There is an endless supply of people who are ready and willing to inform us about what we are doing wrong, and how we can alter our behaviour so we can get ahead and inject magic and happiness into our lives. Between modern day guru Gala Darling who believes “positive thoughts generate positive realities,” and you can “manifest” your own destiny, to capitalist public thinkers such as Oprah Winfrey telling us positive thinking can help us obtain “the sweet life,” it is easy to get misled into a muddle of mistruths.
A recent blog by Gala is entitled “Happiness is simple: why too many choices make us miserable and 5 ways to improve your life!” Yeah? Nah. Too many choices are not the issue for a huge majority of the political underclass; a lack of choice is exactly the problem. Whether it be lack of choice when it comes to quality of education, or lack of access to higher education because you were not born into wealth and privilege, or lack of choice when it comes to nutritious food or warm dry housing because wages are often too low in this country, too often, too much choice is not an issue for the growing majority of the 99 percent; restricted choice is.
Gala and magazines such as Oprah Winfrey’s O Magazine, tell us:
If you just change your attitude and think more positively over time, your life will get easier. Over time, you will land a job that affords you a contract guaranteeing you some security and a pay-check which does not leave you in poverty. You simply have to manifest what you want. Drink a couple of litres of soda pop, add diamantes to your manicure, wear a fake moustache all day long (as Gala really has suggested as a remedy for the blues), put on a nice pink dress and smile a bit more then BOOM! That suicidal depression over the stresses of life such as being unable to buy food because you are on minimum wage, working depressing precarious jobs, and/or the debilitating anxiety over whether your welfare will be cut this week will suddenly melt away.
Middle or upper class young white women seem to be the demographic of the radical self-love movement. It is all well and good to tell them to “smash that class-ceiling” and just work hard to achieve your dreams and the bling and designer shoes will follow, but as Laurie Penny points out in her book Unspeakable Things, there are a lot of women drowning in the basement. In particular women of colour, trans, and queer women who disproportionality suffer from poverty, depression, feelings of alienation, and are discriminated against in the work-place:
It is hard to “think positive” when treated so negatively based on the colour of skin and/or sexuality, when facing hate crimes, targeted violence, and when there are so many structural hurdles put in your way to success and triumph. Radical self-love gurus do not tend to promote or even really engage in discussions on privilege or the disadvantages people are born into; that shit would undermine the cause of “changing yourself, not the system.”
In a powerful piece for The Guardian, “Oprah Winfrey: one of the world’s best neoliberal capitalist thinkers,” Nicole Aschoff writes,
A stream of self-help gurus have spent time on Oprah’s stage over the past decade and a half, all with the same message. You have choices in life. External conditions don’t determine your life. You do. It’s all inside you, in your head, in your wishes and desires. Thoughts are destiny, so thinking positive thoughts will enable positive things to happen.
I used to watch Oprah when I was unemployed, with no money, and feeling utterly crap about my situation. I even started cycling religiously a few years back because Oprah told me exercise would help to reduce my feelings of worthlessness; my arse got smaller but my anxiety and panic attacks over my future, and how I was ever going to pay back my student loan, did not. I even read O Magazine for a while until I realised I was not an idiot and my situation was not my fault. I saw that there are external factors which can offer some pretty challenging barriers to success which no number of pictures of green meadows and calm beaches and deep breathing and kitchy “nick naks” can elevate.
What Nicole suggests in her piece is that Oprah just reinforces the focus on the “individual,” which hides the role of political, economic, and socio-economic structures in our lives,
O Magazine implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, identifies a range of problems in neoliberal capitalism and suggests ways for readers to adapt themselves to mitigate or overcome these problems.” She advises us to turn our gaze inward and reconfigure ourselves to become more adaptable to the vagaries and stresses of the neoliberal moment.
Changing your attitude is not going to change or help to dismantle structural injustice and a failed and unstainable economic model which serves only the elite rich of this world, and exploits the rest of us, particularly the working class and those living in poverty. As far as I am concerned positive thinking will fucking ruin your life.
“Just think positive” is a precursor to “it gets better,” and the hard reality is it is only going to get much, much worse for our most vulnerable. With social bonds being introduced into our public welfare state, life for those who have a disability or mental health diagnosis who need support from the state is only going to get more grinding and unmanageable.
My friend, who suffers from a generic connective tissue disorder, pointed out to me when I told him I was writing this blog,
“When it comes down to it, it doesn’t matter how positive I think, my joints are still going to dislocate and I’m still going to be in constant pain. Work will still be hard to find, my options will always be limited and I’ll never have the full capacity and range of freedom in this area as someone healthy.”
Multiple WINZ (Work and Income New Zealand) case-managers have told me to think “positively” over and over again, often in response to my having told them “The reason why I am struggling to find any work is because we have a flooded job market with countless over-qualified graduates.” Often the message to “just think positive” is not only divorced from reality, it is an unhelpful and patronising statement to say to someone who is struggling to secure work and to stay above the poverty line, especially if they have a disability or other barriers that may regularly prevent them from obtaining a job or better quality of life.
“Positive thinking” and “affirmations” are now being used as a form of psychological coercion against beneficiaries. A first research paper by Hubbab titled, Unemployment being rebranded as psychological disorder expands on what exactly this coercion looks like.
The authors documented the physiological toll on beneficiaries in London who are subject to these practices, “from unsolicited emails extolling positive thinking to attitude changing exercises, with people looking for work frequently perceiving such interventions as relentless, humiliating, and meaningless.
Attitude changing exercises and similar strategies that people like Oprah and radical self-love promoters such as Gala Darling use to ‘lift people up’ are now being employed by state workers to harass and demean people who are struggling to find work.
