8 Negative Attitudes of Chronically Unhappy People

All of us experience negative thoughts from time to time. How we manage our negative attitudes can make the difference between confidence versus fear, hope versus despair, mastery versus victimhood, and victory versus defeat.


1.    Self-Defeating Talk

Self-defeating talk are messages we send to ourselves which reduce our confidence, diminish our performance, lower our potential, and ultimately sabotage our success. Common self-defeating talk includes sentence beginnings such as:
“I can’t…”
“I’m not good enough…”
“I’m not confident …”
“I don’t have what it takes…”
“I’m going to fail…”
Would you like it if a friend tells you repeatedly that “you can’t succeed,” “you’re not good enough,” “you lack confidence,” “you don’t have what it takes,” or “you’re going to fail?” Would you consider this person a real friend? If not, why would you want to talk or think this way to yourself? Engaging in habitual self-defeating talk is like having a false friend who puts you down all day long. You become your worst enemy and detractor.    

2.    Negative Assumptions

A prevailing form of negative thinking is to take stock of a situation or an interaction, and presume the negative. For many people, this “looking at the glass half empty” attitude is habitual and automatic. One might look at a crowded commute, a rainy day, or paying the bills as automatic negative experiences.
Of course, there’s nothing inherently positive or negative about traffic, weather, or bill paying. As the saying goes, “it is what it is.” It’s the way you choose to relate to your circumstances that makes the experience positive or negative. This choice can instantly make you stronger or weaker, happier or gloomier, empowered or victimized. Given the same situations, one might look at a crowded commute as a chance to listen to relaxing music or practice mindful breathing; a rainy day as an occasion to curl up at home with hot cocoa and a good book; or bill paying as an opportunity to practice the “pay yourself first” wealth building strategy. It’s all in how you choose to relate to the moment.      

3.    Negative Comparison with Others

One of the easiest and most common ways to feel bad about oneself is to compare yourself unfavorably to others. We may be tempted to compare ourselves with those who have more accomplishments, seem more attractive, make more money, or boast more Face book friends.
When you find yourself wishing to have what someone else has and feel jealous, inferior or inadequate as the result, you’re having a negative social comparison moment.
Research indicates that habitual negative social comparisons can cause a person to experience greater stress, anxiety, depression, and make self-defeating choices.      

4.    Negative Rumination about the Past

We should learn from the past, but not be stuck in it. Sometimes life circumstances and personal setbacks can haunt and prevent us from seeing our true potential and recognizing new opportunities. What has already happened we cannot change, but what is yet to happen we can shape and influence. At times the first step is simply to break from the past and declare that it is you, not your history, who’s in charge. Goethe reminds us: “Nothing is worth more than this day.” Don’t dwell on the past. Make better choices today and move on.
“Abraham Lincoln lost eight elections failed twice in business and suffered a nervous breakdown before he became the president of the United States.”
— Wall Street Journal

5.    Dis-empowering Beliefs about Difficult People

Most of us encounter difficult people in our lives. In the face of such challenging individuals, it’s tempting to believe that they are the perpetrators and we are the victims, or that they hold the power with their challenging behavior. Such attitudes, even if justified, are reactive and thus self-weakening.
The key to changing your dis-empowering beliefs about difficult people is to shift from being reactive to proactive. Whether you’re dealing with a narcissist, a passive-aggressive, a manipulator, or an intimidating and controlling oppressor, there are many skills and strategies you can utilize to stay on top of the situation.

6.    The Desire to Blame

Blame can be defined as holding others responsible for our misfortunes. Some people cast their dysfunctional parents, negative relationships, socio-economic disadvantages, health challenges, or other life hardships as the reason for their unhappiness and lack of success.
While it’s certainly true that life presents many difficulties, and undeniable the pain and suffering they often cause, to blame others as the reason for one’s unhappiness is to cast oneself in the role of the victim.
There are illusory advantages to victimhood, as finger-pointing provides convenient justification for life’s unsatisfactory conditions, and sheds the work necessary to take complete charge of one’s own life and well-being.
However, habitual blaming over time perpetuates bitterness, resentment, and powerlessness, as the victim suffers from what H.D. Thoreau calls “quiet desperation.”
Often, those who are the target of your blame have little idea (or could care less) about how you really feel. You only hurt yourself by being a prisoner of your own bitterness and resentment. Your feelings may be justified, but they will not help you become happy, healthy, and successful. Ultimately, isn’t that what you really want?
"When we blame, we give away our power."
—   Greg Anderson

