00:00 – Why Does This Keep Happening?!
01:40 – The Weird Ways Your Ex Still Sneaks Into Your Mind
02:37 – The REAL Reason You Can’t Let Go
06:02 – The 8 Stages of Heartbreak Recovery—Which One Are You Stuck In?
16:05 – The Science of Heartbreak: Your Brain on Love (and Withdrawal!)
21:34 – Unfinished Business: What You Need for REAL Closure
29:35 – How to Finally Move On—For GOOD
34:39 – Next Steps & How I Can Help You

How to Be a More Positive Person

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How to Be a More Positive Person

If you’ve ever felt like being told to “just be more positive” is about as helpful as being handed a foam noodle during a shipwreck, I get it! It can make tough situations feel even worse. But here’s the truth: cultivating positivity is not about ignoring what hurts or putting a smiley face on everything. Real positivity—the kind that builds resilience, improves your relationships, and helps you live a more meaningful life—comes from learning how to honor the full spectrum of your emotional experience. Embracing your “negative” emotions can lead to growth and become your biggest strength. 

This week on the Love, Happiness & Success podcast to dig into this exact topic with someone who gets it deeply: Dr. Nick Holton, co-founder of the Anti-Fragile Academy. We went all in on what it actually takes to become a more positive person—not in a cheesy, toxic-positivity way, but in a real, grounded, research-backed way.

Positivity isn’t a personality trait. It’s a skill that can be nurtured and developed. You can get better at feeling good while feeling your “negative emotions” and using them to your advantage. Let’s dig in.

Positivity Isn’t a Trait, It’s a Trainable Skill

Dr. Nick Holton has spent years working with top-tier athletes, high-achieving professionals, and everyday people to help them level up through the science of positive psychology. One of the most powerful ideas he learned is this: positivity isn’t something you either have or don’t have. It’s not a genetic gift bestowed on a lucky few. It’s a skill you can learn and practice.

Positive psychology isn’t about pretending everything is fine when it’s not. Instead, it’s about deliberately cultivating well-being, life satisfaction, and thriving—without rejecting the dark stuff. In fact, trying to avoid dark emotions altogether can backfire. This overcorrection is “toxic positivity,” and if you’ve ever been told to “cheer up” when you were going through something real, you know how damaging that can feel.

Instead, try the “both/and” approach. You can be sad and grateful. Frustrated and optimistic. Feeling down doesn’t mean you’re doing life wrong—it means you’re human.

Accept Reality (Even When It Sucks)

Here’s the surprising thing: sometimes the most emotionally healthy, positive thing you can do is say, “Yep, this is hard. And I’m allowed to feel bad about it.”

Real growth starts with accurately assessing your current experience. If you’re feeling miserable, anxious, disconnected, or pessimistic, there may be a good reason for that. The goal isn’t to override those emotions with affirmations. It’s to feel all of your feelings and explore them with curiosity and ask, “Why does this make sense right now?”

This mindset is especially important in relationships. I’ve seen it countless times in couples counseling: when one partner is stuck in a negative headspace, it can feel like a wall between them and their partner. But instead of telling them to change, sometimes the most powerful move is to validate where they’re coming from. When someone realizes their emotional reactions are actually reasonable given their values and circumstances, it can shift everything.

That clarity creates an opening. You can start to explore what you want to feel instead—and then work backward from there.

Rewriting the Script: Gratitude, Wins, and Self-Trust

If you’re stuck in a cycle of negativity, one of the simplest (and most science-backed) tools for change is practicing gratitude. I know, I know—you’ve heard it before. But stick with me.

Gratitude isn’t about forcing yourself to feel good. It’s about training your brain to notice what’s already working. This process is called “win savoring”. It’s not just about being thankful for what you have; it’s about consciously identifying the moments where you succeeded, overcame something, or made progress.

This is especially powerful if you tend to be hard on yourself (perfectionists, I’m looking at you). When you practice noticing your wins, you build self-efficacy—the belief that you can do hard things. That belief is the foundation of authentic optimism.

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Growth vs. Fixed Mindset

When it comes to becoming a more positive person, mindset isn’t just a buzzword—it’s foundational. One of the most powerful mindset distinctions that can change your entire emotional experience is the difference between a growth mindset and a fixed mindset. If you’re not familiar, here’s what that means:

A fixed mindset is the belief that your abilities, intelligence, or personality traits are set in stone. It says: “This is just the way I am.” People with a fixed mindset tend to avoid challenges, take feedback personally, and are more likely to give up when things get hard—because they believe those struggles are evidence of inadequacy.

On the flip side, a growth mindset is the belief that skills and qualities can be developed. With a growth mindset, setbacks become stepping stones. Feedback becomes fuel. It says: “I’m not there yet—but I can get there with effort and learning.”

Now here’s the twist: while growth mindset is widely celebrated (and rightly so), the goal isn’t to shame fixed-mindset thinking or pretend everything is possible. Sometimes, realism is necessary! For example, if I decide tomorrow that I’m going to become an Olympic gymnast at my age… probably not happening. That’s not negative thinking, it’s self-awareness.