Perhaps this is why I find it so hard to stomach people who tell me to think more “aspirationally” as some kind of solution to a stagnant job market, where any work I can get is underpaid and stressfully precarious. These positive attitude advocates remind me of WINZ case-workers who would phone, without warning, to grill me about what jobs I had applied for, and how many. One in particular spent a good twenty minutes telling me how I needed to “change my attitude” and that I should take any job, even cleaning toilets at minimum wage. I got off the phone crying, not because I think I am above cleaning toilets, but because I felt harassed and humiliated. It was a defeating experience.
I understand people like Gala are trying to help; in fact I know Gala personally. She gave me a job many years ago at Lush Cosmetics. She was, and I am sure still is, a very caring and generally lovely and a kind hearted person. As Gala has said on her own blog site, radical self-love helped her overcome an eating disorder and depression, and she continues to help other women. Some of the help and advice Gala has on offer comes free of charge but she also charges a mint for her “Radical self-love Boot Camps” which cost a staggering $197. Unless you are a high income earner this amount of money is unaffordable.
Gala’s position that she just wants to help women transform their lives does not negate the fact what she and so many others are selling is a flawed ideology which preys on feelings of insecurity and isolation for a lot of women, and especially women who sit a little or a lot lower on the privilege ladder and do not benefit from being in a higher social class. Offering solutions to these feelings of disconnection and discontent, such as looking “inwards,” and changing how you behave, is reductionist, over-simplistic, and problematic.
The disenfranchised, poor, and working class need to collectively band together to restructure the systems, and to expose the neoliberal policies and thinking which has helped create feelings of disconnection and discontent in the first place. Adherence and adaptation will further exasperate the situation, endorsing solutions built on neoliberalism to solve the very problems it has helped to create—which is exactly the thinking that people like Oprah and Gala promote—is truly next level insanity. It doesn’t even make sense!
My spiritual guru advice to you is:
Think revolutionarily. No amount of “positive thinking” can fill the bellies of the 280,000 children living in poverty in this country. I fully support declaring mutiny against governments who pass welfare reforms that push people further into crippling poverty, instead of waging mutiny against ourselves. Radical self-love and positive attitude advocates such as Oprah and Gala are more about adapting to a world “gone mad” and systems that do not serve you, than really improving your life.
It really is your choice: adapt, or disrupt?
Fight for a different paradigm! It might be a tad more productive than trying a green tea diet to purify your body, or rearranging your stationary draw so your pens are in harmony with your paper clips. Fighting for a new paradigm may bring you enemies and some deeply negative reactions but would you not rather seek out that brutal truth than live endlessly on in someone else’s brutal fairy tale? It is a fairy tale which tells you:
If you change your attitude and enough of yourself maybe someone might love you. If you work hard enough and want it badly enough maybe you will land some dream job which pays you enough to afford both rent and food and a bit of financial security. If you just play by the “rules” and adapt to a brutal capitalist system while changing what colour lipstick you wear and your “negative” thought patterns, your life will become easier and better.
If radical self-love and all that glitter and sequins and pink bows and “positive thinking” has worked for you and you have managed to manifest your dream life, then cool, I am stoked for you. But for many of us it is not the answer we are looking for: it part of the problem, not the solution.
You can follow me on Twitter!
A version of this essay also ran on Open Democracy
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[…] “Positive Attitude” Bullshit: On the dangers of “radical self-love”. […]
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Here is the debunked pseudoscience of positive thinking, “The Secret”and other new age woo, backing up her claim that it isall bullshit.
Besides, everyone know the dark side is more powerful.
http://20to30.com/read/power-positive-thinking-bullshit-new-study-finds/
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/jan/19/mathematics-of-happiness-debunked-nick-brown
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You’re correct on all but one count. It’s a common misconception that the dark side is more powerful but in fact it is simply easier and more seductive.
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The issue isn’t positive thinking as you all are speaking of it here. It’s how your shadow consciousness is taking over your perspectives. Everything you believe is related to your past and you will continually project that expected outcome onto the present. The issue to our personal journey is dependent on us becoming the witness to our response to any situation. If you get angry, you must look inside yourself to find and witness that part of your self that is angry. Underneath your anger is a past hurt that your anger is defending. That part is responding to past injustices and projecting that anger onto the present moment.
If we are going to find freedom inside our selves, we must face and heal the parts of ourselves that are continually responding from our past hurts. These parts are still hurt, sad, lonely, angry, etc. about what happened to them. The point here is, that our happiness and attitude are all wrapped up in our past and if we don’t do our personal healing, we will always be unhappy, unsatisfied, and focused on the negative no mater what the world around us is doing. This isn’t to say that we shouldn’t seek for change and do nothing! It’s how we stand up and speak our truth that makes all the difference!
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I think you missed the point. ffs
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Oh dear, so if I get angry about gross injustices, wanton cruelties, etc., it’s because of past personal hurts and that I am projecting that anger onto current situations. Point comprehensively, overwhelmingly missed Tommy!
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Tommy gets it!
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Reblogged this on Liberal, like my Mama… and commented:
Positive Thinking is not going to win over structural racism, structural sexism, structural able-ism or anything else beyond your control. The only thing that beats that is this: ORGANIZE AND FIGHT.
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[…] trend. One I republished on this website, and another was a response article on Libcom. The first one uses the author’s life experience to argue that positive thinking is unrealistic and […]
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I’m really late to the party, but I’m glad this piece was written. I just finished writing about my own experiences with this nauseating religion of positivity. I’m hoping Posse will strap on an obnoxious pink bow and blow some glitter my way by reading and sharing it so I won’t feel so bad about everything.
http://ourstreets.net/2015/08/30/the-religion-of-being-positive/
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This is just what I needed to read today. Thank you. Something about not trying to pretend the world is nothing but glittery unicorn farts actually makes me feel better.