7.    The Struggle to Forgive Yourself

All of us make mistakes in life. When you look back at your past deeds, perhaps there were decisions and actions you regret. There may have been unfortunate errors in judgment. You may have caused harm to yourself and/or others.
As you recall these past events, there may be an accompanying sense of self-blame at the blunders made, damage done, or opportunities missed. You might think of yourself as a “bad” or “flawed” person and wallow in guilt. During these moments, it’s extremely important to be compassionate with yourself, knowing that now that you’re more aware, you have a chance to avoid repeating past mistakes, and to make a positive difference with yourself and others.
“Forgive yourself. Everyone makes mistakes — and mistakes aren't permanent reflections on you as a person. They're isolated moments in time. Tell yourself, "I made a mistake, but that doesn't make me a bad person."
—   Mayo Clinic

8.    The Fear of Failure and Making Mistakes

The fear of failure and making mistakes are often associated with perfectionism (at least in certain areas of your life). You may think that you’re not good enough in some ways, thereby placing tremendous pressure on yourself to succeed.
While setting high standards can serve as an effective motivational tool, expecting yourself to be perfect takes the joy out of life, and can actually limit your greatest potential for success. Multiple studies have shown the correlation between perfectionism and unhappiness. Try as we might, it simply isn’t human to be perfect, and certainly not all of the time.
“Given the desire to be valued and appreciated, it’s tempting to try to appear to be perfect, but the costs of such deceptions are high…How can you like yourself when you don’t measure up to the way you ought to be?”

A Positive Attitude Leads to Success and Happiness.


A positive attitude helps you cope more easily with the daily affairs of life. It brings optimism into your life, and makes it easier to avoid worries and negative thinking. If you adopt it as a way of life, it would bring constructive changes into your life, and makes them happier, brighter and more successful.
With a positive attitude you see the bright side of life, become optimistic, and expect the best to happen. It is certainly a state of mind that is well worth developing.

Positive attitude manifests in the following ways:
·         Positive thinking.
·         Constructive thinking.
·         Creative thinking.
·         Optimism.
·         Motivation and energy to do things and accomplish goals.
·         An attitude of happiness.

A positive frame of mind can help you in many ways, such as:
·         Expecting success and not failure.
·         Making you feel inspired.
·         It gives you the strength not to give up, if you encounter obstacles on your way.
·         It makes you look at failure and problems as blessings in disguise.
·         Believing in yourself and in your abilities.
·         Enables you to show self-esteem and confidence.
·         You look for solutions, instead of dwelling on problems.
·         You see and recognize opportunities.

A positive attitude leads to happiness and success and can change your whole life. If you look at the bright side of life, your whole life becomes filled with light. This light affects not only you and the way you look at the world, but it also affects your environment and the people around you.
If this attitude is strong enough, it becomes contagious. It's as if you radiate light around you.

More Benefits of a Positive Attitude:
This might seem like a repetition of the above, but it helps to make this message clearer.
·         It helps you achieve goals and attain success.
·         It brings more happiness into your life.
·         It produces more energy.
·         Positive attitude increases your faith in your abilities, and brings hope for a brighter future.
·         You become able to inspire and motivate yourself and others.
·         You encounter fewer obstacles and difficulties in your daily life.
·         You get more respect and love from people.
·         Life smiles at you.

Negative attitude says: you cannot achieve success.

Positive attitude says: You can achieve success.

If you have been exhibiting a negative attitude and expecting failure and difficulties, it is now the time to change the way you think. It is the time to get rid of negative thoughts and behavior, and start leading a happier and more successful life. If you tried to do so in the past and failed, it only means that you have not tried enough.

Simple Tips for Developing a Positive Attitude:
1.   Choose to be happy. Yes, it is a matter of choice. When negative thoughts enter your mind, just refuse to look at them, doing your best to substitute them with happy thoughts
2.   Look at the bright side of life. It's a matter of choice and repeated attempts.
3.   Choose to be optimistic.
4.   Find reasons to smile more often. You can find such reasons, if you search for them.
5.   Have faith in yourself, and believe that the Universe can help you.
6.   Associate yourself with happy people.
7.   Read inspiring stories.
8.   Read inspiring quotes.
9.   Repeat affirmations that inspire and motivate you.
10.  Visualize only what you want to happen, not what you don't want.
11.  Learn to master your thoughts

Following even only one of the above suggestions, will bring more light into your life!

