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Bright-sided: How Positive Thinking Is Undermining America Paperback – August 3, 2010
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Barbara Ehrenreich's New York Times bestselling Bright-sided is a sharp-witted knockdown of America's love affair with positive thinking and an urgent call for a new commitment to realism
Americans are a "positive" people -- cheerful, optimistic, and upbeat: This is our reputation as well as our self-image. But more than a temperament, being positive is the key to getting success and prosperity. Or so we are told.
In this utterly original debunking, Barbara Ehrenreich confronts the false promises of positive thinking and shows its reach into every corner of American life, from Evangelical megachurches to the medical establishment, and, worst of all, to the business community, where the refusal to consider negative outcomes--like mortgage defaults--contributed directly to the current economic disaster. With the myth-busting powers for which she is acclaimed, Ehrenreich exposes the downside of positive thinking: personal self-blame and national denial. This is Ehrenreich at her provocative best--poking holes in conventional wisdom and faux science and ending with a call for existential clarity and courage.
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPicador
- Publication dateAugust 3, 2010
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.65 x 8.2 inches
- ISBN-100312658850
- ISBN-13978-0312658854
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Deeply satisfying. . . I have waited my whole life for someone to write a book like Bright-sided.” ―The New York Times Book Review
“A brilliant exposé of our smiley-faced culture.” ―Forbes.com
“Insightful, smart, and witty. . . Ehrenreich makes important points about what happens to those who dare to warn of the worst.” ―BusinessWeek
“Ehrenreich's examination of the history of positive thinking is a tour de force of well-tempered snark, culminating in a persuasive indictment of the bright-siders as the culprits in our current financial mess.” ―The Washington Post
“Bright-sided scours away the veneer of conventional wisdom with pointed writings and reporting. . . . Helping us face the truth is Ehrenreich at her best.” ―The Miami Herald
“Contrarians rejoice! With a refreshingly caustic tone, Barbara Ehrenreich takes on the relentlessly upbeat attitude many Americans demand of themselves, and more damagingly, of others.” ―USA Today
“A rousing endorsement of skepticism, realism, and critical thinking.” ―San Francisco Bay Guardian
“Ehrenreich delivers her indictments of the happiness industry with both authority and wit. . . . Bright-sided offers both a welcome tonic and a call to action--and a blessed relief from all those smiley faces.” ―The Plain Dealer
“Precisely crafted, hard-hitting. . . analysis of the national mass fantasy of wishful thinking ” ―The Dallas Morning News
“Relentless and persuasive. . . In a voice urgent and passionate, Ehrenreich offers us neither extreme [between positive thinking and being a spoilsport] but instead balance: joy, happiness, yes; sadness, anger, yes. She favors life with a clear head, eyes wide open.” ―San Francisco Chronicle
“Ehrenreich reprises her role as Dorothy swishing back the curtain on a great and powerful given.” ―The Oregonian
“A message that deserves to be heard.” ―Jezebel
“Gleefully pops the positive-thinking bubble. . . Amazingly, she'll make you laugh, albeit ruefully, as she presents how society's relentless focus on being upbeat has eroded our ability to ask--and heed--the kind of uncomfortable questions that could have fended off economic disaster.” ―FastCompany.com
“Ehrenreich convinced me completely. . . I hesitate to say anything so positive as that this book will change the way you see absolutely everything; but it just might.” ―Nora Ephron, The Daily Beast
“Ehrenreich delivers a trenchant look into the burgeoning business of positive thinking.” ―Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Bright, incisive, provocative thinking from a top-notch nonfiction writer.” ―Kirkus, starred review
“Wide-ranging and stinging look at the pervasiveness of positive thinking. . .” ―Booklist, starred review
“We're always being told that looking on the bright side is good for us, but now we see that it's a great way to brush off poverty, disease, and unemployment, to rationalize an order where all the rewards go to those on top. The people who are sick or jobless--why, they just aren't thinking positively. They have no one to blame but themselves. Barbara Ehrenreich has put the menace of positive thinking under the microscope. Anyone who's ever been told to brighten up needs to read this book.” ―Thomas Frank, author of The Wrecking Crew and What's the Matter with Kansas?