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You wrote EVERYTHING I have been trying to explain to people but couldn’t find the words. Thank you for writing this, you area hero!
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Kia ora aww cheers thanks so much Kim, anytime! Ha xx
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Positive thinking begs denial of uncomfortable emotion. Realistic appraisal of emotion entails embracing and accepting it all. The issue we face actually is in the minds time based anticipatory obsession with what it might feel in the future projecting an imagined emotional response in the present. We are constantly living with emotion that is in response to an imagined future. To try and think positive would be better if it worked. To try and blame everything for our emotional state would also be better if it worked. In reality we are responsible for our emotion as we create it and we can gain much more realistic appraisal and control over it by practicing our attention in this moment and relating emotionally to this present moment… Good or bad… As long as its present its at least sane.
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Thank god someone dares to speak out against the cult of positive thinking. I am so sick of people telling me and others how my problems will be solved if I just think positive. Thinking positive is nothing more than daydreaming and wishful thinking and it does nothing to change the harsh reality.
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Bonjour, I just discovered your blog and this article after tiping “positive thinking bullshit” on google search to see if anyone was as fed up as I am with the fb posts from happiness-self love- self-entitlement-positive thinking-me-me-me- everything is possible gurus and other bullshiters. Well it was great to read your article, to read someone who has the ability to think realistically and analytically. A intelligent, funny, witty article. Merci Chloe! Oh and pls keep up not apologizing for swearing: it so healthy.
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You lie for thinking that this article is funny. It’s not! If you ask me, funny is for positive folks, none of whom I am.
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well writing , thank you
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right on!
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Reblogged this on Mainstream Permaculture and commented:
Excellent blog post. I’ve been struggling myself around where do I fit, where do I belong and are most needed.
Those who know me, including all the people I work with, know superficial and unrealistic stuff is not my thing: I tell them the truth, and sometimes they are surprised to hear it, but generally thankful: the job market is saturated, the promises of the government don’t pass a reality check, employers are taking advantage by cutting benefits, going to contract job or even suggesting immigrants and youth to volunteer to gain experience when they could perfectly pay a salary; a 9.0 or higher earthquake in BC (such as the one that comes roughly every 300 years and is expected any day now) is probably not survivable for most of us: if the earthquake doesn’t kill us, the tsunami will. No amount of skills or preparation will save us. No amount of skills or Permaculture will save us and most species from extinction if the feedback loops of climate change, soil and water pollution and biodiversity loss kick beyond their points of no return…
I have to confess that I bought the “change your inner attitude” and it has some benefits: focusing only and always on the negative usually disempowers people because it makes them feel as victims without necessarily encouraging them to change the system.
The “system”, let’s face it, is extremely difficult to change. Depending on the length and range of despair and challenges a person or group faces, engaging in changing the system is not an easy option for those who already have to face discrimination and the overwhelming everyday challenge of bringing food and keeping shelter for themselves. I doubt Syrians would be able to change the “system” on their own without first loosing many lives, something most are understandable not willing to risk.
But this post says it too well: the emphasis in positive thinking and the individual, the “inner state” alienates those who are already marginalized and makes those good people who may be able to help inaccessible, selfish and detached from reality…
Don’t get me wrong: I have experienced the “power” of changing some individual patterns of thought, and I believe there is enough evidence to show that leading a healthy life, with enough contact with nature, a healthy diet, rest and exercise make people feel better about themselves and the world…but those are nice things accessible to only a few.
As experienced permaculturists Rosemany Morrow says in this video, we have to erode capitalism, we have to think and work on the edges and not take Permaculture as an elitist practice to show off how much leaves or compost we have accumulated or create a hugelkulture that nobody needs.
Cheap positive thinking will not do any good and will keep people trapped in a dysfunctional system until the system eats all of us…
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Excellent. Article…..just recently my son had Dengue with a fever of 104.5…my ceiling was leaking water from an unknown source…and one of the namaste Yoga Babe friends of mine said…..What you need to do is burn some white sage…too much drama…….Yep..that fixed the leak and took down the fever…..for about 2 minutes I felt bad..like OMG am I being a drama queen…..
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I totally agree….when you are in a situation, or state of mind where you are really depressed, no amount of “positive thinking” is going to change How You Feel! There are no cut and dried solutions for all of us loser type people! (Tongue in cheek). And maybe some of us don’t love being as we are, but we live with it one way or the other and survive the best we can. It used to be easier to be poor, when inflation was not so insane and we still had programs to help people with acquiring food, mental health, family planning, and other problems. We were treated with less judgement and more respect. All that changed when Regan became president. No more programs. We have ill people in prison, many people living on the streets, and attacks on the environment, planned parenthood and so it goes on and on and on. Just keeps getting worse. It’s so frustrating! How can all of us “99%” Not be depressed? All this fluffy stuff to help people really is just bullshit. The crap that becomes mainstream always is. It’s in fashion. But it doesn’t work. I cope mainly with my creativity, people I choose to be with and loving where the sun shines. I have a macabre sense of humor that also helps me see the humor in some of my own bullshit. We all just cope the best we can.
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Well said!!
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That “generic” CTD you mention? Methinks ‘genetic’, perhaps we’re talking EDS. Ehlers Danlos is getting pretty much zero investigation, being seen as too hard although the probable cost is 25years off your life. Unless you did mean ‘generic’ and this is an equally disturbing situation – instead of a pigeon-holing by specialists you go into a diagnostic dumping ground. Either way, there’s no reasons for a positive outlook.