The Challenge: Having a negative attitude keeps us from being happy and impacts the people we interact with.
The Science: Science tells us that having a positive attitude has a direct connection with happiness and success.
The Solution: Make positivity a habit by making these small adjustments to your daily life and mindset!

New vaccine protects against nine types of HPV

    A recent study showed a new vaccine protects against nine type of HPV infection. Photo by Adam Gregor/Shutterstock

Researchers at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute found that an improved vaccine is able to protect against nine types of HPV.

The human papillomavirus, or HPV, is a very common sexually transmitted disease that causes genital and anal warts and is a significant risk factor for cervical cancer.
Cervical cancer is the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, with nearly 300,000 deaths each year. More than 80 percent of these deaths happen in developing countries.

There are more than 100 types of HPV, however, only 13 types are associated with cancer development, with HPV 16 and 18 estimated to cause the majority of cervical cancers at 70 percent.

There are two existing HPV vaccines, Cervarix and Gardasil, that are effective at preventing infection from HPV 16 and 18. Gardasil can also protect against HPV 6 and 11. But both Cervarix and Gardasil do not protect against all types of HPV.

Researchers found that the newest HPV vaccine, 9vHPV, is highly effective at preventing HPV infection and protects against HPV 16, 18, 6, 11 and another five types of HPV: 31, 33, 45, 52 and 58. The 9vHPV vaccine or Gardasil was randomized on 14,215 women age 16 to 26.

The study, published Tuesday in The Lancet, found that 9vHPV has long-term effectiveness against HPV and reduced the risk of developing HPV 31, 33, 45, 52 and 58 by 97.7 percent compared to Gardasil.

"Based on epidemiological studies, the 9vHPV vaccine could prevent approximately 90 percent of cervical cancer, 90 percent of HPV-related vulvar and vaginal cancer, 70 to 85 percent of high-grade cervical disease in females, and approximately 90 percent of HPV-related anal cancer and genital warts in males and females worldwide," Anna R. Giuliano, director of the Center for Infection Research in Cancer at Moffitt, said in a news release.

Senate committee to interview Trump Jr. behind closed doors

Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee will privately interview Donald Trump, Jr., Thursday -- and are expected to ask about his meeting with a Russian lawyer in New York City during last year's presidential campaign.

Senators had sought to interview the president's son publicly in July but he instead offered to be privately interviewed and provide documents
"We look forward to a professional and productive meeting and appreciate the opportunity to assist the committee," Trump, Jr.'s attorney, Alan S. Futerfas, said in a statement.

Last week, Judiciary Committee Chair Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and ranking Democrat Dianne Feinstein of California issued a joint statement confirming the interview with the president's eldest son was imminent.

Trump, Jr., has acknowledged he met with a Russian lawyer -- who he said had damaging information about Democrat Hillary Clinton that could help his father's presidential campaign. He released emails this summer that showed it was "part of Russia and its government's support for [President Donald] Trump."
Donald Trump, Jr., will be privately interviewed by the Senate Judiciary Committee investigators on Thursday. 

Also attending the meeting were Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, now a senior adviser to the president, and then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

Kushner and Manafort have already been interviewed by the Senate Committee on Intelligence.

The Senate and House intelligence committees are investigating Russian election meddling and any ties to Trump's campaign, but the judiciary panel wants to investigate whether any federal criminal statutes that ban solicitation from foreign nationals were violated.

Feinstein told reporters Wednesday the committee staff will conduct the interview, and a public hearing will be conducted later. Feinstein said she doesn't plan to attend the interview.

Other committee members, including Democrats Dick Durbin of Illinois and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, said they plan to attend.

"There are penalties if he lies, and he presumably is aware that he is testifying with very severe penalties if he fails to tell the truth, so we presume he will," Blumenthal told reporters.

