Positive Psychology: Understanding and Changing Human Behavior
Victim Mentality: People viewing themselves as victims of unconscious drives, needs, their families during childhood or their environments in which they exist as adults
Learned Helplessness
The passive resignation produced by repeated exposure to negative events that are perceived to be unavoidable
control problem rather than a competence problem
Diathesis-Stress Model
Attempts to explain a disorder, or its trajectory, as the result of an interaction between a predispositional vulnerability and a stress caused by life experiences
Diathesis: predisposition (biological, genetical, psychological conditions)
Stress: caused by life experience
Predispositional Vulnerability: ex. Difficult childhood but is in a healthy environment, good support system
Overclassification of illnesses
International Classification of Diseases (ICD)
Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM)
Tend to be too book-ish in how we see people (we tend to see the symptoms more than the person themselves)
Overdiagnosis: focuses too much on the inside of the person as diseases
Maddox, 2002
Psychological problems can also be ineffective patterns in living that exist between people in social interactions rather than “inside” people as diseases
Challenge of Diagnosis
Making diagnostic treatment and policy decisions primarily on deficiencies of the person, instead giving strong consideration to strengths of both person and environment
Abnormal behavior > Normal behavior
Internal characteristics > External factors
Weakness > Strengths
Disruptive behavior > Developmental age
As a Result
Psychologists may begin to react to patients as if they are helpless and need to be fixed.
Self-fulfilling prophecy begins to operate and patients see themselves as helpless and passive characters of their own lives
Seligman (2002)
The message of POSIPSY movement is to remind our field that it has been deformed. Psychology is not just the study of disease, weakness and damage. It is also the study of strength and virtue.
Treatment is not just fixing what is wrong, but building what is right. It is not just about illness or health, it is about work, education, insight, love, growth and play
Four-Front Assessment Approach by Wright & Lopez
Areas of client weakness (impaired social skills, low intelligence, emotion dysregulation, labile moods, personality problems)
Areas of client strength (hopeful, grateful, forgiving, courageous, resilient, high intelligence, mood stability, healthy personality)
Deficits or destructive forces in the client's environment (unsafe environment, living conditions, presence of abusive relationships or neglect, exposure to discrimination, etc.)
Assets and resources in the client’s environment (secure living conditions, supportive relationships, opportunities for success, stable employment)
Include the following areas as well:
Developmental stage of client
Culture
Context of behavior
Religion
Community
Educational background
Family dynamics
Understand a person's needs and resources to facilitate best ways to carry out therapy/intervention.
Positive Psychology Interventions
Positive Psychotherapy
Approach to treatment that is built on the enhancement of positive traits, building of strengths and helping clients find untapped resources for positive change.
Fixing what is wrong is only half of the challenge.
Therapists see clients as “active seekers of health” (Keyes & Lopez, 2002)
who can be very creative problem solvers if therapists just work with their clients to nurture already existing skills, talents, and strengths
Therapists need to amplify client strengths and decrease negative emotions
Counseling Psychology – focus on individuals who need assistance with life adjustment problems, career plans, relationship difficulties and other problems of living
Helping people lead lives that are more fulfilling
Personal Growth and Human Potential
People utilize a very small part of their potential and all have the capacity for growth.
Help people overcome their self-imposed limits
Person-Centered Therapy
Man’s capacity for personal growth and self-actualization
From Carl Roger’s Humanistic Theory
Interventions based on Positive Psychology
Solution-focused therapy - focus on finding solutions than dwelling on the problem
Wellbeing Treatment – using Ryff’s 6 dimensions of wellbeing
Personal Growth Initiative – active, intentional psychological development
Hope therapy – wellbeing is anchored on hope
Increasing positive emotions
Relaxation increase a sense of meaning and purpose; created through laughter, sense of humor, engaging in activities that are intrinsically motivating, by enhancing empathy, and with activities that involve both challenges and skills
Transform bad mood to good mood by talking to a friend, listening to music, reading, exercising, taking a warm bath, walking outdoors, looking at the bright side of the situation
Increasing activity level is an effective way to stimulate positive mood
Behavioral Interventions for Happiness
Behaviorist assumption → if a person experiences more positive emotions than negative, then he or she is happy
Read positive self-statements, watch happy movies, increase positive activities and listen to cheerful music
Pleasant Events Therapy: make list activities that they enjoy and then simply to do more of the activities that produced the greatest increase in positive mood
Application
Increasing Resilience
Resilience: the process of adapting well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats or significant sources of stress — such as family and relationship problems, serious health problems, or workplace and financial stressors
The road to resilience is likely to involve considerable emotional distress.
While certain factors might make some individuals more resilient than others, resilience isn’t necessarily a personality trait that only some people possess.
