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Rethinking Positive Thinking: Inside the New Science of Motivation Paperback – November 10, 2015
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So often in our day-to-day lives we’re inundated with advice to “think positively.” From pop music to political speeches to commercials, the general message is the same: look on the bright side, be optimistic in the face of adversity, and focus on your dreams. And whether we’re trying to motivate ourselves to lose weight, snag a promotion at work, or run a marathon, we’re told time and time again that focusing on fulfilling our wishes will make them come true.
Gabriele Oettingen draws on more than twenty years of research in the science of human motivation to reveal why the conventional wisdom falls short. The obstacles that we think prevent us from realizing our deepest wishes can actually lead to their fulfillment. Starry-eyed dreaming isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, and as it turns out, dreamers are not often doers.
While optimism can help us alleviate immediate suffering and persevere in challenging times, merely dreaming about the future actually makes people more frustrated and unhappy over the long term and less likely to achieve their goals. In fact, the pleasure we gain from positive fantasies allows us to fulfill our wishes virtually, sapping our energy to perform the hard work of meeting challenges and achieving goals in real life.
Based on her groundbreaking research and large-scale scientific studies, Oettingen introduces a new way to visualize the future, calledmental contrasting. It combines focusing on our dreams with visualizing the obstacles that stand in our way. By experiencing our dreams in our minds and facing reality we can address our fears, make concrete plans, and gain energy to take action.
In Rethinking Positive Thinking, Oettingen applies mental contrasting to three key areas of personal change— becoming healthier, nurturing personal and professional relationships, and performing better at work. She introduces readers to the key phases of mental contrasting using a proven four-step process called WOOP—Wish, Outcome, Obstacle, Plan—and offers advice and exercises on how to best apply this method to daily life. Through mental contrasting, people in Oettingen’s studies have become significantly more motivated to quit smoking, lose weight, get better grades, sustain fulfilling relationships, and negotiate more effectively in business situations.
Whether you are unhappy and struggling with serious problems or you just want to improve, discover, and explore new opportunities, this book will deepen your ideas about human motivation and help you boldly chart a new path ahead.
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCurrent
- Publication dateNovember 10, 2015
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.62 x 8.4 inches
- ISBN-101617230235
- ISBN-13978-1617230233
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Editorial Reviews
Review
—PO BRONSON, coauthor of Nurtureshock and Top Dog
“How do you get from dreaming to doing? This exciting and important book shows you how to turn your dreams into reality. You'll be surprised at how thoroughly it overturns conventional wisdom.”
—CAROL S. DWECK, Lewis & Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology, Stanford University, and author of Mindset
“Gabriele Oettingen presents a well-written thought-provoking evidence-based self-help book. Hers is an intriguing approach to overcoming life challenges at all ages. It is a worthy read.”
—JAMES JOSEPH HECKMAN, Henry Schultz Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago, Winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics
“I was once asked by educators to identify the single most effective intervention for improving self-control. Every scientist I spoke to referred me to the work summarized here—masterfully and with incomparable insight and warmth. Read this brilliant book and then go out and do what Gabriele Oettingen recommends. It will change the way you think about making your dreams come true.”
—ANGELA DUCKWORTH, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, and 2013 MacArthur Fellow
“Want to quit smoking, lose weight, get better grades, sustain healthier relationships, or negotiate effectively? Then this easy-to-read book, based on twenty-plus years of empirical research, is for you. Setting a goal, visualizing the obstacles, and then charting a path sounds so straightforward—but guess what? It works!”
—GARY LATHAM, Secretary of State Professor of Organizational Effectiveness at the Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto
“Gabriele Oettingen, one of the world’s leading experts on the psychology of motivation, presents a forceful, scientifically based challenge to the ‘power of positive thinking.’ This eminently practical book is a much needed and welcome corrective.”
—LAURENCE STEINBERG, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Temple University, and author of Age of Opportunity: Lessons from the New Science of Adolescence
“Gabriele Oettingen approaches the subject of positive thinking with a scientist’s passionate curiosity. She is open to anything she might find and truly seeks to discover what works—and what doesn’t. What she found will surprise you, as it did me, and will make you eager to try her methods.”
—FLORIAN HENCKEL VON DONNERSMARCK, writer, director (The Lives of Others; The Tourist), and winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Author’s Note
Throughout the book, I draw from the scientific articles and book chapters my colleagues and I have published over the past twenty years. In describing our experiments, our findings, and their implications, I have cited the articles used in the writing of this book so that readers can consult the original texts if they wish. I am deeply cognizant of the rich intellectual contributions of my coauthors, my fellow travelers in the rethinking of positive thinking.
Preface
What is your dearest wish? What dreams do you have for the future? What do you want to be or do? Imagine your dream coming true. How wonderful it would be. How fulfilling.
What holds you back from realizing your wish? What is it in you that stops you from really going for it?
Rethinking Positive Thinking is a book about wishes and how to fulfill them. It draws on twenty years of research in the science of motivation. And it presents a single, surprising idea: the obstacles that we think most impede us from realizing our deepest wishes can actually hasten their fulfillment.