“Oprah Winfrey, Deepak Chopra, Andrew Weil: please read this relentlessly sensible book. It's never too late to begin thinking clearly.” ―Frederick Crews, author of Follies of the Wise: Dissenting Essays
“Barbara Ehrenreich's skeptical common sense is just what we need to penetrate the cloying fog that passes for happiness in America.” ―Alan Wolfe, author of The Future of Liberalism
“In this hilarious and devastating critique, Barbara Ehrenreich applies some much needed negativity to the zillion-dollar business of positive thinking. This is truly a text for the times.” ―Katha Pollitt, author of The Mind-Body Problem: Poems
“Unless you keep on saying that you believe in fairies, Tinker Bell will check out, and what's more, her sad demise will be your fault! Barbara Ehrenreich scores again for the independent-minded in resisting this drool and all those who wallow in it.” ―Christopher Hitchens, author of God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
“In this hard-hitting but honest appraisal, America's cultural skeptic Barbara Ehrenreich turns her focus on the muddled American phenomenon of positive thinking. She exposes the pseudoscience and pseudointellectual foundation of the positive-thinking movement for what it is: a house of cards. This is a mind-opening read.” ―Michael Shermer, author of Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and Other Confusions of Our Time
“Once again, Barbara Ehrenreich has written an invaluable and timely book, offering a brilliant analysis of the causes and dimensions of our current cultural and economic crises. She shows how deeply positive thinking is embedded in our history and how crippling it is as a habit of mind.” ―Thomas Bender, author of A Nation Among Nations: America's Place in World History
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction
Americans are a "positive" people. This is our reputation as well as our self-image. We smile a lot and are oft en baffled when people from other cultures do not return the favor. In the well-worn stereotype, we are upbeat, cheerful, optimistic, and shallow, while foreigners are likely to be subtle, world-weary, and possibly decadent. American expatriate writers like Henry James and James Baldwin wrestled with and occasionally reinforced this stereotype, which I once encountered in the 1980s in the form of a remark by Soviet émigré poet Joseph Brodsky to the effect that the problem with Americans is that they have "never known suffering." (Apparently he didn’t know who had invented the blues.) Whether we Americans see it as an embarrassment or a point of pride, being positive—in affect, in mood, in outlook—seems to be engrained in our national character.
Who would be churlish or disaffected enough to challenge these happy features of the American personality? Take the business of positive "affect," which refers to the mood we display to others through our smiles, our greetings, our professions of confidence and optimism. Scientists have found that the mere act of smiling can generate positive feelings within us, at least if the smile is not forced. In addition, good feelings, as expressed through our words and smiles, seem to be contagious: "Smile and the world smiles with you." Surely the world would be a better, happier place if we all greeted one another warmly and stopped to coax smiles from babies—if only through the well-known social psychological mechanism of "mood contagion." Recent studies show that happy feelings flit easily through social networks, so that one person’s good fortune can brighten the day even for only distantly connected others.1
Furthermore, psychologists today agree that positive feelings like gratitude, contentment, and self-confidence can actually lengthen our lives and improve our health. Some of these claims are exaggerated, as we shall see, though positive feelings hardly need to be justified, like exercise or vitamin supplements, as part of a healthy lifestyle. People who report having positive feelings are more likely to participate in a rich social life, and vice versa, and social connectedness turns out to be an important defense against depression, which is a known risk factor for many physical illnesses. At the risk of redundancy or even tautology, we can say that on many levels, individual and social, it isgood to be "positive," certainly better than being withdrawn, aggrieved, or chronically sad.
So I take it as a sign of progress that, in just the last decade or so, economists have begun to show an interest in using happiness rather than just the gross national product as a measure of an economy’s success. Happiness is, of course, a slippery thing to measure or define. Philosophers have debated what it is for centuries, and even if we were to define it simply as a greater frequency of positive feelings than negative ones, when we ask people if they are happy we are asking them to arrive at some sort of average over many moods and moments. Maybe I was upset earlier in the day but then was cheered up by a bit of good news, so what am I really? In one well-known psychological experiment, subjects were asked to answer a questionnaire on life satisfaction—but only after they had performed the apparently irrelevant task of photocopying a sheet of paper for the experimenter. For a randomly chosen half of the subjects, a dime had been left for them to find on the copy machine. As two economists summarize the results, "Reported satisfaction with life was raised substantially by the discovery of the coin on the copy machine—clearly not an income effect."2
In addition to the problems of measurement, there are cultural differences in how happiness is regarded and whether it is even seen as a virtue. Some cultures, like our own, value the positive affect that seems to signal internal happiness; others are more impressed by seriousness, self-sacrifice, or a quiet willingness to cooperate. However hard to pin down, though, happiness is somehow a more pertinent metric for well-being, from a humanistic perspective, than the buzz of transactions that constitute the GDP.
