Page 78 - 100 Ways to Motivate Yourself
P. 78

“On the contrary, sir, I see Apollo 13 as being our finest hour.” And he turned

               out  to  be  right,  which  illustrates  the  life-or-death  effectiveness  of  optimistic
               thinking.

                    Whenever you feel pessimistic or overwhelmed, remember to keep thinking.
               The more you think about a situation, the more you will see small opportunities
               for action—and the more small actions you take, the more optimistic energy you
               will receive. An optimist keeps thinking and self-motivates. A pessimist quits
               thinking—and then just quits.

                    In  the  Broadway  musical  South  Pacific,  the  heroine  sings  apologetically
               about being a “cock-eyed optimist.” She admits she’s “immature and incurably
               green.” This was an early version of a blonde joke. She confesses, as the giddy
               song soars melodically, that she’s “stuck like a dope on a thing called hope and I
               can’t get it out of my heart…not this heart.” That’s how our society has viewed

               optimists—they are dopes. Society thinks optimistic thinking is something that
               comes from the heart, not the head. Pessimists, on the other hand, are “realistic.”
               In fact, pessimists will never tell you they are pessimists. In their own minds,
               they are realists. And when they run into habitual optimists they sneer at them
               for always “blue-skying” everything, and not facing grim reality.

                    Pessimists  continually  use  their  imaginations  to  visualize  worst-case
               scenarios, and then, concluding that those scenarios are lost causes, they take no
               action. That’s why pessimism always leads to passivity.


                    But  even  lying  on  his  couch,  bloated  with  junk  food  and  foggy  from  too
               much television, the pessimist knows somewhere in his heart that his “what’s the
               use?”  attitude  is  not  effective.  He  is  living  a  life  that  is  reflected  in  what
               Nietzsche  once  said:  “Everything  in  the  world  displeased  me;  but  what
               displeased me most was my displeasure with everything.”

                    Optimists have chosen to make a different use of the human imagination.
               They agree with Colin Wilson’s point of view that “imagination should be used,
               not to escape from reality, but to create it.”





               54. Put on a good debate


                    Negative thinking is something we all do. The difference between the person
               who is primarily optimistic and the person who is primarily pessimistic is that
               the  optimist  learns  to  become  a  good  debater.  Once  you  become  thoroughly
   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83