Approached by someone who wants to achieve a specific dream, many of us offer simple advice: think positive! Don’t dwell on the obstacles, since that will only bring you down; be optimistic, focus on what you want to achieve; imagine a happy future in which you’re active and engaged; visualize how much snazzier you’ll look when you’ve lost that twenty pounds, how much happier you’ll feel when you’ve snagged that promotion, how much more attractive your partner will find you when you’ve quit drinking, how much more successful you’ll be when you’ve started that new business. Channel positive energy and before you know it, all your wishes and goals will come true.
Yet dreamers are not often doers. My research has confirmed that merely dreaming about the future makes people less likely to realize their dreams and wishes (as does dwelling on the obstacles in their path). There are multiple reasons why dreaming detached from an awareness of reality doesn’t cut it. The pleasurable act of dreaming seems to let us fulfill our wishes in our minds, sapping our energy to perform the hard work of meeting the challenges in real life.
Another way to visualize our future exists, a more complex approach that emerges out of work I’ve done in the scientific study of human motivation. I call this method “mental contrasting,” and it instructs us to dream our dreams but then visualize the personal barriers or impediments that prevent us from achieving these dreams. Perhaps we fear that by bringing our dreams directly up against reality, we’ll quash our aspirations—that we’ll wind up even more lethargic, unmotivated, and stuck. But that’s not what happens. When we perform mental contrasting, we gain energy to take action. And when we go on to specify the actions we intend to take as obstacles arise, we energize ourselves even further.
In my studies, people who have applied mental contrasting have become significantly more motivated to quit cigarettes, lose weight, get better grades, sustain healthier relationships, negotiate more effectively in business situations—you name it. Simply put, by adding a bit of realism to people’s positive imaginings of the future, mental contrasting enables them to become dreamers and doers.
Rethinking Positive Thinking presents scientific research suggesting that starry-eyed dreaming isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. The book then examines and documents the power of a deceptively simple task: juxtaposing our dreams with the obstacles that prevent their attainment. I delve into why such mental contrasting works, particularly on the level of our subconscious minds, and introduce the specific planning process that renders it even more effective. In the book’s last two chapters, I apply the method of mental contrasting to three areas of personal change—becoming healthier, nurturing better relationships, and performing better at school and work—and I offer advice on how to get started with this method in your own life. In particular, I present a four-step procedure based on mental contrasting called WOOP—Wish, Outcome, Obstacle, Plan—that is easy to learn, easy to apply to short- and long-term wishes, and that is scientifically shown to help you become more energized and directed.
I’ve written Rethinking Positive Thinking for individuals who are stuck and don’t know what to do about it. It’s also for people whose lives are just fine but who might wonder if they could be better. It’s for people who have a particular challenge in front of them that they’ve tried and failed to handle in the past or that they just don’t know how to approach. Ultimately, though, I’ve written it for all of us. We all need help motivating ourselves so that we can stay on track and move ahead.
Why is this? Well, traditional societies have more mechanisms in place—rituals, habits, rules, laws, norms—that circumscribe individual autonomy and assign people roles and responsibilities. The same is true in repressive societies such as North Korea or the former East Germany. When we lack freedom of action, our own choices do not matter so much because external forces push and pull us to act or prevent us from doing so. The challenge people face in these societies primarily involves keeping up their morale and persevering.
Modern Western societies are different, confronting us with what some call the “curse of freedom.” The pull and push of tradition and external authority seems to have subsided. Many of us experience more freedom than ever, but we are now required to act on our own—to find it in us to stay motivated, energized, engaged, and connected. Nobody is guiding us, day after day, to do what it takes to stay healthy, to pursue a fulfilling career, or to build a family. Nobody is standing over us giving meaning to our lives. It’s all on our shoulders. We need to keep ourselves on track—and we need to restore our ability to take constructive action when we get painfully stuck.
Indulging in fantasies about the future doesn’t help. Though enjoyable in the short term, fantasies only deplete our efforts and lead us to stumble over and over again. We wind up mired in indecision, on the verge of apathy, prone to an impulsive lurching from action to action, pushed beyond our capabilities, seething with frustration, and falling into an unhappiness we don’t understand. But by experiencing our dreams in our minds and also grounding ourselves in the realities we are bound to encounter, we can charge ourselves up to tackle life head-on—to connect with what is most real and abiding in our lives.
Whether you are unhappy and struggling with serious problems, or just want to discover, explore, and optimize hidden possibilities and opportunities, this book will deepen your ideas about human motivation and help you boldly chart a path ahead. Like so many participants in my studies, you’ll come away more motivated than ever to connect with others, engage with the world around you, and take action. All from a single, counterintuitive question: What holds you back from realizing your dreams?
Chapter One
• • • •
Dreaming, Not Doing
One of my friends, a man in his early forties whom I’ll call Ben, remembers having an intense but rather corny crush on a fellow student when he attended college during the late 1980s. He had seen this woman on several occasions while dining with his friends at a cafeteria on campus. As Ben would shave in the morning or try to pay attention during lectures, his mind would drift and he would picture what it would be like to be in a relationship with this woman. He imagined that she was an artist, and that the two of them would tour architectural ruins in Rome and gaze up at the Sistine Chapel. Maybe she would want to sketch him lying on the quad on a sunny day reading a book, or, better yet, playing jazz piano, as he often did on weekends to earn extra money. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to share peaceful moments with someone capable of understanding and sharing his own creativity? For that matter, wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a woman to go to the movies with, or to watch a sunset with, or to hop a bus and go to a nearby city with?