15 states file lawsuit against Trump administration over DACA repeal

    Congressional leaders from the Democratic Party have spoken out against the Trump administration's announcement to     discontinue the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/

Attorneys general from 15 U.S. states filed a lawsuit Wednesday to block the Trump administration's planned termination of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Democratic attorneys general filed the suit Wednesday in retaliation to the administration's announcement a day earlier that it would end the program created by former President Barack Obama, unless Congress provided a legislative fix by March 2018.

President Donald Trump tweeted Thursday morning, "For all of those (DACA) that are concerned about your status during the 6 month period, you have nothing to worry about - No action!"

But if the program is phased out, more than 800,000 people currently working and studying in the U.S. under the Obama-era initiative could be deported.

Among those suing, Washington attorney general Bob Ferguson claimed that getting rid of the program would violate the due process of rights of those who disclosed personal information to enroll in the DACA program.

"It's outrageous, it's not right. As attorney general for the state of Washington, I have a hammer - it's the law," Ferguson said.

The lawsuit claims that the end of the program would ultimately have severe financial and social consequences for states.

"Rescinding DACA will cause harm to hundreds of thousands of the States' residents, injure State-run colleges and universities, upset the States' workplaces, damage the States' economies, hurt State-based companies, and disrupt the States' statutory and regulatory interests," the attorneys general wrote in the suit.

The plaintiffs in the suit include New York, Massachusetts, Washington, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and Virginia, along with the District of Columbia.

The Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel said in 2014 that the program "could be terminated at any time at [the Department of Homeland Security's] discretion."

China's top diplomat says he approves further North Korea sanctions

China's top diplomat said Thursday he agrees additional sanctions need to be imposed on North Korea, following the country's sixth nuclear test Sunday.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi made the statement during a joint press conference in Beijing with Nepal's Minister for Foreign Affairs Krishna Bahadur Mahara -- a sign China could be willing to cooperate on further sanctions.
China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi said sanctions are a part of the solution to persuade North Korea to turn away from nuclear weapons development. Photo by Stephen Shaver

Neither Chinese President Xi Jinping nor Russian President Vladimir Putin had indicated they were willing to pursue sanctions.

During a meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, Putin said the North Korea crisis cannot be "resolved by sanctions alone," a sign Moscow could be hesitant to press forward with fresh penalties at the United Nations Security Council.

Wang is taking a different approach, according to South Korean news service News 1.

"Given the new unfolding developments on the Korean peninsula, China agrees with the point the U.N. Security Council should take necessary measures," the Chinese foreign minister said.

He added, "Sanctions are only half a solution, so dialogue and negotiations should be carried out together."

The United States is circulating a draft resolution at the Security Council, that would allow U.S. Navy and Air Force ships to stop and search North Korean vessels in international waters, The New York Times reported.

Military interdictions at sea, however, could raise tensions not seen since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, when President John F. Kennedy ordered a blockade of the island, according to the report.

The draft resolution also proposes a ban on oil shipments, a move that China has resisted in the past.

Jose continues to strengthen after turning into hurricane

The National Hurricane Center said Hurricane Jose continues to strengthen in the Atlantic Ocean on Thursday.

In its 5 a.m. advisory, the NHC said Jose was located about 815 miles east of the Lesser Antilles with sustained winds up to 90 mph. Forecasters say Jose's wind speeds are expected to strengthen within the next 48 hours.
Jose formed Tuesday in the central Atlantic, more than 1,000 miles east of Hurricane Irma, and so far is following Irma's path westward toward the Caribbean.

Jose strengthened into a hurricane Wednesday evening and its projected path has it nearing the Leeward Islands and Puerto Rico over the weekend. Image courtesy NOAA


The NHC said Jose "continues intensifying over the Central Atlantic it travels west-northwest at 18 mph and this general motion continuing for the next couple of days."

There were no coastal watches or warnings in effect, though forecasters warned the Leeward Islands to monitor the storm. Hurricane and Tropical Storm Watches will likely be required for portions of these islands later this morning.

The NHC forecast track shows Jose's eye nearing parts of the Lesser Antilles Saturday afternoon and Puerto Rico on Sunday as a hurricane before it makes a turn toward the northwest. Jose's preliminary forecast track has it moving north of Irma's path, in the direction of North Carolina.

Jose is the tenth named storm of the Atlantic season so far. The eleventh, Katia, formed early Wednesday and strengthened into a hurricane in the evening.
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