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The A.P.E. Method to Get Out of a Bad Mood By Senia Maymin (Positive Psychology News Daily) You
may be wondering, should
I get out of a bad mood? Suppose
that our answer is already, YES. Now, what do we do? These
are practical and immediately usable. Additionally,
as Dave Seah points out, you can’t
always be waiting for the muse. Most
often in life, you need to do things whether you’re in a bad mood or a
good mood. For example, compare a person who takes actions to move his
life forward only when he’s in a good mood (or when the muse strikes
him) to a person who takes actions to move his life forward no matter
what mood may have set on him temporarily. Who will likely be more
productive? At the
same time, these are not necessarily the best techniques to use “When
you need a thorough, thoughtful and comprehensive understanding of a
problem.” And
not only do I stink at work recently, but everything else is going down
the drain too.”… then what are some alternative beliefs that you could
seek? But do look outward if you tend to blame yourself. Do look at the environment, the surroundings, and provide other possible explanations. (Create an alternative).
* If your beliefs tend to focus on “always” – “I’m never good at my
work, I always mess up at the office, this never goes right for me,”
then train your brain to find the one thing that you consistently excel
at during work. Feel that pride – no matter how small – in that one thing that you own, that is yours, and that you can reliably think about to know that you are good at that part of work. (The point is to create one alternative: not always).
* If your beliefs tend to focus on “everything” – “And not only am I
not good at my work, I can’t meet a great girl/guy, I’m terrible at
keeping in touch with friends,” then train your brain to find the one
part of life in which you have control. Feel
that control in that part of your life – no matter how small that part
may be – maybe brushing your teeth, maybe emailing a certain friend
regularly. (Create an alternative thought-pattern: not everything.)
"Imagine all those problems spinning around like the tornado in
Dorothy’s Kansas at the beginning of the movie. … Now take that entire
storm and all those issues and shrink it down and put the entire storm
into a teacup.” It is
the super-literal description of the phrase “storm in a teacup,” and
talk about perspective! Put
the perspective of time on it (probably not as intense if you were to
look back on this from 50 years in the future). Put the perspective of
seriousness on it (these are bad moods, but nobody should be dying from
this). Put
the perspective of “me” on this (how impenetrable does my problem look
compared to starving children). The
perspective of comparison with those worse off is called downward
social comparison… but in psychological studies it has proven to be
effective in precluding depression. If the
argument is that you’ve never done anything good in your work for the
past decade, get a piece of paper and list two things that you have
done well. That’s it – two things. Two concrete examples. * P - Put the issue in Perspective to get out of a bad mood, and
* E - Use concrete Evidence to discount the bad-mood self-talk in your
head. Senia
Maymin, MBA, MAPP is an Executive Coach, and presents workshops to
corporations about Positive Psychology. Senia is the Editor of Positive
Psychology News Daily, and posts her latest ideas about positive
psychology, business, and coaching at Senia.com. Senia’s bio. Article
from Positive Psychology News Daily - 6/01/07 ~ ~ ~ Related
Talent Development Resources pages:mental
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