Ben didn’t tell his friends about his daydreams; he thought of them as his little secret. They were wonderfully satisfying images, but unfortunately, they stayed just that. You see, Ben couldn’t bring himself to ask this woman out. He told himself she was a total stranger and he’d make a fool of himself by flirting with her. Besides, he was too busy with schoolwork to date someone. He wanted to get good grades, and it wasn’t as if he lacked friends to hang out with on the weekends.
Why didn’t Ben have the energy and drive to step up and make his move? He was doing what so many of us regard as essential to success—dreaming about fulfilling our wishes. What was holding him back?
The Cult of Optimism
The notion that simply imagining our deepest wishes coming true will help us attain them is everywhere these days. Best-selling books like The Secret1and Chicken Soup for the Soul2teach us that we can make good things happen just by thinking positively, and that positive thinkers are “healthier, more active, more productive—and held in higher regard by those around them.”3 So many of us do think positively, as illustrated by the unvarnished, smiling optimism of contestants on American Idol, who speak confidently of their talents and their dream of being discovered, or their counterparts on the Bachelor, many of whom express absolute certainty that they will outshine all the other girls and win the big prize. These individuals gain popularity among audiences not only for having elaborate fantasies about future success, but for living in the bubble of these fantasies and assuming without a sliver of doubt that one day their daydreams will come true.
The cult of optimism goes further than that. Advertising puts forth happy, optimistic people as paragons of success. Politicians at all levels regale the citizenry by claiming the mantle of hope and touting the virtues of the “American dream.” Economists chart “consumer confidence” and survey business leaders about how optimistic their outlook is for the future; financial markets rise and fall on such data. Popular music celebrates the ability of dreaming and dreamers to save the world. We’re also warned from a young age and at every subsequent turn to rid ourselves of harmful “negative self-talk” or to “get out of the hole of negative thinking” if we want to succeed in life.4 An inspiring message posted on the wall of a Manhattan middle school exhorts kids to “Reach for the moon; even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars.”
Optimism appears to prevail even in the face of extreme adversity. In 2008, amidst a severe recession, PepsiCo began surveying American consumers as part of its Pepsi Optimism Project. In 2010, a full 94 percent of those surveyed felt that “optimism is important in creating new ideas that can have a positive impact on the world.” Almost three-quarters of participants reported that they “expect the best to happen in uncertain times.” And over 90 percent said that they “believe that optimism can have a strong impact on moving society forward in a positive direction.”5 By 2013, some observers were decrying the death of the American dream and American optimism, yet a survey that year sponsored by the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company found that 73 percent of Americans saw life as “the glass half full” and 79 percent felt that the American dream was still alive.6 Another poll by Gallup found that 69 percent of those surveyed were “optimistic” about their personal prospects in 2013.7
The worship of optimism is not of recent vintage, nor is it uniquely American. It’s a theme in world literature, from Marcus Aurelius (“Dwell on the beauty of life”)8 to Samuel Johnson (“that the habit of looking on the best side of everything is worth a thousand a-year”)9 to Dr. Seuss (“And when things start to happen, don’t worry, don’t stew. Just go right along, you’ll start happening too”).10 But Americans traditionally have seemed to relish their optimistic outlook. “Pessimism never won any battle,” President Dwight Eisenhower once said. Charlie Chaplin likewise came out on the side of positive thinking, stating that “You’ll never find rainbows if you’re looking down.”11
Belief in the power of optimism rests on a simple idea: by looking at the future, we can hang tough and do our best in the present. And if we are going to look ahead, thinking positively seems to be the way to go. What else are we going to do—dwell on how doomed we are to misfortune and misery? How motivating is that? A common adage circulating on the Web (and printed on T-shirts) says it all: “Dream it. Wish it. Do it.”
Given optimism’s prevalence, it sometimes feels risky to express even mildly negative viewpoints inside institutions and organizations. If you’re in the workplace and you take the position of the “realist,” others will often label you a “Debby downer” or a killjoy. Filmmakers and television producers often shrink from offering tragic themes and sad endings, fearing that they will come across as “too dark” and turn viewers off. For that matter, what politician wants to question the merit of an optimistic outlook or be seen as breaking from the traditional “can-do” attitude?
As a German citizen who came to the United States relatively late in life, I was initially struck by how much more positive thinking was valued in the United States than back in Europe. In Germany, if you asked how someone was doing, you would usually get a frank answer, such as “I didn’t sleep well last night,” or “My puppy got sick and it’s bothering me.” In America, I noticed how people would say, “I’m fine”—even if something was bothering them. I also noticed that people found it jarring when someone violated the unwritten rule of positivity. In 1986, when I was a postdoctoral fellow in Philadelphia, a professor told me about a faculty meeting during which she described some difficult things happening in her life. Her colleagues became highly critical of her for being so “negative” in a professional setting. It was implied that she needed to learn to keep her negativity to herself, so that it wouldn’t infect other people.