Resilience involves behaviors, thoughts and actions that anyone can learn and develop
Interventions to Increase Resilience
Reduce risk factors that may decrease or destroy resilience within family and community (including Big Brothers/Sisters program, good public services/health/school, connected neighborhood)
Promote and build resilience in children and adolescents - ‘within-the-child’ qualities include positive self-esteem, good social skills, problem-solving and academic abilities, positive outlook on life and a good sense of humor
Seven Traits of Resiliency (Wolin & Wolin, 2000)
Insight - provide clarity and to pierce through denial and confusion
Independence - distance themselves from trouble
Good relationships - building healthy emotional ties
Initiative - create a sense of self-efficacy
Creativity - transform their emotional into creative works
Humor - keep a sense of humor and ability to laugh at difficulties
Good moral standards - able to act from a sense of conscience, even when others did not
Fordyce’s Happiness Training Program
Happiness Training Course
Cognitive retraining to be applied on belief and attitude about happiness
Point out the irrationality or impossibility of that belief and suggest a substitute belief that is more amenable to lasting happiness
Example: “It is absolutely necessary that I be loved by most people in order to be happy” →CHANGE TO → “I would like to be loved by those people who are important to me”
Be more active
Spend more time socializing
Be productive at meaningful work
Get organized
Stop worrying
Lower your expectations and aspirations
Think optimistically
Orient yourself to the present
Work on healthy personality
Develop an outgoing social personality
Be yourself
Eliminate negative feelings
Develop and nurture close relationships → #1 source of happiness
Value happiness – put it first in your life
Emotional Storytelling
Writing is a way to deal with difficult emotions resulting from trauma or other problems:
Write about any issue that you are currently living with
Find a location in which to write whew you won’t be disturbed
When you write, do not worry about spelling, grammar, or the quality of your prose. Just put it down on paper
When you write about the event, write about both what happened and your feelings surrounding the event, both positive and negative
Generally, it is helpful if you plan to keep what you write private
Applications of Mindfulness
Mindfulness therapy (Jon Kabat-Zinn)
Based on the idea that if we try to ignore or repress unpleasant thoughts or sensations, then we only end up increasing their intensity
Clients are taught to allow thoughts, images, and sensations to occur, observe them non-judgmentally, and then let them dissipate as other thoughts and sensations naturally replace them
Steps:
Step 1: Automatic Pilot
Step 2: Dealing with barriers
Step 3: Mindfulness of the breath
Step 4: Staying present
Step 5: Allowing and letting be
Step 6: Thoughts are “Not Facts”
Step 7: How can I best take care of myself?
Step 8: Using what’s been learned to deal with future moods
Victim Mentality: People viewing themselves as victims of unconscious drives, needs, their families during childhood or their environments in which they exist as adults
Learned Helplessness
The passive resignation produced by repeated exposure to negative events that are perceived to be unavoidable
control problem rather than a competence problem
Diathesis-Stress Model
Attempts to explain a disorder, or its trajectory, as the result of an interaction between a predispositional vulnerability and a stress caused by life experiences
Diathesis: predisposition (biological, genetical, psychological conditions)
Stress: caused by life experience
Predispositional Vulnerability: ex. Difficult childhood but is in a healthy environment, good support system
Overclassification of illnesses
International Classification of Diseases (ICD)
Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM)
Tend to be too book-ish in how we see people (we tend to see the symptoms more than the person themselves)
Overdiagnosis: focuses too much on the inside of the person as diseases
Maddox, 2002
Psychological problems can also be ineffective patterns in living that exist between people in social interactions rather than “inside” people as diseases
Challenge of Diagnosis
Making diagnostic treatment and policy decisions primarily on deficiencies of the person, instead giving strong consideration to strengths of both person and environment
Abnormal behavior > Normal behavior
Internal characteristics > External factors
Weakness > Strengths
Disruptive behavior > Developmental age
As a Result
Psychologists may begin to react to patients as if they are helpless and need to be fixed.
Self-fulfilling prophecy begins to operate and patients see themselves as helpless and passive characters of their own lives
Seligman (2002)
The message of POSIPSY movement is to remind our field that it has been deformed. Psychology is not just the study of disease, weakness and damage. It is also the study of strength and virtue.
Treatment is not just fixing what is wrong, but building what is right. It is not just about illness or health, it is about work, education, insight, love, growth and play
Four-Front Assessment Approach by Wright & Lopez
Areas of client weakness (impaired social skills, low intelligence, emotion dysregulation, labile moods, personality problems)
Areas of client strength (hopeful, grateful, forgiving, courageous, resilient, high intelligence, mood stability, healthy personality)
Deficits or destructive forces in the client's environment (unsafe environment, living conditions, presence of abusive relationships or neglect, exposure to discrimination, etc.)
Assets and resources in the client’s environment (secure living conditions, supportive relationships, opportunities for success, stable employment)
Include the following areas as well:
Developmental stage of client
Culture
Context of behavior
Religion
Community
Educational background
Family dynamics
Understand a person's needs and resources to facilitate best ways to carry out therapy/intervention.