Surprisingly, when psychologists undertake to measure the relative happiness of nations, they routinely find that Americans are not, even in prosperous times and despite our vaunted positivity, very happy at all. A recent meta-analysis of over a hundred studies of self-reported happiness worldwide found Americans ranking only twenty-third, surpassed by the Dutch, the Danes, the Malaysians, the Bahamians, the Austrians, and even the supposedly dour Finns.3 In another potential sign of relative distress, Americans account for two-thirds of the global market for antidepressants, which happen also to be the most commonly prescribed drugs in the United States. To my knowledge, no one knows how antidepressant use affects people’s responses to happiness surveys: do respondents report being happy because the drugs make them feel happy or do they report being unhappy because they know they are dependent on drugs to make them feel better? Without our heavy use of antidepressants, Americans would likely rank far lower in the happiness rankings than we currently do.
When economists attempt to rank nations more objectively in terms of "well-being," taking into account such factors as health, environmental sustainability, and the possibility of upward mobility, the United States does even more poorly than it does when only the subjective state of "happiness" is measured. The Happy Planet Index, to give just one example, locates us at 150th among the world’s nations.4
How can we be so surpassingly "positive" in self-image and stereotype without being the world’s happiest and best-off people? The answer, I think, is that positivity is not so much our condition or our mood as it is part of our ideology—the way we explain the world and think we ought to function within it. That ideology is "positive thinking," by which we usually mean two things. One is the generic content of positive thinking—that is, the positive thought itself—which can be summarized as: Things are pretty good right now, at least if you are willing to see silver linings, make lemonade out of lemons, etc., and things are going to get a whole lot better. This is optimism, and it is not the same as hope. Hope is an emotion, a yearning, the experience of which is not entirely within our control. Optimism is a cognitive stance, a conscious expectation, which presumably anyone can develop through practice.
The second thing we mean by "positive thinking" is this practice, or discipline, of trying to think in a positive way. There is, we are told, a practical reason for undertaking this effort: positive thinking supposedly not only makes us feel optimistic but actually makes happy outcomes more likely. If you expect things to get better, they will. How can the mere process of thinking do this? In the rational explanation that many psychologists would offer today, optimism improves health, personal efficacy, confidence, and resilience, making it easier for us to accomplish our goals. A far less rational theory also runs rampant in American ideology—the idea that our thoughts can, in some mysterious way, directly affect the physical world. Negative thoughts somehow produce negative outcomes, while positive thoughts realize themselves in the form of health, prosperity, and success. For both rational and mystical reasons, then, the effort of positive thinking is said to be well worth our time and attention, whether this means reading the relevant books, attending seminars and speeches that offer the appropriate mental training, or just doing the solitary work of concentration on desired outcomes—a better job, an attractive mate, world peace.
There is an anxiety, as you can see, right here in the heart of American positive thinking. If the generic "positive thought" is correct and things are really getting better, if the arc of the universe tends toward happiness and abundance, then why bother with the mental effort of positive thinking? Obviously, because we do not fully believe that things will get better on their own. The practice of positive thinking is an effort to pump up this belief in the face of much contradictory evidence. Those who set themselves up as instructors in the discipline of positive thinking— coaches, preachers, and gurus of various sorts—have described this effort with terms like "self-hypnosis," "mind control," and "thought control." In other words, it requires deliberate self-deception, including a constant effort to repress or block out unpleasant possibilities and "negative" thoughts. The truly self-confident, or those who have in some way made their peace with the world and their destiny within it, do not need to expend effort censoring or otherwise controlling their thoughts. Positive thinking may be a quintessentially American activity, associated in our minds with both individual and national success, but it is driven by a terrible insecurity.
Americans did not start out as positive thinkers— at least the promotion of unwarranted optimism and methods to achieve it did not really find articulation and organized form until several de cades after the founding of the republic. In the Declaration of Independence, the founding fathers pledged to one another "our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor." They knew that they had no certainty of winning a war for independence and that they were taking a mortal risk. Just the act of signing the declaration made them all traitors to the crown, and treason was a crime punishable by execution. Many of them did go on to lose their lives, loved ones, and fortunes in the war. The point is, they fought anyway. There is a vast difference between positive thinking and existential courage.