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It’s a bit like saying seeing a psychologist will fix your problems… This is not its purpose 🙂
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Positive thinking begs denial of uncomfortable emotion. We think with emotion and so trying to cut off emotional ties if anything distorts perception. Realistic appraisal of emotion entails embracing and accepting it all. I feel the issue we face is in the minds time based anticipatory obsession with what it might feel in the future, projecting an imagined emotional response in the present. We are constantly living with emotion that is in response to an imagined future. To try and think positive would be better if it worked. To try and blame everything for our emotional state would also be better if it worked. Drugs would be better if they still worked. The next hurdle after trying positive thinking etc etc etc is finding a much more realistic appraisal and control over emotion by practicing our attention in this moment and relating emotionally to this present moment… Good or bad… As long as its present its at least sane. With sanity comes an uncanny ability to deal with life realistically.
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Exercise is an excellent way of reducing anxiety. Better than any drug as far as I’m concerned. For me that involved walking lots, in countryside though. Cycling would make anxiety worse really because of traffic.
Over all, this is a very positive, inspiring and uplifting post, it shows how the power of positive thought can help.
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I appreciate this article. It is insightful and I can relate to the problems discussed because I have tones of negative experiences due to being immigrant, speaking English with the “wrong” accent, being a woman, being White (yes, I’m a White, single woman) and most of all, living the past few years with disability. Thanks God, while I was running my business I have insured myself and don’t have to rely on the state. But make no mistake! Insurance companies use the same inhumane tactics of pushing you to the wall and crashing your self-esteem as the government agencies do to the unemployed and the sickness beneficiaries. If you are unfortunate enough to have your medical condition causing you secondary depression, they will hire “experts” who will focus on the secondary depression and will tell you that it is all in your head and you must toughen up. They pay these “experts” a lot of money and will try to cut your payments, no matter that the policy they sold you states different amount.
Try to find a job relevant to your skills and experience if you live with permanent disability! You may be “lucky” to be offered totally unsuitable position on a minimal wage! Sorry, but it is impossible to stay positive in a situation like this and that commercial crap sold by Oprah and other self-development “gurus” is not helping. It makes things worse, because it sends you on a “la-la” lend and when you realise that this is not working, you start questioning yourself. A reality check is vital for survival.
Of course, pessimism is just as bad. We need motivation but it has to come from spiritual growth. What works for me is Tai chi and my own positive affirmations, that I derived from reading various literature. It helps to keep me sane in a cruel and downright disgusting world set up to serve a handful of privileged, self-proclaimed elite that indulges in oppression of the rest of the population. Can we change that? I doubt it. Human history is full of revolutions and as far as I am concerned non have delivered just and humane societies. Shame really.
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“Adapt to a brutal capitalist system…” Wow, just wow. You do realize that this is the United States of America, right? And then you go on to trash one of the people who you are saying is in the underserved population and who happens to have worked hard and made something of her life? You can’t have it both ways. Is life fair to everyone? No. Should there be programs in place to help those who need a hand up, rather than a hand out? Yes. No matter who you are, you are not entitled to anything. Hard work and a positive attitude go a long way. Also, as a white, middle-class woman, my children have to pay full tuition to go to college, unlike the poor and working poor, who’s children get free rides, if they decide to go that route. Not everyone gets to be rich. You are free to make your own choices, you are not free from the consequences of those choices.
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I am rather tired of responses like these. First off I live in New Zealand, this is the context I am writing to not everything has to evolve around America. Sure not ‘everyone gets to be rich’ but we need wealth dispersal because it is unfair that most wealth is concentrated in the hands of 1% of the population. If you can explain to me how I ‘trashed’ gala in a personal way then please be my guest. I attacked the ideologies’ she is pedalling that I believe do more far more harm than good.
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I am rather tired of everyone having their hands out. And please explain to my why it is that unfair that 1% of the population has the majority of the wealth? And why should anyone else be entitled to my wealth? I’m not saying that I am not generous with my time/money/success, but it isn’t on anyone else to take care of you. I am also not saying that there aren’t vast injustices and prejudices in the world. Oprah Winfrey (a black woman who is part of the “underserved”) feels that being positive and having a positive attitude has helped get her to where she is today. Not saying that’s the end all be all. Nor am I saying that being positive will help you out of a jam or pay the bills, but it sure beats the hell out of having a pity party for yourself. But saying that someone else owes you a standard of living that you can’t or aren’t able to provide for yourself and your family, is ludicrous. Smile. Be positive. Love glitter. You’ll be much happier wallowing in the unfairness of your life.
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Can you explain how people have their :”hands out” are you talking about coporate welfare.. or….
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“No matter who you are, you are not entitled to anything”. Really? Do you mean that there are absolutely no privileged people in this world? We all happened to be born absolutely equal and only those who work hard “make” something of their lives? Sorry, but that is the biggest bullshit I have ever read. That is how the privileged condition the rest, so they would never question how the hell the privileged acquired their wealth. As for Oprah – I too trash her. What kind of exceptional talent she has to deserve the billions she gets paid for some stupid shows that have one and one goal only – conditioning the masses according current political agenda? Is she an artist, inventor, what is the exceptional thing she has done to justify her paycheck? Nothing.
And yes, the neoliberal capitalist system is brutal and inhumane. We have people “living” under bridges, on the streets, in card-board boxes while Oprah and co. indulge in their fortune build on playing with vulnerable peoples’ emotions. We, the so called “developed” countries have homeless people who eat twice a week and have no choices because:
1. There aren’t enough jobs for everybody
2. Nobody would take homeless person on board.
May be Oprah’s rubbish will help them?
Lastly, enjoy your “success” but don’t be arrogant. People are not whining, they are stating facts. Don’t look down on people unless you are helping them.
