Positivity Workshop - IPPM...Positivity Workshop Barbara L. Fredrickson, Ph.D. University of North...

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Positivity Workshop

Barbara L. Fredrickson, Ph.D.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

www.PositiveEmotions.org

www.PositivityResonance.com

Changing Daily Diets

How to…?

Be Positive Don’t “ ”

“There wouldn’t be such a thing as counterfeit gold if there were no real

gold somewhere.”

-- Sufi proverb

Lightly…

Loving-Kindness Meditation (LKM)

Classic Phrases of LKM

• May [you] feel safe.

• May [you] feel happy.

• May [you] feel healthy.

• May [you] live with ease.

Framing Thoughts

Escape Self-Absorption

Start Easy

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Sincerity Matters

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Not Magical Thinking

Envelop in Equanimity

Let’s Try It

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Your Reactions?

www.PositivityResonance.com

For More Information…

www.SharonSalzberg.com

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Micro-Moment Practices

Find Nearby Nature

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Reflect on Connection

Nightly: Think of your 3 longest social interactions of the day…

How true is each:

• During these social interactions, I felt “in tune” with the person/s around me.

• During these social interactions, I felt close to the person/s.

Rate on a scale from 1-7:

1 = not at all true

7 = very true

Celebrate Another’s Good Fortune

Practice Compassion

Be Curious

Be Kind

Be Real

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Prioritizing Positivity

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Prioritizing Positivity…

• A priority for me is experiencing happiness in everyday life.

• I look for and nurture my positive emotions.

• What I decide to do with my time outside of work is influenced by how much I might experience positive emotions.

• I structure my day to maximize my happiness.

• My major decisions in life (e.g., the job I choose, the house I buy) are influenced by how much I might experience positive emotions.

• I admire people who make their decisions based on the happiness they will gain.

1 = does not apply at all 2 = applies slightly 3 = applies somewhat 4 = applies very strongly

36 Catalino, Coffey, Algoe & Fredrickson (in press). Emotion

… predicts increased well-being

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Prioritizing Positivity

Catalino, Coffey, Algoe & Fredrickson (in press). Emotion 37

… and expressed appreciation

Catalino et al. Fredrickson (in preparation). 38

…behavioral effort

Catalino et al. Fredrickson (in preparation).

Valuing Happiness (to an Extreme)… • How happy I am at any given moment says a lot about how worthwhile my

life is.

• If I don’t feel happy, maybe there is something wrong with me.

• I value things in life only to the extent that they influence my personal happiness.

• I would like to be happier than I generally am.

• Feeling happy is extremely important to me.

• I am concerned about my happiness even when I feel happy.

• To have a meaningful life, I need to feel happy most of the time.

1 = Strongly Disagree 2 = Disagree 3 = Somewhat Disagree 4 = Neither Agree nor Disagree 5 = Somewhat Agree 6 = Agree 7 = Strongly Agree

Mauss, Tamir, Anderson, & Savino (2011). 41

… predicted reduced well-being.

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Valuing Happiness

42 Catalino, Coffey, Algoe & Fredrickson (in press). Emotion

… and loneliness

Mauss et al. (2011). 43

Prioritizing Positivity 6-Minute Challenge

Divide into small groups of 2 or 3.

Grab a large sheet of paper from a flipchart and find your own wall space.

Identify 5 ways to support your clients’ abilities to prioritize positivity.

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2-minutes each: Identify – group Roam & find – solo Discuss best ideas – group Share – all

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Well-being & the Genome

Our Roadmap

• Adversity & the Genome

• Perspectives on Well-being

• Well-being & the Genome

• Implications for Health

Our Roadmap

• Adversity & the Genome

• Perspectives on Well-being

• Well-being & the Genome

• Implications for Health

Lonely

Integrated

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Inflammation

Immunoglobulin G1 production

Type I interferon antiviral response

Cole et al., Genome Biology, 2007 Irwin & Cole, Nature Reviews Immunology, 2011

Steve Cole, Director UCLA Social Genomics Core Laboratory

Genomic Correlates of Loneliness and Adversity

Cole et al., Genome Biology, 2007 Irwin & Cole, Nature Reviews Immunology, 2011

Steve Cole, Director UCLA Social Genomics Core Laboratory

A forward-looking immune system: Conserved Transcriptional Response to Adversity

(CTRA)

• Isolation & Adversity?

