The Positivity Project

If you follow me at all, you’ve probably noticed an increasing frequency in the number of posts spawned by something I read at Daily Good.  Seriously, I’m loving this having good news delivered to my inbox every day.  We could all use our faith in humanity restored.

It’s spawned a great deal of introspection and general philosophizing about positivity, particularly since that post I wrote about retraining your brain.  And, well, it’s led me to fall off the wagon in a big way.

That would be the no creating new blogs wagon.  Because I have a documented addiction.

Let’s review.  I have three blogs I actively post on (this one, Pots and Plots, and the ROW80 blog).  I have 3 LJs (2 defunct and one with future plans).  I had, previously, 2 other homes for my cooking blog before I settled on my current one.  This does not count the 2 blog domains I currently have reserved “just in case”, nor the half dozen for other purposes that I made myself delete due to lack of use, or the various and sundry Blogger blogs I had back in the day.  I have a problem, I’ve acknowledged it, and I’m dealing.  Thanks.

But this positivity thing has really captured my imagination.  I really LOVE the idea of retraining my brain to focus on the positive.  As somebody who has struggled in the grip of negativity and anger since I was in high school, I find this really empowering and appealing.  So I did it.  I fell off the wagon and I started another blog.

The Positivity Project is not meant to be the be all end all of anything.  I’m not claiming to be an expert.  I’m not claiming to know the right way to do something.  At the root, my motivation for creating this blog is to make myself sit down daily and document the positive in my life.  The stuff that makes me grateful, happy, or otherwise just optimistic about life and the world.

I’m trying to retrain my brain.  And maybe inspire some other folks to do the same.

So if you’re interested, pop by.  If not, no worries.  I’m not offended.  Just thought I’d share my latest brain child with you.

5 thoughts on “The Positivity Project

  1. I have found you to be remarkably positive about everything except your evil day job and the complication there of

  2. I consider myself a relatively positive person and always look at the glass half full. So you don’t seem terribly negative to me. I discovered Daily Good a week or so ago and fell in lurve. Great site and love your idea of the positivity project.

  3. Here’s one for you. When you can’t find the positive in you life at any given moment – stop – take a breath – and listen to that which is around you. This is a quick exercise to get you into the now and change your perspective and your focus.
    Trust me – it works.

  4. Having bipolar disorder I have to actively retrain my brain all the time and do it unconsciously now. I have a though (negative) and tip it on its head, pose the question: “What if I try and it goes brilliantly though?” instead of “I can’t.” “I should have.” “I’m useless.” etc. (there’s more to it but you get my drift). It’s a constant battle but it’s what keeps me alive and able to live without a huge dose of anti-psychs in my blood stream everyday. It’s very easy to be negative, but those thoughts not only hindr ones life, they can lead to mental health issues and even suicide (my brother – R.I.P: 2004). Controlling how we interpret the world around us and what we accept from it is crucial to any form of happiness and well-being. Good luck Kait. X

Leave a Reply to Kait Nolan Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.