Positive Psychology Interventions
Positive Psychotherapy
Approach to treatment that is built on the enhancement of positive traits, building of strengths and helping clients find untapped resources for positive change.
Fixing what is wrong is only half of the challenge.
Therapists see clients as “active seekers of health” (Keyes & Lopez, 2002)
who can be very creative problem solvers if therapists just work with their clients to nurture already existing skills, talents, and strengths
Therapists need to amplify client strengths and decrease negative emotions
Counseling Psychology – focus on individuals who need assistance with life adjustment problems, career plans, relationship difficulties and other problems of living
Helping people lead lives that are more fulfilling
Personal Growth and Human Potential
People utilize a very small part of their potential and all have the capacity for growth.
Help people overcome their self-imposed limits
Person-Centered Therapy
Man’s capacity for personal growth and self-actualization
From Carl Roger’s Humanistic Theory
Interventions based on Positive Psychology
Solution-focused therapy - focus on finding solutions than dwelling on the problem
Wellbeing Treatment – using Ryff’s 6 dimensions of wellbeing
Personal Growth Initiative – active, intentional psychological development
Hope therapy – wellbeing is anchored on hope
Increasing positive emotions
Relaxation increase a sense of meaning and purpose; created through laughter, sense of humor, engaging in activities that are intrinsically motivating, by enhancing empathy, and with activities that involve both challenges and skills
Transform bad mood to good mood by talking to a friend, listening to music, reading, exercising, taking a warm bath, walking outdoors, looking at the bright side of the situation
Increasing activity level is an effective way to stimulate positive mood
Behavioral Interventions for Happiness
Behaviorist assumption → if a person experiences more positive emotions than negative, then he or she is happy
Read positive self-statements, watch happy movies, increase positive activities and listen to cheerful music
Pleasant Events Therapy: make list activities that they enjoy and then simply to do more of the activities that produced the greatest increase in positive mood
Application
Increasing Resilience
Resilience: the process of adapting well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats or significant sources of stress — such as family and relationship problems, serious health problems, or workplace and financial stressors
The road to resilience is likely to involve considerable emotional distress.
While certain factors might make some individuals more resilient than others, resilience isn’t necessarily a personality trait that only some people possess.
Resilience involves behaviors, thoughts and actions that anyone can learn and develop
Interventions to Increase Resilience
Reduce risk factors that may decrease or destroy resilience within family and community (including Big Brothers/Sisters program, good public services/health/school, connected neighborhood)
Promote and build resilience in children and adolescents - ‘within-the-child’ qualities include positive self-esteem, good social skills, problem-solving and academic abilities, positive outlook on life and a good sense of humor
Seven Traits of Resiliency (Wolin & Wolin, 2000)
Insight - provide clarity and to pierce through denial and confusion
Independence - distance themselves from trouble
Good relationships - building healthy emotional ties
Initiative - create a sense of self-efficacy
Creativity - transform their emotional into creative works
Humor - keep a sense of humor and ability to laugh at difficulties
Good moral standards - able to act from a sense of conscience, even when others did not
Fordyce’s Happiness Training Program
Happiness Training Course
Cognitive retraining to be applied on belief and attitude about happiness
Point out the irrationality or impossibility of that belief and suggest a substitute belief that is more amenable to lasting happiness
Example: “It is absolutely necessary that I be loved by most people in order to be happy” →CHANGE TO → “I would like to be loved by those people who are important to me”
Be more active
Spend more time socializing
Be productive at meaningful work
Get organized
Stop worrying
Lower your expectations and aspirations
Think optimistically
Orient yourself to the present
Work on healthy personality
Develop an outgoing social personality
Be yourself
Eliminate negative feelings
Develop and nurture close relationships → #1 source of happiness
Value happiness – put it first in your life
Emotional Storytelling
Writing is a way to deal with difficult emotions resulting from trauma or other problems:
Write about any issue that you are currently living with
Find a location in which to write whew you won’t be disturbed
When you write, do not worry about spelling, grammar, or the quality of your prose. Just put it down on paper
When you write about the event, write about both what happened and your feelings surrounding the event, both positive and negative
Generally, it is helpful if you plan to keep what you write private
Applications of Mindfulness
Mindfulness therapy (Jon Kabat-Zinn)
Based on the idea that if we try to ignore or repress unpleasant thoughts or sensations, then we only end up increasing their intensity
Clients are taught to allow thoughts, images, and sensations to occur, observe them non-judgmentally, and then let them dissipate as other thoughts and sensations naturally replace them
Steps:
Step 1: Automatic Pilot
Step 2: Dealing with barriers
Step 3: Mindfulness of the breath
Step 4: Staying present
Step 5: Allowing and letting be
Step 6: Thoughts are “Not Facts”
Step 7: How can I best take care of myself?
Step 8: Using what’s been learned to deal with future moods