A Closer Look at Optimism
As unfamiliar as this widespread optimism was to me, I felt thankful for it and did not see it as a counterproductive presence in society. I felt people were being considerate and not dumping all their problems on one another. They valued being in a good mood and keeping others in a good mood as well. I gained a more nuanced perspective, though, when I began to study optimism during the mid-1980s. Initially, I was inspired by what I had seen in East Germany during the Cold War. I researched cross-cultural differences in levels of depressive behavior and compared pessimistic outlooks between individuals living under communism in East Germany with those who lived in West Germany’s more open, democratic society.12 As part of this research, I went into bars (or Kneipen, as Germans call them) in adjacent areas of East and West Berlin to observe and track signs of depression among male bar patrons.13
At the time, some people in West Germany and elsewhere wondered whether the communist system held substantial advantages for people’s well-being and sense of security. This was a society in which everyone was meant to be equal and cared for by the state, and in which everybody was guaranteed a job and a place to live. However, I found more visible signs of depression—such as slumped postures and sad facial expressions—in patrons of East German bars than I did in patrons of West German bars. I found it fascinating that many people I spoke to in East Germany, just to get through the day, relied on blind optimism and free imagery of a better future.
On one occasion, an East German painter expressed his chagrin at being trapped in East Berlin. He had no canvas, paints, or other supplies required to pursue his art, and on ideological grounds the authorities explicitly discouraged him from doing what he loved most. But this artist, who painted small, appealing figures in the style of Miró and Klee, also told me of his intense dreams of traveling outside of the country to pursue his artistic work. “One day, I’ll visit Paris,” he said quietly with a smile on his face. Then he turned to gaze out the window and sighed. It was a poignant moment that brought home just how sustaining positive fantasies can be.
Conversations such as this inspired me to refine my understanding of optimism. Martin E. P. Seligman, founder of the positive psychology movement and my research advisor at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, conceived of optimism as beliefs or expectations about the future that are based on past experiences of success.14 Seligman found that we are most optimistic when we assess reality as we’ve known it thus far and logically conclude that the future will likely work out in a similar fashion. If a batter in baseball has already hit .300 with twenty home runs over the past three months of the season, a manager getting ready for a big game will put him in the cleanup position over the player who has hit only .200 with three home runs. Based on experience, the manager believes it more likely that the .300 hitter will get on base in the game—he has a “positive expectation of success.”
In East Berlin, though, people I met remained hopeful even though they believed that their wishes for the future very likely wouldn’t come true. My artist friend had never been to Paris, nor did he have any particular reason based on his past experience to think he would ever visit there. In fact, his past experience suggested he would likely never leave East Germany. Yet still he pictured himself free to pursue his art—painting at all hours, feeling inspired and stimulated and visiting the Louvre. He sustained hope purely on the basis of positive fantasies—free thoughts and images about the future that happened to occur to him and that mentally guided him to and through Paris. His hopefulness amounted to the dreamy anticipation of being surprised given what he knew rationally about his past and the likely grimness of his future reality.
Against this background, Seligman’s definition seemed helpful but unable to capture the entire phenomenon of optimism. With his definition the dominant one, many in the discipline seemed to possess an apparent blind spot. Empirical or quantitatively oriented psychologists were hardly writing about or studying positive fantasies or dreams. Influenced by the study of human behavior, they focused on understanding the rational, experience-based judgments people might make about future likelihoods. Expectations were easy to measure and study, while fantasies seemed vague or intangible and thus not suitable for objective analysis. Fantasies also harkened back to Freud,15 who then (as now) had a reputation for putting forth ideas unsubstantiated by empirical research.
I sensed that positive fantasies were an important part of the human experience, and wanted to explore in depth how they work and affect our behavior. For inspiration, I looked back to the origins of modern psychology—specifically, to the latenineteenth-century thinker William James. In his chapter entitled “The Perception of Reality,” in volume two of his seminal work The Principles of Psychology, James remarked, “Everyone knows the difference between imagining a thing and believing in its existence, between supposing a proposition and acquiescing in its truth.”16 James was talking about people’s outlooks on the past and present, but this distinction also seemed to hold true for the future. It suggested to me that there were in fact two distinct kinds of optimism worth studying: positive expectations that were based on past experience, and the more free-flowing thoughts and images that were rooted in wishes and desires.
I wondered in particular if positive dreams disconnected from past experience would affect people’s willingness and ability to take action in their lives. Scholars like Albert Bandura17 and Martin E. P. Seligman18 had probed the connection between positive expectations and performance, establishing that expectations increased effort and actual achievement. In their research studies, people who judged their chances of success more favorably based on past experience actually did more to pursue them and achieved their goals more readily. Would fantasizing about something likewise increase the chances of the fantasies actually coming about? Could a flight of fancy, a dream detached from actual experience in the past, energize someone to take action and accomplish the dream?
I thought it probably could. There was no reason to think dreams were any different in their practical impact than expectations; all forms of positive thinking seemed inherently helpful. Wanting to investigate this further, I conducted a study of twenty-five obese women enrolled in a weight-loss program.19 Before the program began, I asked participants how much weight they wished to lose and how likely it was that they would succeed. Then I asked each participant to complete several short open-ended scenarios. In some they were asked to imagine having successfully completed the program and in others being in situations in which they were tempted to violate their diets.