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Ok. Well. Good luck with your pity party about the big bad rich people! And good luck saving the world.
As far as looking down on people, you don’t know me. You know nothing about me. I have hired two homeless people, both of whom were given an opportunity to succeed in this horrifying capitalist society, one did, one did not. And there are plenty of jobs for everyone, but no one wants to make minimum wage because somehow they are entitled to more. And please do not give me the “it’s not a livable wage” crap. IT’S NOT SUPPOSED TO BE! It’s supposed to be painful so that you work toward improving yourself to get something better. Ugh.
Oprah has given back more than you could even ever contribute. So please get off of your hater soap box.
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There aren’t plenty of jobs for everyone? Most statistics say otherwise in fact in Aotearoa job creation has stangnated so have our wages. Our Minimum wage is not market leading which gives a false sense of poverty, and most wages do not match the consumer price index therefore people can’t afford to live. No one should have to starve in their own country. I have earnt minimum wage for ten years, I come from the working classes, I have multiple degrees but including a teaching degree but we have a major oversupply of teachers, therefore all I find is casual on call “relief work”. You are just pushing shitty neoliberal rheotric (do you understand what neoliberalism even is?), which is a failed political ideaological model which has caused widespread misery, poverty and made the gap between the wealthy and poor, look like a chasm. You actually sound like a psychopath, is that something you where aiming for?
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Firstly, I do not hate Oprah, or anybody else. I have my opinion on her “work” and that doesn’t make me hater! Secondly, how much she has given back and how it does compare to what I have given back is irrelevant. You are looking down on people. If you didn’t, you wouldn’t try to hit me with such ridiculous argument.
Minimum wage was supposed to be painful, to push people to improve themselves? That is IDIOCY! That is the biggest nonsense I have ever read. Who the hell has right to make people suffer in order to improve? And what do you mean by “improving’? So, people who work mundane, but necessary jobs on a minimum wage are not good enough and they must be made to suffer to get better? Sorry, this is morally corrupt stance and no – I do not believe that you or anyone with your non-existent value system would employ homeless people. Unless, of course you took these “needed-to-be-improved individuals” to make them suffer even more, so they become something that is worth of appreciation according your twisted logic.
Lastly, I do not feel sorry for myself. But I do feel sorry for the countless talented and generally good people out there that were disadvantaged by such a brutal, inhumane, disgusting reality, created by sociopaths with power. There is no other explanation to the fact that the minimum wage was supposed to be painful, as you stated it. To make the majority suffer, because you don’t see them good enough and worthy of normal living standard, that is some kind of pathology. That is lowest a society can stoop. That is in fact oppression.
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Actually, “fedupwithwhining” the minimum wage is meant to be a liveable on wage. So that at least everyone can have heating and hot water and can pay their bills and have a place to lay their head at night, so sorry, you’re wrong.. Even welfare is meant to provide that..
“Jdels” you got the wrong end of the stick. Chloe was addressing the other person with her reply. Not you..
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Funny, last time I looked it was not the United States of America here. And I don’t think Aukland is in the United Staes of America either. I didn’t think the Internet was confined to one nation, I kinda thought it was without national boundaries. Muppet.
P.S. I am entitled to plenty where I am, yes, ENTITLED – free health care, social security and more because we as a society have decided that’s the way we want it and we pay taxes for it to protect ourselves and the less able members of our society precisely because we want a fairer and more equal society. Or we did, these days I’m not so sure.
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Reblogged this on theladyonthelake's Blog and commented:
Powerful
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@chloeanneking. It looks like your last comment is addressed to me. Ok, yes, there are not enough jobs for everyone. I’ve no idea what statistics you have in mind, but according the latest ones, in NEW ZEALAND unemployment rose to 6%. May be in Aotearoa things are different….(for readers who don’t know, Aotearoa is the unofficial, Maori name of New Zealand).
Unemployment of 6% means that there are no jobs for everyone. At least that is the logical conclusion.
Do I know what neo-liberalism is? Yes, I do and I don’t need to have several degrees to grasp the concept. Do I push it? No, I do not push neo-liberalism and in fact, any political ideology. I think, you must check your attention span, it looks a bit short.
“Our Minimum wage is not market leading which gives a false sense of poverty, and most wages do not match the consumer price index therefore people can’t afford to live.”
The above doesn’t make sense. “False sense of poverty” makes “people cannot afford to live” redundant- choose one or the other.
I am always open for an intelligent discussion, but when people cross the line, I am done. Wishing you all the best in your endeavors. Do not reply. I won’t read it and will not return to your blog.
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She was addressing the other person, not you..
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[…] “Positive Attitude” Bullshit: On the dangers of “radical self-love” […]
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To the author:
“JUST think positive” /is/ problematic.
But I’ll point out that your call to activism is hard to cast as anything other than thinking positive.
A negative person would just give up on that, no?
Funny, kinda. But I’m not saying that to be sarcastic, just trying to point out that complaining about a shallow, bankrupt, patronizing definition of what positivity IS doesn’t make positivity in every form meaningless or a con.
May you get the kind of world you want.
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I think the problem is the “it’s all inside you” part, the “manifest it by thinking” hooey. Have I got that about right?
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Hey!
I comment here late and without reading each and every comment before me. The general feeling I got from the comments I read made me want to write this anyway. I in no way wish to hurt anyone with my words and it is not my intention to tell how things actually are, more how I happen to see them. I also want to point out that I feel there is a huge need for us all to work towards a world where everyone has enough and a possibility to live free and decide upon their lives and by no means is my point here that everyone should be looking in their selves and only in their selves. On contrary, I think we should all work together and help each other in all the ways we can. So if you read this, please try to understand what I mean behind my possibly quite poorly (english is not my native language) written sentences.