Systematic positive thinking began, in the nineteenth century, among a diverse and fascinating collection of philosophers, mystics, lay healers, and middle-class women. By the twentieth century, though, it had gone mainstream, gaining purchase within such powerful belief systems as nationalism and also doing its best to make itself indispensable to capitalism. We don’t usually talk about American nationalism, but it is a mark of how deep it runs that we apply the word "nationalism" to Serbs, Russians, and others, while believing ourselves to possess a uniquely superior version called "patriotism." A central tenet of American nationalism has been the belief that the United States is "the greatest nation on earth"—more dynamic, democratic, and prosperous than any other nation, as well as technologically superior. Major religious leaders, especially on the Christian right, buttress this conceit with the notion that Americans are God’s chosen people and that America is the designated leader of the world—an idea that seemed to find vivid reinforcement in the fall of Communism and our emergence as the world’s "lone superpower." That acute British observer Godfrey Hodgson has written that the American sense of exceptionalism, which once was "idealistic and generous, if somewhat solipsistic," has become "harder, more hubristic." Paul Krugman responded to the prevailing smugness in a 1998 essay entitled "American the Boastful," warning that "if pride goeth before a fall, the United States has one heck of a come-uppance in store."5
But of course it takes the effort of positive thinking to imagine that America is the "best" or the "greatest." Militarily, yes, we are the mightiest nation on earth. But on many other fronts, the American score is dismal, and was dismal even before the economic downturn that began in 2007. Our children routinely turn out to be more ignorant of basic subjects like math and geography than their counterparts in other industrialized nations. They are also more likely to die in infancy or grow up in poverty. Almost everyone acknowledges that our health care system is "broken" and our physical infrastructure crumbling. We have lost so much of our edge in science and technology that American companies have even begun to outsource their research and development efforts. Worse, some of the measures by which we do lead the world should inspire embarrassment rather than pride: We have the highest percentage of our population incarcerated, and the greatest level of inequality in wealth and income. We are plagued by gun violence and racked by personal debt.
While positive thinking has reinforced and found reinforcement in American national pride, it has also entered into a kind of symbiotic relationship with American capitalism. There is no natural, innate affinity between capitalism and positive thinking. In fact, one of the classics of sociology, Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, makes a still impressive case for capitalism’s roots in the grim and punitive outlook of Calvinist Protestantism, which required people to defer gratification and resist all pleasurable temptations in favor of hard work and the accumulation of wealth.
But if early capitalism was inhospitable to positive thinking, "late" capitalism, or consumer capitalism, is far more congenial, depending as it does on the individual’s hunger formore and the firm’s imperative of growth. The consumer culture encourages individuals to want more—cars, larger homes, television sets, cell phones, gadgets of all kinds—and positive thinking is ready at hand to tell them they deserve more and can have it if they really want it and are willing to make the effort to get it. Meanwhile, in a competitive business world, the companies that manufacture these goods and provide the paychecks that purchase them have no alternative but to grow. If you don’t steadily increase market share and profits, you risk being driven out of business or swallowed by a larger enterprise. Perpetual growth, whether of a particular company or an entire economy, is of course an absurdity, but positive thinking makes it seem possible, if not ordained.
In addition, positive thinking has made itself useful as an apology for the crueler aspects of the market economy. If optimism is the key to material success, and if you can achieve an optimistic outlook through the discipline of positive thinking, then there is no excuse for failure. The flip side of positivity is thus a harsh insistence on personal responsibility: if your business fails or your job is eliminated, it must because you didn’t try hard enough, didn’t believe firmly enough in the inevitability of your success. As the economy has brought more layoffs and financial turbulence to the middle class, the promoters of positive thinking have increasingly emphasized this negative judgment: to be disappointed, resentful, or downcast is to be a "victim" and a "whiner."
But positive thinking is not only a water carrier for the business world, excusing its excesses and masking its follies. The promotion of positive thinking has become a minor industry in its own right, producing an endless flow of books, DVDs, and other products; providing employment for tens of thousands of "life coaches," "executive coaches," and motivational speakers, as well as for the growing cadre of professional psychologists who seek to train them. No doubt the growing financial insecurity of the middle class contributes to the demand for these products and services, but I hesitate to attribute the commercial success of positive thinking to any particular economic trend or twist of the business cycle. America has historically offered space for all sorts of sects, cults, faith healers, and purveyors of snake oil, and those that are profitable, like positive thinking, tend to flourish.