“You have just completed Penn’s weight-loss program,” one scenario read. “Tonight you have made plans to go out with an old friend whom you haven’t seen in about a year. As you wait for your friend to arrive, you imagine . . .” In another scenario, I asked participants to imagine that they had come upon a plate of doughnuts. What would they think, feel, or do? Asking participants in the study to rate how positive or negative their fantasies seemed to them, I measured whether they dreamed about an idealized outcome of weight loss as well as whether they fantasized about weight loss being an easy process. It was the participants’ own, subjective assessment of their dreams—whether they found their dreams to be positive or negative—which interested me, not whether I as a researcher happened to think their dreams were positive or negative.20
The results of this initial study got my attention. After one year, women who assessed that they were likely to lose weight shed an average of twenty-six pounds more than those who didn’t believe they would lose much weight. But here’s the kicker. Irrespective of their judgments based on past experience, women who had strong positive fantasies about slimming down—the ones who most positively pictured themselves looking slender and attractive when going out with their friend, or who pictured themselves passing by the doughnuts without batting an eye—lost twenty-four pounds less than those who pictured themselves more negatively. Dreaming about achieving a goal apparently didn’t help that goal come to fruition. It impeded it from happening. The starry-eyed dreamers in the study were less energized to behave in ways that helped them lose weight.
I published that study back in 1991, and no, it didn’t suddenly cause people either in psychology or the wider world to take a more nuanced look at optimism. It didn’t do much of anything because the prevailing belief in the power of optimism was just too strong. Almost everyone back then accepted without question the notion that positive views of the future would increase the chances of success. For this reason, some of my colleagues urged me to change course. “Stick closer to established concepts,” they told me. “Researching dreams is too risky; it brings you closer to pseudoscience and speculation. If you want people to take you seriously, do research on positive expectations.” But I felt research on dreams was meaningful and that my work could contribute to people’s lives.
Although my first study was published in a peer-reviewed journal, the second paper I wrote on the subject was rejected several times, with reviewers claiming that the results and arguments were too far-fetched. Some of my peers said they didn’t even want to finish reading my paper because my message was ridiculous and even hideous. I was upset and disappointed, but I wanted to see my ideas through.
In science, particular findings must be replicated in order for the scientific community—including me as an author—to accept them. You can’t necessarily trust the results of just a few studies. Idiosyncrasies in the data or the analysis could be responsible for the findings. To convince my most skeptical colleagues (and myself) as well as attract a wider audience for my work, I wanted to conduct a number of rigorous, larger studies. I knew I couldn’t rest on other people’s prior work; the burden was on me to build a painstaking case, putting study after study into place like cinder blocks in a wall until the overall findings were supported.
I got to work, spending twenty years observing people of different ages, in different contexts, in both Germany and the United States. I varied my research methods to anticipate any conceivable objection scholars might have. If I could run studies with all these variations and still come up with a similar result, I would feel confident that I was dealing with a substantial psychological phenomenon. That’s exactly what happened.
Again and again, much to my surprise at first, the results turned out to be the same. Positive fantasies, wishes, and dreams detached from an assessment of past experience didn’t translate into motivation to act toward a more energized, engaged life. It translated into the opposite.
Remember Ben, who dreamed about his mystery woman but never pulled himself away from his studies long enough to ask her out? I investigated whether the positive fantasies of people in his situation did in fact impede them from taking action. I recruited 103 college students who had claimed to have a crush on a member of the opposite sex but who weren’t dating that person.21 I first asked them to assess, on a scale from 0 to 100 percent, how likely it was that they would initiate a relationship with that person (i.e., expectations about the future based on past experiences). Then I asked them to complete a series of hypothetical scenarios related to dating. “You are at a party,” one scenario read. “While you are talking to him/her, you see a girl/boy, whom you believe he/she might like, come into the room. As she/he approaches the two of you, you imagine . . .” For each scenario, I asked participants to rate on a 1 (very negative) to 7 (very positive) scale how negative or positive they felt their dream was.
For some students in the sample, such a prompt initiated a positive dream: “The two of us leave the party, everyone watches, especially the other girl. We go outside, sit on a bench, no one around, he puts his arm around me . . . etc. . . .” For others, it elicited a more negative dream: “He and she begin to converse about things which I know nothing about. They seem to be much more comfortable with each other than he and I are, and they don’t care very much to involve me in the conversation.”
Five months later, I checked in on the students and asked if they had gotten together with the person on whom they had a crush. The results were similar to those obtained in the study of the obese women. The more students expected, based on some reasonable assessment of past experiences, that they would initiate a relationship, the more likely they reported having initiated the relationship. But the more students, like Ben, had indulged in positive fantasies as part of our study, the less likely they reported initiating the relationship. Initiating a relationship is a classic challenge requiring motivation and bold action. So is looking for a job. Would job seekers increase their chances of finding employment by positively visualizing themselves acing an interview or sitting in a wonderful new office or handing out flashy new business cards? In 1988, I recruited eighty-three male graduate students at a German university. Most were in their midtwenties. I asked how probable it was that they would find a job, and how much it mattered to them that they be employed. I also asked them to generate and write down any positive fantasies about finding a job and to rate on a scale of 1 (very rarely) to 10 (very often) how often these images entered into their minds. Then I let two years pass before checking back in. The more frequently students had experienced positive fantasies, the less success they had. They reported that they sent out fewer applications and received fewer job offers. Ultimately, they reported earning less money. Dreaming about their success hurt them.