– Expect Bacteria

• Social Integration?

– Expect Viruses

Key advance: CTRA now indexed as an a priori 53-gene composite gene set

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Our Roadmap

• Adversity & the Genome

• Perspectives on Well-being

• Well-being & the Genome

• Implications for Health

Two Aspects of Well-being

Aristotle (c. 350 BC)

Hedonic Well-being Eudaimonic Well-being

Short Flourishing Scale 0 = Rarely or none of the time (less than 1 day) 1 = Some or a little of the time (1 – 2 days) 2 = Occasionally or a moderate amount of time (3 – 4 days) 3 = Most or all of the time (5 – 7 days) In the past week... ____ 1 - How often did you feel happy? ____ 2 - How often did you feel interested in life? ____ 3 - How often did you feel satisfied? ____ 4 - How often did you feel that you had something to contribute to society? ____ 5 - How often did you feel that you belonged to a community/social group? ____ 6 - How often did you feel that our society is becoming a better place for people? ____ 7 - How often did you feel that people are basically good? ____ 8 - How often did you feel that the way our society works makes sense to you? ____ 9 - How often did you feel that you liked most parts of your personality? ____ 10 - How often did you feel good at managing the responsibilities of your daily life? ____ 11 - How often did you feel that you had warm and trusting relationships with others? ____ 12 - How often did you feel that you have experiences that challenge you to grow and become a better person? ____ 13 - How often did you feel confident to think or express your own ideas and opinions? ____ 14 - How often did you feel that your life has a sense of direction or meaning to it?

Keyes, C. (2006). The Mental Health Continuum-Short Form (MHC-SF) for adults. Available at http://calmhsa.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/MHC-SFEnglish.pdf

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Reciprocal “Upward Spiral” Relations

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Our Roadmap

• Adversity & the Genome

• Perspectives on Well-being

• Well-being & the Genome

• Implications for Health

How often do you feel happy?

How often do you feel satisfied?

Short Flourishing – Hedonic

Something to contribute to society?

Grow and become a better person? Short Flourishing – Eudaimonic

How often do you feel sad?

How often do you feel depressed? CES-D

A Functional Genomic Approach

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Highly Correlated

r = +.79 p < .0001

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Opposing Relations to Gene Expression

NOTE: Analyses control for other aspect of well-being, plus a priori covariates: age, sex, race/ethnicity, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, recent minor illness symptoms, and leukocyte subset prevalence.

* p < .01 + p < .10

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Addressing High Correlation

Addressing High Correlation

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Reduced CTRA

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How Replicable?

• Split-half reliability

– rs = .63 - .82

• Monte Carlo simulations show excellent reliability

– benefit of testing an a priori gene set vs. individual genes

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Actual Replication (N = 122)

Fredrickson et al., under review

Social Aspects of Eudaimonia Drive Genomic Advantage

Fredrickson et al., under review

Short Flourishing Scale 0 = Rarely or none of the time (less than 1 day) 1 = Some or a little of the time (1 – 2 days) 2 = Occasionally or a moderate amount of time (3 – 4 days) 3 = Most or all of the time (5 – 7 days) In the past week... ____ 1 - How often did you feel happy? ____ 2 - How often did you feel interested in life? ____ 3 - How often did you feel satisfied? ____ 4 - How often did you feel that you had something to contribute to society? ____ 5 - How often did you feel that you belonged to a community/social group? ____ 6 - How often did you feel that our society is becoming a better place for people? ____ 7 - How often did you feel that people are basically good? ____ 8 - How often did you feel that the way our society works makes sense to you? ____ 9 - How often did you feel that you liked most parts of your personality? ____ 10 - How often did you feel good at managing the responsibilities of your daily life? ____ 11 - How often did you feel that you had warm and trusting relationships with others? ____ 12 - How often did you feel that you have experiences that challenge you to grow and become a better person? ____ 13 - How often did you feel confident to think or express your own ideas and opinions? ____ 14 - How often did you feel that your life has a sense of direction or meaning to it?

Keyes, C. (2006). The Mental Health Continuum-Short Form (MHC-SF) for adults. Available at http://calmhsa.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/MHC-SFEnglish.pdf

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Our Roadmap

• Adversity & the Genome

• Perspectives on Well-being

• Well-being & the Genome

• Implications for Health

Hedonic Eudaimonic

Hedonic

Eudaimonic

An Objective Approach to Moral Philosophy?

