How To Develop A Positive Attitude Easily
Think
how often in the day you’re besieged by people who argue over money,
worry about the possibility of failure, complain about someone’s
actions, criticize mistakes, mistrust someone’s intentions, blame
others to avoid condemnation, envy someone for personal achievements,
and gossip about trivial garbage. (No wonder we’re exhausted at the end
of the day.)
A positive attitude--optimism, expectancy, and
enthusiasm--makes everything in business easier. A positive attitude
boosts you up when you're down and supercharges you when you're already
"on a roll." Here are some positive tips to change your life for the
better.
1. Remember that YOU control your attitude.
Attitude does not emerge from what happens to you, but instead from how you decide to interpret what happens to you.
Take,
for example, receiving the unexpected gift of an old automobile. One
person might think: "It's a piece of junk!" a second might think: "It's
cheap transportation," and a third might think: "It's a real classic!"
In
each case, the person is deciding how to interpret the event and
therefore controlling how he or she feels about it (i.e. attitude).
2. Adopt beliefs that frame events in a positive way.
Your
beliefs and rules about life and work determine how you interpret
events and therefore your attitude. Decide to adopt "strong" beliefs
that create a good attitude rather than beliefs that create a bad
attitude. To use sales as an example:
Situation: The first sales call of the day goes poorly.
Weak: A lousy first call means that I'm off my game and today will suck.
Strong: Every sales call is different, so the next will probably be better.
Situation: A customer reduces the amount of an order at the last minute!
Weak: Customers who change orders can't be trusted.
Strong: Customers who change orders are more likely to be satisfied!
Situation: A big sales win comes seemingly "out of nowhere."
Weak: Even a blind pig finds an acorn once in a while.
Strong: You never know when something wonderful will happen!
3. Create a "library" of positive thoughts.
Spend
at least 15 minutes every morning to read, view, or listen to something
inspirational or motivational. If you do this regularly, you'll have
those thoughts and feelings ready at hand (or rather, ready to mind)
when events don't go exactly the way you'd prefer.
4. Avoid angry or negative media.
Unfortunately,
the media is full of hateful people who make money by goading listeners
to be paranoid, unhappy, and frightened. The resulting flood of
negativity doesn't just destroy your ability to maintain a positive
attitude; it actively inserts you into a state of misery, pique, and
umbrage. Rather than suck up the spew, limit your "informational" media
consumption to business and industry news.
5. Ignore whiners and complainers.
Whiners
and complainers see the world through crap-colored glasses. They'd
rather talk about what's irreparably wrong, rather than make things
better. More importantly, complainers can't bear to see somebody else
happy and satisfied.
If you tell a complainer about a
success that you've experienced, they'll congratulate them, but their
words ring hollow. You can sense they'd just as soon you told them
about what's making you miserable. What a drag (figuratively and
literally)!
6. Use a more positive vocabulary.
I've
written about this before, but the point is worth making again. The
words that come out of your mouth aren't just a reflection of what's in
your brain--they're programming your brain how to think. Therefore, if
you want to have a positive attitude, your vocabulary must be
<a href="https://www.inc.com/">consistently positive</a>. Therefore:
Stop
using negative phrases such as "I can't," "It's impossible," or "This
won't work." These statements program you for negative results.
Whenever anyone asks "How are you?" rather than "Hanging' in there," or
"Okay, I guess..." respond with "Terrific!" or "Never felt better!" And
mean it.
When you're feeling angry or upset,
substitute neutral words for emotionally loaded ones. Rather than
saying "I'm enraged!" say "I'm a bit annoyed..."
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