The key to changing your mindset is balance. A growth mindset isn’t about magical thinking—it’s about believing in your ability to grow where it matters most. If you’re feeling stuck in negative thoughts, emotional ruts, or unhelpful patterns in your relationships, you’re not broken. You’re just running an outdated mental script—and you can update it.

Expanding Your Emotional Vocabulary

Let’s talk emotional literacy. If you want to be a more emotionally positive person, a crucial first step is learning to understand what you’re feeling in the first place.

Most of us were never taught how to do this. We grow up labeling every unpleasant feeling as “stress” or “anxiety,” and every pleasant feeling as “happy” or “excited.” That’s like trying to describe the world with only five colors—it’s flat, vague, and limiting.

Your emotional vocabulary is your internal compass. The more precisely you can identify what you’re feeling, the more effectively you can respond to it. For example:

  • Frustration usually means something’s blocking your goals.
  • Disappointment reflects a gap between expectations and reality.
  • Sadness shows up when we’ve lost something important.
  • Guilt may arise when our actions clash with our values.

See how different those are? Yet so often, we lump them all together and just say “I feel bad.”

Here’s one of my favorite tools to start improving your emotional vocabulary: the Emotion Wheel (or Mood Meter). It helps you identify not just what you’re feeling, but how intensely you’re feeling it—and whether the emotion is generally pleasant or unpleasant. That kind of nuance is a game-changer.

When you can name it, you can work with it. You might realize you’re not “stressed”—you’re actually overwhelmed, disappointed, or underappreciated. Each of those feelings has a different root cause… and a different solution. This is emotional intelligence in action, and it’s the foundation of emotional empowerment.

Becoming Anti-Fragile: Growth Through Challenge

Here’s the truth that doesn’t get talked about enough: happiness and positivity aren’t about avoiding hard things. They’re about becoming the kind of person who can handle hard things without falling apart.

That’s what it means to be anti-fragile.

If something is fragile, it breaks under pressure. If it’s resilient, it bounces back. But if it’s anti-fragile, it actually gets stronger through challenge and adversity.

You become anti-fragile when you stop avoiding discomfort and start building the skills to walk through it with courage, confidence, and clarity. That might look like:

  • Facing tough conversations instead of avoiding them.
  • Sitting with anxiety or sadness without trying to “fix” it right away.
  • Practicing self-compassion when things don’t go as planned.
  • Reflecting on failures and asking, “What did this teach me?”

Anti-fragility isn’t about being unbothered. It’s about being fully human—feeling all the feelings, and still choosing to grow.

One of the most powerful tools for building anti-fragility is mental contrasting—intentionally imagining not just best-case scenarios, but also the obstacles that might get in your way. When you prepare for discomfort instead of pretending it won’t happen, you’re not thrown off course when it shows up. You’re ready. And you trust yourself to handle it.

This level of emotional strength takes practice. But the good news? It’s learnable. You don’t have to be born with “thick skin” or some magical bounce-back gene. You just need the right mindset, the right tools, and the willingness to show up for yourself—even when it’s hard.

Ready to Feel More Positive (For Real This Time)?

If any of this resonates with you and you’re thinking, “Okay… yes. I want this. But I don’t know where to start,” I’ve got you.

This is exactly the kind of work we do every day at Growing Self. Whether you’re dealing with personal growth blocks, relationship dynamics, or just trying to feel happier and more balanced in your life—we can help.

I’d love for you to schedule a free consultation with one of our expert therapists or coaches. We’ll help you get matched with someone who specializes in exactly what you’re needing right now. And even if you’re not ready to dive in fully, that first call can help you get clear on your next step.

You can also find me over on Instagram and YouTube, where I’m sharing new tools and strategies every week to help you create love, happiness, and success in your life. I’d love to connect with you—especially during one of our upcoming livestreams (12p MT on Thursdays)! Come say hi. 🌱

Xoxo
Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby

PS: If you thought “Wow, this was helpful” at any point while reading… think about someone in your life who might need to hear this too. Forward it to a friend who could use a little more light in their day. We all need reminders sometimes, and your kindness might be exactly what they need right now.

Resources: 

Fredrickson, B. L. (2003). The value of positive emotions: The emerging science of positive psychology is coming to understand why it’s good to feel good. American scientist, 91(4), 330-335. https://www.jstor.org/stable/27858244

Irvin, K. M., Bell, D. J., Steinley, D., & Bartholow, B. D. (2022). The thrill of victory: Savoring positive affect, psychophysiological reward processing, and symptoms of depression. Emotion, 22(6), 1281. https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2020-87570-001

Dweck, C. (2016). What having a “growth mindset” actually means. Harvard business review, 13(2), 2-5. https://www.academia.edu/download/56500411/What_Having_a_Growth_Mindset_Actually_Means.pdf

Steiner, C. (1984). Emotional literacy. Transactional Analysis Journal, 14(3), 162-173. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/036215378401400301

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