Cascading toward Health

Positive Thinking

Positive Emotions

Positive Meaning

Healthy Genome

Positive Emotions Build Resources

Fredrickson et al. (2008). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 95, 1045-1062

“Things that are good are good, and if one is responding to that goodness one

is in contact with a truth from which one is getting something.”

-- Thomas Merton

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Q: What blocks eudaimonic pursuits among your clients? How might those

barriers be removed?

Unlock Positivity & Purpose through Effective Task Enabling

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Ode to Jane Dutton

Thanks also to Mary Ceccanese & Ali Grasel

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Images of Task Enabling

What do these images have in common?

83 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Core Definition

Task enabling = The behaviors, thoughts and feelings one person engages in that help another person be more successful or perform better on a task, project or job

84 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Why a Tool on Task Enabling?

1. Build Positivity & Purpose

2. Foster Development, Growth and Thriving at Work & at Home

3. Enhance Performance, Engagement and Well-Being

85 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Givers vs. Takers

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We all have blind spots

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Core Assumptions

1. We have blind spots about who is task enabling us

2. We often don’t know if our task enabling is working or how to improve it

3. We don’t think about how to facilitate others’ task enabling of us

88 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

HTTP://POSITIVEORGS.BUS.UMICH.EDU/WP-

CONTENT/UPLOADS/GLANCE-TASK-ENABLE.PDF

POS Task Enabling Exercise

89 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

STEP 1: Reflect on How Others Task Enable You

• Think of a specific goal or project of yours

• Name a person who is key to your success

• Describe how this person enables you

• Identify characteristics of enabling actions that were effective

• Identify characteristics of enabling actions that were not effective

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Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Who is not currently enabling you whom you wish was enabling you?

What could you do to encourage this person’s enabling of you?

Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission. 91

STEP 2: Assess Your Task-Enabling Targets

• Identify current actual and wished for people whom you are task enabling

• Who is missing? Are there people you are task enabling that perhaps you should not be?

92 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

STEP 3: Current Task Enabling Patterns

• Choose a specific person whom you are currently task enabling

• Identify the most frequent ways you task enable this person

• Rate the effectiveness of your task enabling (1=not effective; 5 = very effective)

• What could you do to improve your task enabling for this person?

93 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Sample Tactics (Used to Enable)

• Advocacy – going “to bat” for someone

• Sharing knowledge

• Facilitating connections

• Providing exposure and visibility

• Providing social support

• Extending a deadline

• Sharing feedback

• Making resources available

Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission. 94

STEP 4: Explore Your Potential for Task Enabling Improvement and Unlock

Untapped Resources

• Prime the pump (Broaden your task enabling repertoire–(Nouns=resources, Verbs= tactics)) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADkm4qkXAj8

Name resources you see being used to enable this critical life task)

95 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

STEP 4: Explore Your Potential for Task Enabling Improvement and Unlock

Untapped Resources

• Identify current resources you use in task enabling others

• Identify resources you would like to use for task enabling others

96 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Sample Resources (Used to Enable)

• Time • Advice • Experience • Motivation/Encouragement • Sense of Humor (playing) • Organizational Skills • Exposure to Networks • Access to Organizational Resources • Empathy/Compassion • Protection (i.e., flying cover)

Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission. 97

STEP 5: Action Planning

• Identify 3 investments you could make to improve yours and others’ task enabling – General Examples:

• Seek more feedback from colleagues about what is working and not working in your attempts to help

• Notice who is not enabling you and think about what might be blocking this

• Introduce ideas of task enabling and see if a task enabling mindset enhances performance on your next project

• Specify when you will do your investing! Commit to something now.

98 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Take Aways • Task enabling: a vital skill set and mindset for

bringing out the best in self and others

• Goal: create a learning orientation for discovering how better to enable others and to foster others’ better enabling of you

• Means: reflecting on who, how, and how well one is enabling (self and other) and building in feedback to improve

• GOOD NEWS: Endless possibilities for improvement!

99 Copyright Dutton and Ceccanese, Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship. Used with permission.

Positivity Ratio Challenge

Share Your Reflections…

… on the Task Enabling Exercise 100

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