Some of the studies mentioned so far—the lovelorn college students, the job seekers—used self-reported data. That is, I assessed the end result by relying on the participants themselves to tell me what happened. What if the participants I was studying got it wrong? What if something about positive fantasies caused them to under- or overreport how much success they were having? That would mess up my results and possibly put my larger findings into question.
I decided to study the phenomenon of positive fantasies in a more objective way, examining the role of optimism in academic achievement. I asked 117 college students in an introductory psychology class what grade they wished to achieve on the midterm, which would happen in two days’ time, and how likely they were to achieve it. I measured their fantasies in the usual way—by asking them to complete hypothetical scenarios. “You have already completed your test and today is the day that the grades are posted,” one scenario read. “As you are walking toward the building that the board is in, you imagine . . .” One student completed this scenario with a negative fantasy, writing: “What if I messed up the exam? Maybe I should have studied more—where is my grade? Damn—it is a ‘C.’ How shall I ever make this up?” Others were more positive. I just asked students to rank how positive or negative they thought these fantasies were.
I logged students’ midterm and final grades over a six-week period; I didn’t rely on the students to report them. As expected, the more students positively fantasized about the grades they would get, the lower they scored and the less they reported studying.
Product details
- Publisher : Current; Reprint edition (November 10, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1617230235
- ISBN-13 : 978-1617230233
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.62 x 8.4 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #332,109 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,512 in Happiness Self-Help
- #2,720 in Motivational Self-Help (Books)
- #3,754 in Personal Transformation Self-Help
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book well-researched and thoughtfully written, appreciating its practical wisdom and evidence-based approach to personal transformation. Moreover, the content is easy to employ and highly effective, with one customer noting it's particularly accessible for a popular audience. However, the writing quality receives mixed feedback, with several customers finding it repetitive and tiring to read.
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Customers appreciate the book's well-researched content and evidence-based approach to self-help, with one customer noting how it provides useful clarifications about positive thinking.
"...What I have found is that the WOOP process channels my negativity into positive action. Often, when doing something challenging, I will feel anxiety...." Read more
"...WOOP is an evidence-based tool for enhancing goal achievement and goal striving...." Read more
"...and found it to be a very well-formatted Kindle book with a good Table of Contents, footnotes, sidebars and images." Read more
"...In the same way her exploration of positive fantasies is excellent: when do we do them "successfully" and what is needed to go from dreaming to..." Read more
Customers find the book readable and worth the time invested, with the first half receiving positive feedback.
"...But, more importantly, I am more relaxed when running and am enjoying it more. Here is a second example in which I used WOOP successfully...." Read more
"...This wonderful book is the first from Professor Oettingen, but hopefully not the last, written for a popular audience but thankfully without dumbing..." Read more
"...A good work, that reads comfortably even though there are solid research and plenty of references for the person hungry for the back-story...." Read more
"...All in all, I do see the value in WOOP, particularly the idea of considering potential obstacles to our goals and making plans to overcome them...." Read more
Customers find the book highly effective, with one mentioning how it improves the efficacy of medications.
"...A good work, that reads comfortably even though there are solid research and plenty of references for the person hungry for the back-story...." Read more
"...Plan is very simple and based on her extensive research, highly effective...." Read more
"...this is the first one that I'v used and have had immediate and successful results. And that's about all you have to know." Read more
"...that positive expectations can provide symptom relief, improve the efficacy of medications, and speed recovery times after surgery...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, describing it as thoughtfully written, with one customer noting its clear language and another mentioning its well-formatted Kindle presentation.
"...Note: I read this book on Kindle, and found it to be a very well-formatted Kindle book with a good Table of Contents, footnotes, sidebars and images." Read more
"...The method, called "mental contrasting" is offered clearly and reliably...." Read more
"...It reads like a literature review of her papers, with very little added; it is too dry. -..." Read more
"As a book, this is less thrilling than it ought to be--it's not badly written, but it's repetitive in places...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to use, with one mentioning that the core method is simple to remember.
"...It works. Reading this book you will learn a simple yet powerful, easy-to-apply tool to help you achieve your goals in any domains...." Read more
"...placed outside of the scope of the main reading, but of course easily accessible through the electronic link of the kindle version...." Read more
"...The process – what she calls WOOP – Wish, Outcome, Obstacle, Plan is very simple and based on her extensive research, highly effective...." Read more
"...by justifying its premise with science and then moves to a useful, how-to book to apply the tool to your life everyday...." Read more
Customers find the writing quality of the book poor, describing it as repetitive and tiring to read, with one customer noting it explains every last step.
"...It feels too long, and at times it is repetitive. -..." Read more
"...However, I found the book a little too long, there was too much detail about her various studies...." Read more
"...Even if learning about the research is your goal, sloppy language and a practice of stretching examples to fit her conclusions may still make you..." Read more
"...thrilling than it ought to be--it's not badly written, but it's repetitive in places...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2014UPDATED REVIEW BELOW
Original Review, 11/3/14:
Since I came upon this book, a week ago, and the "WOOP" technique described within, I have been experimenting with it every day, sometimes more than once. My five star review is based on the power of this idea and how promising it has been so far. Check back in a few months. I will update this review in March, 2015. If I am still using the technique and am still experiencing helpful results, I will write about it here and let the five stars remain. If I am not continuing to use the technique because it has not continued to be personally helpful, I will write about that too (and perhaps lower my star rating.)
