altogether useful information in this portion of the work. The author has a tendency to boast a great deal about the importance and validity of her lifetime of scientific research, though I can't help but think that if someone doubted that positivity was a good thing they wouldn't be reading the book in the first place.

It's a bit like picking up a book called "LOSE WEIGHT" and discovering that, instead of telling you HOW to lose weight, the first two-thirds of the book are devoted to telling you how awesome it feels to be thin. Then the last third of the book just dishes out some trivial prescription that you already intuitively knew such as "Eat less and move more".

I'm sure this book will be enough to pull some privileged upper-middle class white women out of a self-induced funk, and I'm more than certain it was enough to net the author some tidy royalties on top of her academic pay. But sadly, if you want more concrete and practical advice on nurturing positivity then you're going to have to keep on looking...
13 people found this helpful
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This is a very good book.

This book provides information and exercises that have been shown to increase satisfaction with life. The research is good and it is helpful to most people. And it is not simply "looking on the bright side." I recommend it.
12 people found this helpful
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Positively Great

Positivity: Top-Notch Research Reveals the 3-to-1 Ratio That Will Change Your Life by Barbara Frederickson, Ph.D. (Three Rivers Press, 2009), reviewed by Steve Gladis, Ph.D.

First and foremost, positivity makes you feel good and gives you an injection of natural hormones that makes you both happier and healthier at the same time. Those same natural chemicals ushered in by positivity broaden and expand your mind, making it more adaptable and receptive. Positivity then helps reduce stress, allowing you to build out significant areas of your mind and your life because you stay open and receptive to life's opportunities--not closed down by fear, anger, or depression. It also builds your psychological immune system--resilience--the ability to bounce back from negativity that life naturally brings. The positivity ratio of 3:1 (Losada's Line) offers us a concrete goal to set a path toward thriving, not just surviving. This book is one you'll want to read cover to cover and give to your best friend, relative or coworker.
2 people found this helpful
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Very technical approach to increasing positivity in your life

I really enjoyed this book. Barbara's approach is very scientific, basing all of this text off years of her and her colleagues research. I found it a little hard to get through because it is so technical, but amazing information that can have a huge impact on your life. I've successfully implemented some of Barbara's ideas and it's made a big difference to my life.
1 people found this helpful
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Excellent Read

Unlike most educational text's this one actually keeps your attention. I have found this book to be of excellent resource and information. Incredibly well written, keeps your attention going, wanting to learn more in the next chapter.
1 people found this helpful
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FANTASTIC BOOK!

I have had the privilege to hear Dr. Fredrickson speak about her research at my alma mater.

This is a MUST HAVE BOOK for anyone who is going into a life coaching or counseling profession. The 3 to 1 ratio is a scientifically based proportion to transform how we view the world, our experiences, and our relationships.
1 people found this helpful
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Buy this book

This is a great book. I am already a positive person, but there are reasons and research that give you even more incentive to be positive.

The best thing is that it points out that you can't be positive all the time. You can be negative 20% of the time and still be successful. It is even healthier to be negative a little bit of the time. I found this to be a great relief.
1 people found this helpful
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Life Changing

I am currently working on my dissertation in educational leadership. One of my professors turned me on to Barbara Fredrickson's research on positivity and positive psychology to enrich my research on leaders' perspectives/attitudes towards professional learning and development. I read the book in January 2011. In my personal life during this time, my husband and I were undergoing fertility treatments after 2 years of trying to conceive. I began applying the principles of positivity taught in the book in my own life (and my research). We spontaneously conceived in April 2011 during our "off" month as we prepared for IVF. Our beautiful baby is due December 2011. Barbara Fredrickson writes in her book about the number of people who have reached out after reading her research struggling with infertility and were able to spontaneously conceive without treatments. I never intended this book to have a life changing impact on my personal life. Regardless of your challenges, this book will benefit you.