At the turn of the twenty-first century, American optimism seemed to reach a manic crescendo. In his final State of Union address in 2000, Bill Clinton struck a triumphal note, proclaiming that "never before has our nation enjoyed, at once, so much prosperity and social progress with so little internal crisis and so few external threats." But compared with his successor, Clinton seemed almost morose. George W. Bush had been a cheerleader in prep school, and cheerleading— a distinctly American innovation— could be considered the athletically inclined ancestor of so much of the coaching and "motivating" that has gone into the propagation of positive thinking. He took the presidency as an opportunity to continue in that line of work, defining his job as that of inspiring confidence, dispelling doubts, and pumping up the national spirit of self-congratulation. If he repeatedly laid claim to a single adjective, it was "optimistic." On the occasion of his sixtieth birthday, he told reporters he was "optimistic" about a variety of foreign policy challenges, offering as an overview, "I’m optimistic that all problems will be solved." Nor did he brook any doubts or hesitations among his close advisers. According to Bob Woodward, Condoleezza Rice failed to express some of her worries because, she said, "the president almost demanded optimism. He didn’t like pessimism, hand-wringing or doubt." 6
Then things began to go wrong, which is not in itself unusual but was a possibility excluded by America’s official belief that things are good and getting better. There was the dot-com bust that began a few months after Clinton’s declaration of unprecedented prosperity in his final State of the Union address, then the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001. Furthermore, things began to go wrong in a way that suggested that positive thinking might not guarantee success after all, that it might in fact dim our ability to fend off real threats. In her remarkable book, Never Saw It Coming: Cultural Challenges to Envisioning the Worst, sociologist Karen Cerulo recounts a number of ways that the habit of positive thinking, or what she calls optimistic bias, undermined preparedness and invited disaster. She quotes Newsweek reporters Michael Hirsch and Michael Isikoff, for example, in their conclusion that "a whole summer of missed clues, taken together, seemed to presage the terrible September of 2001."7 There had already been a terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in 1993; there were ample warnings, in the summer of 2001, about a possible attack by airplane, and flight schools reported suspicious students like the one who wanted to learn how to "fl y a plane but didn’t care about landing and takeoff ." The fact that no one—the FBI, the INS, Bush, or Rice—heeded these disturbing cues was later attributed to a "failure of imagination." But actually there was plenty of imagination at work—imagining an invulnerable nation and an ever-booming economy—there was simply no ability or inclination to imagine the worst.
A similar reckless optimism pervaded the American invasion of Iraq. Warnings about possible Iraqi resistance were swept aside by leaders who promised a "cakewalk" and envisioned cheering locals greeting our troops with flowers. Likewise, Hurricane Katrina was not exactly an unanticipated disaster. In 2002, the New Orleans Times- Picayune ran a Pulitzer Prize–winning series warning that the city’s levees could not protect it against the storm surge brought on by a category 4 or 5 hurricane. In 2001,Scientific American had issued a similar warning about the city’s vulnerability.8 Even when the hurricane struck and levees broke, no alarm bells went off in Washington, and when a New Orleans FEMA official sent a panicky e-mail to FEMA director Michael Brown, alerting him to the rising number of deaths and a shortage of food in the drowning city, he was told that Brown would need an hour to eat his dinner in a Baton Rouge restaurant.9 Criminal negligence or another "failure of imagination"? The truth is that Americans had been working hard for decades to school themselves in the techniques of positive thinking, and these included the reflexive capacity for dismissing disturbing news.
The biggest "come-uppance," to use Krugman’s term, has so far been the financial meltdown of 2007 and the ensuing economic crisis. By the late first decade of the twenty-first century, as we shall see in the chapters that follow, positive thinking had become ubiquitous and virtually unchallenged in American culture. It was promoted on some of the most widely watched talk shows, likeLarry King Live and the Oprah Winfrey Show; it was the stuff of runaway best sellers like the 2006 bookThe Secret; it had been adopted as the theology of America’s most successful evangelical preachers; it found a place in medicine as a potential adjuvant to the treatment of almost any disease. It had even penetrated the academy in the form of the new discipline of "positive psychology," offering courses teaching students to pump up their optimism and nurture their positive feelings. And its reach was growing global, first in the Anglophone countries and soon in the rising economies of China, South Korea, and India.