I think I get your point here and I agree that it isn’t very constructive to tell people they can completely change their lives, get new better jobs and all the stuff they’ve ever wanted, just by thinking positively or what so ever.
Then again, I think most people have utterly misunderstood the concept of real happiness within these new age and such things. What I understand the happiness means (in the words of for example buddhisms, mindfullness’s, yogas, tolles and de mellos) is that you can be happy and enjoy your life pretty much regardless of your situation, regardless what you own or how well educated you are. The happiness they talk about is not really a feeling, cause they come and go, it’s a deep restful state of being we all have deep within us. You can feel this “happiness” even if you would be depressed. The point for me deep within these teachings is that this happiness comes totally from within and it has little or mainly nothing to do with your surroundings and life. And that’s how we come to the point where of course, it has to do with how we perceive things in ourself and our life and that is the point where I think many have gone a bit far from the original point. But sometimes changing your point of view actually changes your life and it’s easy for us to think that what worked for someone must work to others as well, so there’s an understandable reason for all this confusion.
With love,
Jessu
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Hey jessu I think people with clinical depsression and other serious mental health issues may disagree with you? I understand where you are coming from but under neoliberalism which has co-opted spirituality as big business, “positive thinking” and “spirituality” are used more as mollifying messures than ways to bring about radical self-change for the better?
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[…] https://millennialposse.wordpress.com/2015/07/08/positive-attitude-bullshit-on-the-dangers-of-radica… […]
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Reblogged this on alphatacticus101 and commented:
Serious food for thought !
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I really enjoyed reading this blog post and the comments. There is an intelligence in all of these writings that I rarely see on the internet. Just wanted to toss in my two cents, which is that I don’t really see the two things (poverty and changing one’s mental disposition) as being mutually exclusive.
Virtually everything Chloe is saying about wealth extremes is true in the US as well. And the extremes of wealth distribution are based in the laws of the society, not in nature itself. So while it may be true that life doesn’t owe us anything, it’s also true that the laws of our society lean heavily in favor of those who already have wealth and power.
My income is technically below the poverty level, but I get by reasonably well because I’m creative and smart (lucky me!).
Having said all that, if I weren’t vigilant about my mental and emotional state, I would have committed suicide by now. The only way I can survive is to question every thought and feeling I have and ask myself, “Is it empowering and resourceful or not?” But I also don’t see it as needing to be “positive.” If I’m angry, I feel my rage and let the energy propel me forward.
I pulled myself out of a lifetime of depression by unpacking and questioning every single thought and feeling I have. I could wake up one day and say, “Life is hopeless,” and when I’m in that state, I can’t get out of bed. Or I can wake up and say, “I’m going to take the world by storm. I’m going to run at it like a lion and rip it to shreds” (metaphorically speaking) and I have a much better chance of making something useful happen. I don’t use words like “positive” or “negative” anymore because they might imply that my fear, anger, shame, guilt, or other emotions don’t have power in them, but I can assure you sometimes I’m far more powerful when feeling those emotions than when I’m feeling content.
So I think Chloe’s expressing her anger and her passion and asking us to look more deeply at whether we’ve really thought things through or are just submitting to a stream of propaganda. I see that stimulus to question as a beautiful gift.
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Google “toxic” right now. Go ahead, I’ll wait. It’s the word of the year so you should soak it in for a moment at the very least, and aside from the otherwise ironic video by Brtiney Spears as the first return, you should revel in this supposed ugliness that permeates our culture. Countless results with toxic water, toxic air, toxic planet, toxic politics, (toxic colon?) and of course the neverending stream of WebMD, Huffington Post and blockheaded Buzzfeed lists that has declared “Are your relationships toxic?”
We’ve turned the toxic tuner away from the panicked public back inward to our frantically obsessed media minds. The movement is clear, people are toxic. You, as a shining rod of dignity need to grab your Oprah chai and get to the nearest yoga mat to dispel those toxic chemicals that may be in your body, that could very well be coming from that cosponsored latte, but I digress. Once you’ve found the inner peace sweating out of you, remember to turn off your phone! forget facebook! ignore those emails from anyone who may want anything from you! It’s a toxic trap! As the bombardment continues one gets the sense of the hypocrisy involved in the thinly veiled reason it has always existed: money.
With everyone shouting in your face to LIVE IN THE MOMENT. and DUMP THIS PERSON and UNFRIEND THAT PERSON it sure seems like our true moment of zen is another cookie cutter version of the long gestating ‘self help’ industry. Our problems of course are other people. If someone sneezes within your circle of friends, you may be just a head cold away from Ebola. Remember if someone is having a difficult time, go immediately back into your beer commercial world of high-fiving your positive, debt and disease free friends in a bar and forget about all that negative nonsense. How dare those people become ‘toxic’ around you. Human beings are not a spectrum of a lifetime of experience that can span years of moods and delicate balances of endless incoming growth and more importantly, failures. If they aren’t immediately on the chosen path of self loving, light of living in the now with you, drop ’em.
Do you get the point? Should my three little paragraphs weigh against the onslaught of literal millions of blogs, articles and tv moments that punch your senses over and over again about the Toxic movement. If I were cynical about it all, I’d say it’s nothing more than another form of control. The PC purveyors have long been lobbied behind government officials and laws. Telling someone how to act and feel is no different from the bullying initiated by the very side acknowledging such behavior modification that is “living for today!”
