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I choose to meet my thoughts with kindness, and in doing so, I shape the mind I live in.

What We Carry About Positivity
We have a complicated relationship with positive thinking. Somewhere along the way, the phrase became tangled with something forced — a demand to smile when we’re hurting, to paste brightness over bruises. We’ve been told to “look on the bright side” by people who hadn’t yet looked at all. And so many of us learned to distrust the whole project. We conflated genuine optimism with denial, and in protecting ourselves from one kind of dishonesty, we sometimes closed the door on a deeper kind of truth.
This is worth sitting with. Because the resistance we carry toward positive thinking often has nothing to do with positivity itself. It has to do with being asked to perform it before we were ready — before the feeling was real, before it had roots. What we’re really hungry for isn’t forced cheerfulness. It’s an honest relationship with our own minds, one where the light we find is actually ours.
What the Research and Practice Reveal
The neuroscience here is striking, and it begins with a humbling fact: our brains are not neutral observers of reality. They are prediction machines, shaped by repetition. What we think repeatedly, we think more easily. The neural pathways we travel most often become the paths of least resistance. Psychologist Rick Hanson’s work on the negativity bias reminds us that the brain is, as he puts it, “like Velcro for negative experiences and Teflon for positive ones.” We evolved to scan for threats, to remember what hurt us, to rehearse worst-case scenarios. This kept our ancestors alive. It also means that, left unattended, the mind drifts toward darkness not because life is dark, but because the brain is doing its ancient, protective work.
Positive thinking — the real kind, not the bumper-sticker kind — is a deliberate act of neuroplasticity. Barbara Fredrickson’s broaden-and-build theory, developed over two decades of research at the University of North Carolina, demonstrates that positive emotions don’t just feel good — they expand our cognitive repertoire. When we experience genuine states of curiosity, gratitude, amusement, or hope, our peripheral vision literally widens. Our problem-solving capacity increases. We become more creative, more connected, more resilient. The positivity isn’t decorative. It’s structural. It changes what the mind can do.
But here’s the part that matters most for practitioners: the research is clear that forced positivity doesn’t produce these effects. Suppressing negative emotions — what psychologists call experiential avoidance — actually amplifies them. The benefits emerge only when the positive thought is met with genuine attention, when it arises from awareness rather than from fear of the alternative. This is where mindfulness and positive thinking stop being separate disciplines and become one practice.
What Shifts When We Turn Toward It
When we sit in meditation, we notice something instructive. Thoughts arrive unbidden — thousands of them each day — and most of them are repetitions. The same worries, the same self-criticisms, the same low-grade narratives running like background music. We don’t choose most of our thoughts. But we can choose which ones we attend to. We can choose which ones we meet with hospitality.
This is the pivot point. Positive thinking, practiced with integrity, is not about manufacturing thoughts we don’t believe. It’s about noticing the thoughts that are already there — the small appreciations, the quiet relief, the unexpected moments of sufficiency — and letting them land. Letting them register. Giving them the same weight and attention we so effortlessly give to worry. It is, in the deepest sense, a practice of fairness. We are not lying to ourselves. We are finally telling ourselves the whole truth.
What shifts is subtle but profound. We begin to notice that the mind responds to our attention the way a garden responds to water. The thoughts we nourish grow. Not because we’ve willed them into existence, but because we’ve stopped unconsciously starving them. Over weeks and months, the internal weather changes — not from storm to permanent sunshine, but from a climate dominated by threat to one that includes, genuinely includes, the possibility of goodness. And from that inclusion, everything downstream changes: our relationships, our decisions, our capacity to bear difficulty without collapsing into it.
What We Return To
We return to the breath. We return to the present. And we return to a recognition that is both ancient and scientifically validated: the mind we live in is not fixed. It is being built, moment by moment, by where we place our attention. This is not magical thinking. This is the most empirical thing we know about the brain — that it changes in response to experience, and that conscious experience is the most powerful sculptor of all.
The invitation is not to become relentlessly upbeat. It is to become relentlessly honest — to notice when something is good, when something is working, when we are, against all odds, okay. To let that noticing complete its circuit in the nervous system instead of rushing past it toward the next problem. We are not ignoring the hard things. We are refusing to ignore the rest.
Today, carry this with you — not as a demand, but as a choice that has always been available. Let it sit gently at the front of your awareness, a quiet companion for whatever the day brings. Repeat it when you notice the mind rehearsing its old patterns. Not to silence them, but to remind yourself that there is another channel, and you have every right to tune into it.