But nowhere did it find a warmer welcome than in American business, which is, of course, also global business. To the extent that positive thinking had become a business itself, business was its principal client, eagerly consuming the good news that all things are possible through an effort of mind. This was a useful message for employees, who by the turn of the twenty-first century were being required to work longer hours for fewer benefits and diminishing job security. But it was also a liberating ideology for top-level executives. What was the point in agonizing over balance sheets and tedious analyses of risks—and why bother worrying about dizzying levels of debt and exposure to potential defaults—when all good things come to those who are optimistic enough to expect them?
I do not write this in a spirit of sourness or personal disappointment of any kind, nor do I have any romantic attachment to suffering as a source of insight or virtue. On the contrary, I would like to see more smiles, more laughter, more hugs, more happiness and, better yet, joy. In my own vision of utopia, there is not only more comfort, and security for everyone— better jobs, health care, and so forth—there are also more parties, festivities, and opportunities for dancing in the streets. Once our basic material needs are met—in my utopia, anyway—life becomes a perpetual celebration in which everyone has a talent to contribute. But we cannot levitate ourselves into that blessed condition by wishing it. We need to brace ourselves for a struggle against terrifying obstacles, both of our own making and imposed by the natural world. And the first step is to recover from the mass delusion that is positive thinking.
Product details
- Publisher : Picador; First Edition (August 3, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0312658850
- ISBN-13 : 978-0312658854
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.65 x 8.2 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #731,005 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #551 in Customs & Traditions Social Sciences
- #2,428 in Cultural Anthropology (Books)
- #17,608 in Psychology & Counseling
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

BARBARA EHRENREICH is the author of fourteen books, including the bestselling Nickel and Dimed and Bait and Switch. She lives in Virginia, USA.
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Customers find the book thought-provoking and insightful, with excellent research and readability that reads like a research paper. The writing style is brilliant, and they appreciate the author's acerbic wit. The book receives positive feedback for its quality, with one customer describing it as a gifted non-fiction writer's work, and another noting its irresistibly sunny cover design. While customers appreciate the book's approach to cancer awareness, some mention it focuses heavily on this topic.
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Customers find the book thought-provoking and insightful, with excellent research and an interesting perspective on positive thinking.
"...So, imagine my joy in reading a book, a well-researched, thoughtful one at that, which not only agrees with me (don't we all love being agreed with!)..." Read more
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Customers find the book readable, describing it as a great and fun read that reads like a research paper and is refreshingly honest.
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Customers enjoy the book's humor, particularly its acerbic wit, with one customer noting that the light prose is engaging.
"...And she is back again with her classic wit, dystopian x-ray vision and precise sense of what is going wrong with America...." Read more
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"...However, I feel like what she got out of cancer was two books. Point well taken, but for me I found none of the hospital professionals forcing me to..." Read more
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Customers find the book spot-on.
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"While the chapter "God wants you to be happy" I felt was pretty spot on, the balance of the book kept bringing to mind a quote by the Dude..." Read more
Customers appreciate the author's quality, with one describing them as a gifted non-fiction writer who starts the book promisingly.
"...These fine books, by fine authors, continue to give a strong voice to the voiceless. Highly recommended. "..." Read more
"...The author starts this book promisingly, with a number of examples of dangerous positive thinking, instances where just hoping something bad won't..." Read more
"...I reread occasionally just to remind myself how a truly gifted non-fiction writer, writes." Read more
Customers like the book's cover, with one describing it as irresistibly sunny.
"Bright-Sided, with its irresistibly sunny cover, is an almost perfect antidote for those of us who can no longer tolerate panoplies of pink ribbons,..." Read more
"Bright-sided..." Read more
"Bright-Sided..." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's focus on cancer, with several noting that it primarily discusses this topic.
"Bright-Sided, with its irresistibly sunny cover, is an almost perfect antidote for those of us who can no longer tolerate panoplies of pink ribbons,..." Read more
"...Cancer is not a gift, it's not sexy, it's not spiritual. Cancer doesn't make you better, more self-aware or more enlightened...." Read more
"...It's good medicine for any of us who've ever listened to a Tony Robbins CD or blamed ourselves for causing some personal misfortune..." Read more
"...Excelent premise but so far, there's been WAY to much Cancer talk and I just can't "get into it" If you buy thre book solely on what you think the..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2016Ah.. at last... a member of my tribe!
What's wrong with being sad and depressed when sick and suffering; horrified by the bombing of innocents; furious with inequality, racism, misogyny, ageism; outraged by corporate malfeasance and immunity? A little pessimism and skepticism is damn useful.
