Barbara Ehrenreich on the Negative Power of Positive Thinking

Barbara Ehrenreich discusses Bright-sided

November 13, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Ever get sick of people telling you to cheer up and think more positively? Author and commentator Barbara Ehrenreich sympathizes in her book Bright-sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America. Bombarded by everything from self-help guides to motivational speakers, Americans are dangerously overwhelmed with messages of positive thinking, so much so that they have stopped being realistic about the world around them, argues Ehrenreich, author of the best-selling Nickel and Dimed. She recently chatted with U.S. News about the business of motivation, how optimism contributed to the recession, and why Americans should remove their rose-colored glasses. Excerpts:

Your book argues against positive thinking. Does that mean you don't think Americans should be happy?

No [laughing]. Happiness is another matter altogether. Positive thinking is a specific kind of ideology which says you have to act cheerful and optimistic and upbeat—no matter how you're feeling—if you want to get along in the world. And I think that is very, very different from happiness, joy, bliss, and those things.

The book discusses the country's roots in Calvinism. How did the culture transform to such a different stance now?

Calvinism was pretty harsh. The message was that we are all wretched sinners, doomed, probably, to eternal torment and hell. And there were some interesting independent thinkers . . . who rejected this Calvinistic notion and said, you know, "No, God doesn't hate us, and the world is more bountiful than you think." They just gave us a more upbeat response, which I think was good and necessary at the time. But by the 20th century, this had kind of mutated into a thing about how you could achieve success in financial matters or career things.

What is the business of motivation?

That's what corporations tried to do with the human-relations side of downsizing. The corporations themselves became a big market for the self-help books and the motivational speakers and other products. Before that, of course, there was always a market, but more from individuals.

Is the positive thinking of today more a secular or religious idea?

It's both. There are completely secular versions of it which will talk about the universe and how the universe is a big mail-order department waiting for our orders. And then the religious version—which has really taken over evangelical Christianity—is that God is the intermediary, that God wants you to be rich, God wants you to have a larger house. And you enlist him as a sort of personal assistant to get you those things you want.

How did positive thinking contribute to the financial meltdown?

Well, I don't think it's the only contribution by any means. But it's very clear to me that one of the things that was going on was that corporate decision makers were living in a bubble of forced optimism. That was the corporate culture by 2005 or 2006 or certainly even before that. From what I can gather from interviewing insiders—corporate and Wall Street and finance industry insiders—to be too negative was to risk being fired. You do not want to be the bearer of bad news. You do not want to be the one who says, "This business plan is going to get us in big trouble."

You talk about George W. Bush, the cheerleader. How was his positive thinking detrimental to the nation?

There are so many examples, but I think the big one was Iraq. We all remember the optimistic predictions of what would happen when the American troops went into Iraq, the cakewalk idea. And Condoleezza Rice told Bob Woodward that she occasionally wanted to raise some questions or doubts . . . but she was afraid to because the president hated "pessimists."

Why do you link the government's optimism to events like 9/11?

What was going on in the summer of 2001 as they got the information—you know, reasonable intelligence—that one, airplanes could be used as weapons against buildings, and two, that there were guys going to flight school who wanted to fly but not land airplanes? Somehow nobody got concerned. So, I think that is an example of "bright-siding." When there's a lot at stake, you have to think of the worst possibility, the worst-case scenario.

Has Obama's presidency shown that he has been bright-sided?

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You just have to figure out how to get it done. Then expend the brain and physical muscle to do it. For more details visit http://www.themindmedic.com

themindmedic of CA 12:41AM July 02, 2010

You just have to figure out how to get it done. Then expend the brain and physical muscle to do it.

awake of CA 6:07AM June 28, 2010

that way things get done. The above book is not worth your while

awake of CA 6:05AM June 28, 2010

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