But, based on the last week, I am very excited. This idea ties together lots of things I've wondered about. It seems to be working, I just want more time to see.
Another thought... In my life, I interact with people from many parts of the world. I've always been fascinated with how Americans (like myself) are so relatively optimistic and practice "positive thinking". Other, relatively negative, cultures of the world tend to either admire us, or make fun of us, for our "positive" tendencies. In the past, I wondered about this. My international friends seemed to be on to something, yet they too seemed to be limiting themselves, just in negative ways. I had come to the unhappy conclusion that we were all kind of stuck.
Well, now, with this WOOP technique, it kind of brings the value of both sides together, optimism and pessimism, in a powerful way. The best of both worlds.
See you in March.
UPDATED REVIEW, 3/7/14:
For the past four months I have used the technique presented in the book almost every day. Sometimes multiple times a day. It has become a go-to tool for help implementing goals.
I am amazed that there are currently only 23 reviews on Amazon for this book. Other new books on rehashed topics have hundreds of reviews in this amount of time. However, I think this is only a symptom of how new and revolutionary the WOOP technique actually is. Most people will not “get it” until enough early adopters have shown the way.
For the purposes of this review, I will not describe the technique. You can get a good overview at http://www.woopmylife.org/. Actually, you can get a great start using only resources available at the website. I suggest you do and, if you like it, get the book to learn more. (Alternately, a google search for “mental contrasting” will bring up any number of articles that introduce this technique and book.)
When you first try WOOP, you might want to use it for immediate goals so that you have a quick experience of WOOP’s effectiveness.
So, what more have I learned from four months of regular practice?
What I have found is that the WOOP process channels my negativity into positive action. Often, when doing something challenging, I will feel anxiety. In the past, I would draw upon skills learned in counseling to try, unsuccessfully, to think my way out of these feelings. Other times I tried using relaxation techniques, to help. This often backfired as the repressed feeling bounced back even stronger. The WOOP technique, on the other hand, allows me to prepare a pathway in my mind from negative feelings to positive actions. The energy of of the negative feelings actually fuels the positive actions that I have pre-determined using WOOP. This happens both consciously and unconsciously after using the technique.
WOOP worked dramatically and immediately in areas that I have already experienced some success. It increased my productivity and efficiency in these areas. Things became easier and more fun. I have used WOOP for exercise goals, language study, family relationships, to-do items, among other things. I have been "on fire" in these areas since using WOOP regularly.
One example of this kind of success using WOOP: I have already been running successfully for more than 5 years. Despite years of success, I still tend to get anxious. Before using WOOP, the anxiety would make me enjoy running less. Nowadays, before and even during a run, I might think through the following:
“Wish: I will have a relaxing, meditative, run.
Outcome: I will be in "the zone". I will be mindful and relaxed. I will enjoy this run.
Obstacles: I may become anxious and worry that I am doing it wrong. I may worry about hurting my knees or whether my heart is healthy.
Plan: If I find myself worrying I will remember that I have been running successfully for the last 5 years. I will turn my attention back to my stride and put one foot in front of the other, both literally and metaphorically.”
Since using WOOP, I have continued running regularly. I have increased my speed and distance. But, more importantly, I am more relaxed when running and am enjoying it more.
Here is a second example in which I used WOOP successfully. I was attending a gathering of several former coworkers, all who were friends, but who I had not seen in many months. Being an introvert, I would have felt at ease with them in very small groups, or one-on-one. But, the large size of the group and the fact that I hadn't seen them in quite awhile was stirring up feelings of anxiety. I used the following WOOP:
“Wish: I will have relaxed fun with my friends.
Outcome: I will enjoy my time with my friends. I will feel connected with them. We will have a good time together, support each other and laugh frequently.
Obstacle: I may feel anxious and self-conscious. I may feel old feelings of fear that people do not like me.
Plan: If I find myself feeling anxiety and fear, I will remember that these people are already my friends and that they already like me. They wouldn't have invited me if they didn't. I will just be myself and trust that a good time will result.”
It was a good time, and I was sad when it was over.
As discussed in the book, WOOP doesn't work for every goal. If you do not actually believe you can succeed with a goal, WOOP may not help.
WOOP is more challenging, but also more intriguing when applied to aspirations on that “fault line” between confidence and no confidence.
I experienced this several days after first learning WOOP. As I mentioned, I am an introvert, but I tried to use WOOP to help myself enjoy a language exchange group composed mostly of strangers and a few people with whom I only have a superficial acquaintance. In previous meetings, I had felt unable to break into the conversations of extroverts and unable to connect with the group in general. But, this day, on my walk to the meeting, I went through the WOOP process twice. But, once I got there and the group started, I still had a miserable time.
However, it was still very important me to use the group to further my Spanish studies. So, before the next meeting, I scaled my expectations way back. I set my “wish” to “just showing up” and “practicing some Spanish” rather than “enjoying” and “connecting”. And, with these more attainable goals, I experienced success! Although I did not enjoy the group as much as the extroverts, I had a more positive experience in general, practiced a lot of Spanish, and I feel that I can continue to benefit from the group in the future.