I suspect I'm in the minority when I say I don't believe having a positive, cheerful outlook will cure cancer. In fact, I don't think cancer, or any other illness, gives a fart if I'm chipper, whereas if I take it seriously and realistically, rather than being determinedly, insistently, optimistic as to the outcome, then although I may be bloody miserable, at least I'll be doing whatever it takes to improve my health. Oprah would probably disagree. She, and so many others in the Positive Thinking camp, would probably tell me I had brought the damn disease on myself due to negative thinking and that my negative thinking would be the death of me, literally.
Similarly, I believe no amount of 'visualizing' will 'manifest' my material desires. In other words, I won't get a Pulitzer by visualizing myself accepting it. I think the book THE SECRET is a dangerous fraud, although not a new one. Its bulls*** has been around since before Norman Vincent Peale.
And so on.
So, imagine my joy in reading a book, a well-researched, thoughtful one at that, which not only agrees with me (don't we all love being agreed with!), but one that also provides a history of where this idiotic belief system came from in the first place. And where did it come from? Ehrenreich tells us it comes from "New Thought" the 19th c. reaction to the more dour and punitive practices of Calvinism, which over time mutated into something just as useless and damaging. I didn't know that, but it makes perfect sense. These things are never new, they just slink around for years, shapeshifting as they go.
When she turns her gaze to the medical community, Ehrenreich knows what's she's talking about, having experienced cancer herself, and damn near choked to death on all the pink ribboned positivity everyone insisted she have, and the marketing of products like pink teddy bears and pink lipstick and pink everything that, she believes, serve more to infantilize women than empower them. Wouldn't you, she asks, rather have a skeptical, even pessimistic doctor who was going to explore ever treatment possible, do every test possible, rather than the positive-thinker who says, "oh, it's probably just a shadow on the x-ray. Meditate a bit. That'll do the trick."
She looks at the motivational gurus hawking their dubious wares; the corporations bullying their employees into faux positivity, to the detriment of both the employees and the bottom line; and the quacks claiming cheerfulness can improve the immune system and, as I said above, cure disease (research on the subject is laughably feeble and discounted). She takes us inside the mega-churches of abundance -- Joel Ornsteen and the ilk -- and doesn't hesitate to show us the little man behind the bedazzled curtain. She points a damning finger at how such 'Christian' churches are entirely concerned with materialism, in utter contradiction to the teachings of Christ. It reads like some bizarre heretical cult.
One of the most important sections for me had to do with the economic consequences of positive thinking, and how it contributed to the collapse of the Ponzi scheme the mortgage industry had become and the resultant economic meltdown. An eye-opener and must read.
Reading this wonderful book reminded me -- I met a man some years ago, a plumber and victim of the economic catastrophe, whose house was in foreclosure. He told me he wasn't worried because he was putting out great energy into the world and would soon -- he had no doubt -- be raking in cash as a motivational speaker to corporate executives. I suggested no amount of positive thinking would pay his back mortgage, and shouldn't he start working as a plumber again, a field in which he could make pretty good money, and renegotiate with his bank? He wouldn't be dissuaded and insisted he was plugged into the abundance of the universe. Well, okay, then. Of course he lost his house and, I'm sad to say, disappeared on down the road where he was sure he would find his pot of gold waiting.
The positive thinking camp would say he simply wasn't visualizing properly, that some wee dark pocket of negativity was holding him back from his best life. Ehrenreich would suggest his problem was the unreality inherent in ruthless optimism, because it kept his delusions intact and chasing after a sparkly carrot that not only would he never catch, but doesn't exist.
To be clear, Ehrenreich isn't extolling depressive, morbid crankiness and pessimism, just a dose of reality. Such reality might just help you get out of town before the pitchfork-waving mob arrives and get into the cellar before the tornado blows your roof off.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2012There is deep wisdom in the Ecclesiastes poetry about a season for everything: a time to be born, a time to die, a time to plant and a time to reap. Included is a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance. The nurturing realism in this wisdom is that life will always have both enjoyable and disagreeable aspects. The most wholesome way to relate to this fact of life is to say an overall "Yes" to it, to grieve wholeheartedly and to play robustly. To be a stoic with a stiff upper lip or a Pollyanna with a permanent smile is to pretend.