We are human beings. People have a life to live and they are allowed the spectrum of pain to pleasure on their own accord. You have the very right to live in light and away from toxic people. The slope is buttered though, and soon you’ll find that everyone around you has a smile and talks about only the positives in life that mean everything to them while they’ve ‘volunteered’ to withdraw from social media outlets (because they’re poison) and from more people (because they’re poison). Sounds like Stepford Wives 2.0 but for the entire internet generation.
No, I’ll live with people in pain, who are not always positive, who don’t have the answers or yoga mats. I’ll live around those who are flawed and human and sometimes ugly. It could be my within my own family, old friends from school or new friends I’ve just met out in the big blue world. In an age where people flimsily add strangers to facebook, it is incredible to see the flush of those same people announce loudly, that they’ve unfriended someone because of a political debate. With things so unpersonally ultra invasive, we sure have all the answers in the digital age about how we should, well, age in front of each other. So I’ll keep my republican friends, as well as my democratic buddies. I’ll talk with the same amount of empathy and respect to those with nothing to believe in as I do my Jewish and Christian brothers and sisters.
Living with those who embrace the full spectrum of life is a choice, just like living in the toxic flush movement. I think those who sometimes get damaged from bumping against life’s ridged nature is something everyone needs sorely in their lives. When you’re left to those who can only afford to be positive in their projections, you’re left with a bankrupt trust in a horrifying world. The rest of us that get the joke, will be laughing, maybe morbidly, maybe not with yours or Huffington’s or Oprah’s permission, but the gift of getting to experience it all in any circumstance fate has for us, will be better spent before it is our own time to clock out.
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I agree with you in some ways.. But I’m not sure if your comment is against what Chloe is saying here… Or if you agree
But I agree with you, it’s now the done thing to label everyone as Toxic or as a Narcissist or even a Troll, just because they have a different way of thinking. Sometimes though, people really are just that, Trolls, because there’s a cruelty behind what they say, because they actually feel bad about themselves.
I was recently diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder, which is something I’ve thought I had since splitting up with an ex in 2012. I’ve probably had it since 1992/3.. It’s a relatively modern Mental Health Disorder, in its classification. But I am sick and tired of seeing people like me, with BPD, classed as Toxic, or alongside Narcissists. But even then I feel sympathy for the Narcissists. There just is no grey area for some people. People can both be positive and negative.. Most people with BPD or NPD are the way they are because of abuse, neglect, the way they were brought up or even the death of a parent or loved one.
I do feel though, especially on social media, sometimes it’s better, especially for people like me, to unfriend people who are always criticising us. It’s very hard for people with BPD to not take things personally or to not react. And so sometimes the best course of action is to delete those people who always criticise us, or are critical.. Because it doesn’t help us to feel better. It’s not that we don’t care about these people I often feel guilty when I do it. But sometimes it has to be done, especially if you are trying to help yourself. Mostly the people I delete on FB are people who I never even speak to.
I do have friends that are Right-Wing (I’m left), racist family members (I don’t like to think I’m racist, but we all can be a bit), Athiests, Monks, Buddhists, Pagans, (I don’t follow any religion really, but I align with Paganism and I was baptised a Protestant). I try to see the best in everyone.
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[…] posters, and tips on taking control of one’s life. In a wonderfully bitchy cri de coeur, Chloe King calls out the “radical self-help” movement and people like Oprah Winfrey for insisting all we need is positive thinking to have a better […]
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There’s only three reasons you should have a “J,O,B”
1) learn the skills to start your own business
2) save the capital to start your own business
3) cover your expenses until you can start your own business
Be a possibility 😁
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not everyone wants to start their own business, though? Plus it is likly you then becme part of the issue by paying your staff poorly and exploting them like a vast majority of other business owners?
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Here’s 3 reasons why I have a J.O.B.
1. As a university fundraiser, I’d look a bit of a dick if I tried to run that gig as my own business
2. Some things are better done, and some people are better employed, working within larger organisations or within focused teams – the UK’s national health service couldn’t work if it were delivered by a bunch of self-employed people, for example
2. I don’t want to spend the rest of my life selling sh*t that people don’t really need.
Will that do? Does my job prevent me from being a possibility, or more importantly a possible enabler of future generations?
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Thank you for writing this, as a therapist I often have to spend time metaphorically walking alongside someone as they unpick the harm done by these “positive thinking” you all have choices messages. Its damaging in so many ways, to so many people.
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Kia ora Karen, would you have time to be interviewed by me at all? It would be more on the damage done by the “positive attitude” movement, and you in no way would have to talk about your patients specifically, of course.
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I would be more than happy to, and would make the time! Apart from the intersectional issues you highlight here (which are very important) it troubles me that people don’t see that positive thinking is as false as negative thinking, and that people are blamed for “poor attitude” My wordpress details should show my email, if not I will add it to a comment (but would appreciate it if you then did not display, or deleted the comment)
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“Changing your attitude is not going to change or help to dismantle structural injustice and a failed and unstainable economic model which…” pretty sure that is meant to say unsustainable.
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“will further exasperate the situation,” I believe you mean to say exacerbate.
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thanks for correcting my spelling I love it when people do that I dont find it patronising, at all.
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This is truly one of the most thought-provoking pieces I’ve read in a long time. My social media is constantly flooded with people who believe that if we could all just love ourselves and each other, things will get better. People are becoming passive in a world that needs more action. Can’t wait to read more of your writing!
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Reblogged this on Melissa Fields, Autist.
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Reblogged this on christyautisticwalk.
