Be(com)ing Positive

July 26, 2019 Cognitive Insights, Empathy - Compassion, Mental Growth No Comments

It happens: people who see themselves as ‘positive’ but who are such only in a superficial layer, like thin ice over a pool.

Being positive is not saying ‘yes’ to anything

and then again, it is.

But not thoughtless, not feeling-less. One can say ‘yes’ in many ways. It can mean “I see you”, “I understand you”, “I listen to you.” Listening is a way of being positive. [see: “Listening to Silence”]

One can also say ‘no’ in many ways. The most pernicious one of them being “I do not want to listen to you.” Indeed, one may not want to listen because one may not want to change. Except in the icy part. And even there, it’s not easy.

Being positive is taking the challenge to be able to change.

This is: change from inside. Not some change at the outside with the explicit intention to keep the inside ‘business as usual.’

Not a change of keeping up appearances. [see: “Do Not Change”]

Real change is a process of inner growth. Look at a plant. It can grow. It cannot un-grow. Inner growth is a challenge. You don’t go back.

Being positive is taking this challenge.

That’s OK. Don’t break the ice. Don’t make it stronger. When comes spring?

Spring comes when one becomes more and more positive.

The big question is: “How?”

The big answer is: “Meditation.” I mean this in the broadest sense. On a cushion if you like, but it’s not that concrete cushion that makes the meditation. It’s you.

Off the cushion? Sure. It can be anywhere. As long as you give deep attention. As long as for instance you see more than icy layers in people. People are always more than that. There’s always a lot to be positive about.

That includes you.

Looking this way, you become more positive. Sure, now you can say:

“There’s also always a lot to be negative about.”

True. The positive stance is not to push the negative away. It just doesn’t go away by pushing.

The really positive stance is to look at the negative itself as the pool. There’s an icy layer on it. By staring only at this, you don’t see the pool.

What is the ‘raison d’être’ of the negative? How can you invite it to change?

Do you even (still) want to invite it? Even acknowledging that you don’t want to, can be positive because this way, you won’t spend a tremendous lot of energy (anymore) in trying to accomplish something that you yourself are inhibiting at the same time. You avoid burnout. You avoid making the other person guilty for your burnout.

And then maybe the ice will melt by itself, at its own pace.

And then maybe you see your own ice melting too, bit by bit.

There are many ways to be(come) positive.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

Inner Friend or Foe?

One can treat one’s inner being as a friend or enemy. It’s good to make this an explicit choice. It’s too important to let it be a choice imposed upon you. People are not conscious of their non-conscious mental processing Yet, the science in this is unequivocal. The inner, non-conscious mental life of a person Read the full article…

Why Small Causes can have Huge Consequences

This is about the mental domain. At first glance, it may seem counterintuitive. How could something as small as a word, a pause, or a nudge possibly lead to anything substantial? We’re accustomed to thinking that bigger is better. More effort, more volume, more pressure. But the mind doesn’t quite work that way. Especially in Read the full article…

Anything Human Starts in Beauty

The title may sound provocative, especially when we think of depression, aggression, cruelty, or even war. Yet this is not romantic idealism. It is an attempt to look more deeply into the origin of human mental movement. If we dare to look deeply enough, what appears broken may reveal that it began and is utterly Read the full article…

Translate »