I imagine we all long to be simply real, to fully and courageously experience life without pretense. However, as Ehrenreich demonstrates, the culture of the U.S. of A. has developed a rebellion against life as it is and a pretense that we can make it more to our liking. Regrettably, like any addiction to unreality, this habit has had, and is having devastating effects. Ehrenreich first saw this pattern when she dealt with breast cancer. The attitude of many sufferers and healers of breast cancer is that positive thinking will heal you -- to the degree that those who have cancer are sometimes blamed or blame themselves for having cancer or for not getting better. Because of some forms of positive thinking we avoid noticing that something is wrong in the environment; otherwise so many of us wouldn't be getting cancer.
Exploring the roots of this pattern of positive thinking, Eharenreich discovers in our history an attempt to break from the hellfire Puritanism of Calvin. The most popular forms were Mary Baker Eddy's Christian Science and Norman Vincent Peale's Power of Positive Thinking. The modern version is, The Secret, by Rhonda Byrne, and the belief that we create our own reality. Positive Psychology has come up with the (pseudo) Science of Happiness. Mega-church evangelists convince thousands that "God wants you to be rich." The motivation business with its use of positive thinking is rampant in corporations. Ehrenreich's interviews with those involved in the real estate crash revealed that anyone who wanted to insert realism into the discussion was either shamed or fired. In her words, "The near unanimous optimism of the experts certainly contributed to the reckless buildup of bad debt and dodgy loans, but so did the wildly upbeat outlook of many ordinary Americans."
Certainly it is good to be open to the positive, to say an overall "Yes" to life, do what you can, give of your best. That's different than trying to control things you cannot control, such as your feelings or final outcomes. In addition to encouraging people to live a fake, delusory life, the promotion of positive thinking in the U.S. encourages an already deep, unhelpful pattern of individualism. Moreover, if people think they are making everything happen by their thoughts, they don't notice, much less challenge, the injustice in the workplace, the destruction of the environment, and the poor decisions made in governmental bodies -- things we might get together and do something to change.
Top reviews from other countries
- LorraineReviewed in Canada on November 20, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!
Barbara Ehrenreich never disappoints. Intelligently written, relevant information. Always enjoyable reading her work.
- AtomicBenReviewed in Canada on January 11, 2016
4.0 out of 5 stars Forget positive thinking. It's garbage.
I am so sick and tired of positive thinking. It's ridiculous. i was hoping this book would give me a bunch of valid arguments against this scourge. This book provided a different perspective. It demonstrates how positive thinking can actually hurt other people or at the very least prevent you from truly empathizing with people having a tough time.
When your friend has cancer and you say things like "my thoughts and prayers are with you" instead of "Hey, how are you? Tell me about how you're feeling? What are you thinking?" you're kinda just telling them you don't want to hear it and that they should just shut up and be positive. Such a shame.
- Victor SmartReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 16, 2009
4.0 out of 5 stars Reasons to be cheerful, but sceptical
Ever bought a self-help book that didn't deliver what it promised? Then Bright-sided is for you. This is a forensic diagnosis of why boundless positive thinking turns our minds to mush, deracinates managers, and helps make us willing believers in economic bubbles.
Ehrenreich has several distinct strands to her book. She kicks off with her experience at the age of about sixty when diagnosed with breast cancer. To her amazement she stumbled across on an entire industry in the US devoted to presenting the disease as little short of the best thing that could ever happen to a woman.
Other chapters analyse how the school of mindless optimism was born with Mary Baker Eddy, fed the subprime scandal and has come to infect mainstream corporate management thinking. Anyone who has sat through a toe-curling session by a motivational speaker at a company off-site will chuckle in recognition.
Ehrenreich has evidently survived her brush with cancer without resorting to a whacky, manic outlook. And her book is far from down at the mouth. It is a good read, sceptical but sane, probing yet witty. There are especially amusing interviews with "positive thinking" gurus at various stages of derangement.
One gap is that she does not discuss cognitive behaviour therapy. This is successful in treating depression by eliminating negative thoughts that tend to reinforce themselves - at least the National Health Service, which now stumps up for the treatment, believes so.
In short, this is a book for grown-ups baffled by the credulity of others, and perhaps their own. A life-changing book? No, but its explanation of how fads have entered the mainstream will certainly generate a wry smile.
- dan hunterReviewed in Canada on April 4, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Praise!
- LowlanderReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 20, 2018
3.0 out of 5 stars Three Stars
OK.