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I’m going to have to lovingly call bullshit on this one. It’s true “positive thiking” can be reductive, nauseatingly oversimplified and alienating to those less privileged, minorities, those struggling with abuse, illness or just plain sadness, but seriously it’s equally reductive to lob this complaint at Oprah . Let’s review. Oprah is: black— check, a woman—check, born in extreme poverty— check check. She was also unwanted, survived brutal childhood sexual abused, was forced to sleep on the porch because she was “too black and ugly” and pregnant as a teenager. For the author not acknowledge this and contextualize her analysis in terms of this seems to me to replicate the very privilege she purports to dispell. I’m a black woman too should I, should we all, just throw our heads back and surrender to the forces of oppression? No. I believe we have some choice in terms of what happens to us. While positive thinking can be silly even damaging, examining and retelling the narrative we have about ourselves, ruthlessly extracting untruths and consciously creating I believe is essential. That I think is some of what Oprah offers. She offers a template out of poverty born out of her own fierce faith and creative powers. Personally I’m taking notes.
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I think the main message that should be taken from all the “think positive” books and articles is that you should think positive about yourself. A psychologist by the name of Guy Winch tells a great story about a women who calls upon her best friend after being stood up by some hot date she had that evening. After her friend is brought up to speed on the whole situation she immediately starts going through all the reasons why the hot guy stood her up. You’re ugly, what were you thinking wearing that dress, you said what? of course he left. Turns out the story had a nice little twist at the end revealing that the friend was actually the ladies own depressing thoughts. By no means should you lie to yourself in an attempt at “being positive” but you should always try and be your own best friend and that takes a positive mindset whether you like it or not. A book you might like Chloe is “The Life-Changing Magic of Not Giving a F**K”.
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[…] “Positive Attitude” Bullshit: On the dangers of “radical self-love” […]
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As long as this is not on reference to the radical self love of DBT for people who need help recovering and changing negative behaviors and relationships, because that is how I know of radical self love, (for people who radically need it). For me, giving up radical self love would be dangerous. But I don’t think that is what this is in reference to.
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Really great article Chloe. I totally agree that most bloggers and self-help gurus these days pedal positive thinking, without much self-awareness about the place of privilege and structural injustices play in society. Gala Darling is one especially I think of about not having enough self awareness on the role her privileges (even the most basic ones) has played in her life and success. I do see how positive thinking has become a movement, as it DOES help improve your life to a certain degree. Oprah is a classic case — black woman born in the 50s and a victim of rape multiple times, she has everything going against her, including systemic racism and her grandmother telling her the only thing she should aspire to be is to be a servant to someone else. I know of a lot of people whom positive thinking has helped turn their life around including some women who have been victims of sexual abuse whom I’ve worked with once.
The key though is balance, as with all things. Positive thinking has its place, but people in this position should damn well acknowledge that there are systemic fucked up things at play in this world as well that control 90% of the world. The One Percent doco comes to mind, about how out of touch the one percent is on what they do.
One thing I learned is that there are bad people and good people among the rich and poor. The difference is, the more money you have, the more impact your actions make, it’s unfortunate that there’s more greedy, ignorant and frankly narrow minded people who has money who controls a lot of the world. Being a non-white, immigrant, I’ve experienced Racial Default — how most people see white as “normal” while the rest as “other” and this is one of the roots of systemic racism. But, I’m also aware of my privileges…middle class, education, the means to more choices. These days I take a more balanced stance on things while quietly doing what I can to either help change people’s thinking one conversation at a time, do the positive thinking where it’s appropriate, contribute to society where I can, etc.
As with all things, get the good out of every belief being pedaled, have your other foot on the opposite ground and take it with a grain of salt, and be more aware about how the world works. Then people wouldn’t be so fanatic about positive thinking without enough grounding on certain systemic realities that really affect the majority unfairly, as well as self awareness of these people’s privileges before they stand on the soap box.
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who really missed the point?
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I’m glad I stumbled upon this. In researching about care and relationship from a different perspective, I also found this: http://cloudfront.crimethinc.com/pdfs/self-as-other_for-screen.pdf
Also, posse, would it be alright to turn this article into zine form, as I wish to share if with some friends so we can discuss more on the topic? thank you.
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Hey, yes you have my permission to turn this into a zine x
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[…] between the queer and the occult a radical one? To the skeptics focusing on the magic itself, this is surely aligned with the self-love movement that focuses on self-preservation instead of community activism. Surely it’s an illusion of […]
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[…] az olyan “népszerű neoliberális kapitalista gondolkozók”, mint pl. Oprah Winfrey tudatosan tartják sötétségben az embereket, hogy azok megelégedjenek azzal, hogy most ugyan “ezt vonzották be”, de “csak […]
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I can see where you’re coming from. In your experience, people telling you to fix your attitude and think positive have ignored the systems in place that keep you down and keep other disadvantaged people from advancing. It erases struggle and experience.
But I also think that thinking positive, as in things will get better and the future will be better, keeps a lot of people of color and lgbtq and so forth alive. Not everyone can go out and begin protesting. I honestly feel like having the time to go out and protest and be outspoken is also a privilege that not everyone has. Not everyone, especially those living in poverty, living right at the edge, can go out and risk their jobs because they have kids to feed. I understand that the system should be disrupted because the very system is the one that keeps these very people struggling and in poverty. But change is never quick. Capitalism and sexism and racism, all of the isms won’t just disappear from the world overnight. And to ask disadvantaged people to accept their situations and immediately disrupt them is unrealistic and coming from a privileged mindset. People of color speaking out like White people is never going to be treated the same. EVER. White words mean more in this world and they are never as inflammatory as those of people of color.
I think that people should do what they must to stay a live first. If that involves invoking a positive mindset to maintain hope, then so be it.
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[…] Source: “Positive Attitude” Bullshit: On the dangers of “radical self-love” […]
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[…] color are and that cops would treat them better if they “didn’t act like thugs.” As Chloe King notes this thinking is patently ridiculous and […]
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