

womanFinally,
positive illusions are adaptive because they enable people to feel hopeful
in the face of uncontrollable risks. This process may keep people from
becoming immobilized or depressed by seemingly insurmountable obstacles.
Potential liabilities of positive illusions:There are several potential
risks that may arise if people hold positive illusions about their personal
qualities and likely outcomes. The first is that they set themselves up for
unpleasant surprises for which they are ill prepared when their overly
optimistic beliefs are disconfirmed. Research suggests that for the most
part, these adverse outcomes do not occur. People’s beliefs are more
realistic at times when realism serves them particularly well, for example,
when initially making plans, when accountability is likely, or following
negative feedback from the environment. Following a setback or failure,
people’s overly positive beliefs may be attached to a new undertaking (Armor
& Taylor, 1998).A second risk is that people who hold positive illusions
will set goals or undertake courses of actions that are likely to produce
failure.
This concern appears to be largely without basis. Research shows that when
people are deliberating future courses of actions for themselves, such as
whether to take a particular job or go to graduate school, their perceptions
are fairly realistic, but they become overly optimistic when they turn to
implementing their plans. The shift from realism to optimism may provide the
fuel needed to bring potentially difficult tasks to fruition (Taylor &
Gollwitzer, 1995).A third risk is that positive self perceptions may have
social costs. People who are self promoting in public situations do indeed
turn other people off. Initially, their upbeat optimistic nature endears
them to others, but over time, other people become aware of their self
absorption and turn away from them. People who hold overly positive self
assessments privately, however, do not turn others off and indeed the
opposite is the case. They make positive impressions on others, they are
well liked by their friends, and they impress clinicians and peers as
mentally healthy.
One might say, it’s ok to think
you’re better than others as long as you don’t act that way.A potential
limitation of positive illusions concerns their cultural prevalence.
Although it is easy to document positive illusions in Western cultures,
people in East Asian cultures are much less likely to self enhance and
indeed, are often self effacing instead. Positive illusions may nonetheless
be manifested in group-enhancing biases and may also be privately held, but
not publicly voiced in East Asian cultures. Positive illusions and physical
health:The ability to develop and sustain positive beliefs in the face of
setbacks has health benefits. Research with men who were HIV seropositive or
already diagnosed with AIDS has shown that those who hold unrealistically
positive assessments of their abilities to control their health conditions
experience a longer time to developing symptoms and a slower course of
illness. Men with AIDS who held overly positive beliefs about their ability
to combat their illness lived on average 2 year longer than men who were
more pessimistic about their circumstances.
Origins of positive illusions:Where do positive illusions come from?
Research suggests that there may be modest genetic contributions to the
ability to develop positive illusions. Early environment also plays an
important role: people are more able to develop these positive beliefs in
nurturant environments than in harsh ones. Gene-environment interactions may
also play a role.Can positive illusions be learned? There is no reason to
think that positive illusions cannot be taught and indeed, many
well-established therapies that involve teaching people to think better of
themselves,
Positive Illusions
Many people hold
beliefs about themselves, the world, and the future that are more positive
than reality can sustain. These beliefs are called positive illusions. What
positive illusions do people hold?:Three types of positive illusions have
been documented: self aggrandizing self-perceptions (that is, people
consistently regard themselves more positively and less negatively than they
regard others and than others regard them), perceptions of mastery (that is,
most people believe that they can exert more personal control over
environmental circumstances than is actually the case), and unrealistic
optimism (that is, most people are optimistic and believe that the present
is better than the past and that the future will be better as well,
especially for themselves). For example, typically, people overestimate the
likelihood that they will experience a wide variety of pleasant events, such
as liking their first job or having a gifted child, and somewhat
underestimate their risk of succumbing to negative events, include being
fired, getting divorced, or succumbing to a chronic disease.
What are some common examples of positive illusions in everyday life? If you
make a list of the things you want to accomplish in a day, but find that you
have completed far fewer than you had expected by the end of the day, you
are showing unrealistic optimism, a positive illusion about your
productivity. If you bet on a sports team that is not favored to win because
you have a hunch they can pull it out, you are showing a positive illusion.
You may of course be right some of the time, but looked at from the
standpoint of its objective likelihood, your belief would still be
considered illusory. Positive illusions and mental health:Why do people hold
positive illusions? One reason is that these positive beliefs are tied to
psychological wellbeing. By wellbeing, psychologists mean the ability to
feel good about oneself, to be creative and/or productive in one’s work, to
form satisfying relationships with other people, and to combat stress
effectively. Positive illusions are particularly useful for helping people
to combat major stressful events or traumas, such as a life threatening
illness or serious accident.
People who are able to develop or maintain their positive beliefs in the
face of these potential setbacks cope more successfully with them and show
less psychological distress. For example, psychological research shows that
cancer survivors often report a higher quality of life than people who have
never had cancer at all. This is because they have allowed the traumatic
experience to evoke a sense of meaning and purpose in life.People also hold
positive illusions because such beliefs enhance their productivity and
persistence toward tasks on which they might otherwise give up. When people
believe they can achieve a difficult goal, this expectation often creates a
sense of energy and excitement, the fuel needed to persist to bring goals to
realization. Even though people sometimes fall short of achieving all they
set out to do, they may make more progress than would otherwise be the case.
Think, for example, of a day in which you made a long list of things to do.
At the end of the day, there were no doubt things left undone, but you
almost certainly did more than if you had made a more realistic list with
only two or three items.





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