I am looking forward to seeing future developments in the study and practice of WOOP. It will be nice when there are enough people using WOOP that some sense of community forms. I looked to see if any online forums have sprung up and, so far, none have. It would be nice to hear other people's ideas and experiences in using WOOP for complicated, long range goals. It would be good to hear how others incorporate WOOP into different types of professions and activities.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2014This book is a summary of Gabriele Oettingen's work. For almost 25 years, she has been studying how having positive fantasies about the future affects goal achievement
In this book, she introduces MCII (Mental Contrasting with Implementation Intention), now re-branded as WOOP (Wish Outcome Obstacle Plan), to the general public.
WOOP is an evidence-based tool for enhancing goal achievement and goal striving. Translated: if you have an attainable wish that you want to turn into reality, use WOOP. It works.
Reading this book you will learn a simple yet powerful, easy-to-apply tool to help you achieve your goals in any domains.
As some other reviewer noted, authors often describe a problem, but rarely they offer a practical solution. Gabriele Oettingen does.
Kudos then to Prof Oettingen for sharing her insights in a book, after publishing dozens of peer-reviewed papers in psychology journals. If the author's scientific credentials are impeccable, not so much the book.
Below is a list of reasons why I would rate it a a 3-star piece of work:
- It feels too long, and at times it is repetitive.
- It reads like a literature review of her papers, with very little added; it is too dry.
- There are grammatical errors (e.g., p. 158: "In one study of high school and middle school students lead [sic] by...").
- The references the author uses to make her points are questionable. For example: "The worship of optimism is not of recent vintage, nor is it uniquely American. It's a theme in world literature, from Marcus Aurelius ("dwell on the beauty of life") to...". Marcus Aurelius, the Stoic, an optimist?!?? Another example: "Companies spend millions on executive coaching... with little systematic research that coaching works" (p.90). The reference linked to this statement is from 2003, since then several studies and meta-analyses have been published.
- Last but not least, the book is all about Oettingen. In itself that is not bad, but it needs to be balanced by introducing other characters and it needs to avoid a narrative centered on the author vs. the "establishment".
a) Regarding the former, even though she acknowledges in the introduction that she is indebted to many, her narrative rarely introduces other researchers and their teams (which would have made for a more engaging story, and it is something common in many pop psych books). E.g., after going on for more than a page describing an experiment she led, the author then says: "a similar experiment with fifth graders from low-income backgrounds in the United States turned up the same results". That is interesting! But who did the experiment? Where? How?
B) Regarding the latter, on p.10, after describing her counter-intuitive results in her first published paper, Oettingen writes: "I published that study back in 1991, and no, it didn't suddenly cause people either in psychology or the wider world to take a more nuanced look at optimism. It didn't do much of anything because the prevailing belief in the power of optimism was just too strong". Well, I would say it did not do much of anything because it was just one study with a very small sample (25 subjects overall).
And I could go on and on...
To sum it all up:
- if you never heard of the work of Gabriele Oettingen, or if you believe in the power of positive thinking, do yourself a favor and buy this book. You will learn some very useful life skills.
- if, however, you know about her work or if you are looking for an engaging book about psychology, maybe this is not for you.
Top reviews from other countries
- AndreaReviewed in Italy on June 18, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Very nice
very interesting book
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Alberto LópezReviewed in Mexico on February 10, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars La pieza del rompecabezas que faltaba
Muchos libros hablan de cómo establecer metas y muchos otros hablan de la visión, disciplina y de cómo superar la postergación. En este libro encontrarás cómo lograr lo que propones con una fórmula muy sencilla y práctica. Altamente recomendable.
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dehemkaReviewed in France on January 27, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Très intéressant
Je pense que pour ceux qui se poseraient des questions sur la pensée positive (voire le positivisme) et - de mon point de vue - par extension sur le "développement personnel" trouverons sinon des réponses, au moins des pistes.
En revanche, il faut comprendre un minimum l'anglais mais ça reste très abordable même avec un niveau scolaire (il n'y a que pour les mots spécifiques/professionnels qu'on doit se tourner vers un dictionnaire).
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CarlosReviewed in Spain on June 13, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Muy útil
Va más allá de "pensar en positivo". Aporta una buena manera manera de enfrentarte a los retos, sean estos los que fueren, fácil lectura. Como siempre se podría haber dicho en muchas menos páginas, pero esto es común a casi todos los autores de este tipo de libros.Aún así es recomendable.
- JTReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 27, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is a MUST READ
This book takes a sceptical approach to positive thinking and reveals the hidden traps to why the seductive myth of positive thinking may be harming your personal development. I don't want to reveal the exact details of the authors research as that my spoil the novelty of the book for you, however it is backed up by erudite research and convincing arguments, that will at least challenge your thinking and disposition towards the subject,
Please note the author has been criticized in some reviews and I personally believe this is unjustified as there is a lot of innate truth in the content and research, so please remain open-minded and if there are some elements you disagree with then in the words of the tao te ching "Absorb what is useful discard what is useless".
Overall I have given the book five stars, for anyone interested in personal development or psychology it is a must read.