首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Some Suggestions for Pessimists [A] Obesity and smoking may be the most conspicuous causes of illness in this country, but physi
Some Suggestions for Pessimists [A] Obesity and smoking may be the most conspicuous causes of illness in this country, but physi
admin
2017-06-29
80
问题
Some Suggestions for Pessimists
[A] Obesity and smoking may be the most conspicuous causes of illness in this country, but physical factors don’t account for everything. Your psychology—namely, your personality and outlook on life— can be just as important to your well-being as exercising and eating right. And especially these days, with the world’s economy tumbling toward a depression, it’s a good time to prevent yourself from slipping into one too.
[B] An entire science has grown up around the risks of negative thinking (as well as the power of positive psychology), and the latest findings confirm that a pessimistic outlook not only fuels anxiety, which can put people at risk for chronic mental illnesses like depression, but may also cause early death and set people up for a number of minor physical illnesses, ranging from the common cold to heart disease and immune disorders.
[C] Optimism, meanwhile, is associated with a happier and longer life. Over the course of a recent eight-year study, University of Pittsburgh researchers found that optimistic women lived longer than pessimistic ones. Which may be good news for the active people out there, but what about the rest of us who aren’t always so cheerful? Are we destined for sickness and failure? Or is it possible to master the principles of positivity the same way we might learn a new hobby or follow a recipe?
[D] The answer from the experts seems to be yes. But it does take effort. Seeing the sunny side doesn’t come easily.
Be an "Optimalist"
[E] Most people would define optimism as being eternally hopeful, endlessly happy, with a glass that’s perpetually half full. But that’s exactly the kind of false cheerfulness that positive psychologists wouldn’t recommend. "Healthy optimism means being in touch with reality," says Tal Ben-Shahar, a Harvard professor who taught the university’s most popular course, Positive Psychology, from 2002 to 2008. "It certainly doesn’t mean thinking everything is great and wonderful."
[F] Ben-Shahar, who is the author of Happier and The Pursuit of Perfect, describes realistic optimists as "optimalists"—not those who believe everything happens for the best, but those who make the best of things that happen.
[G] In his own life, Ben-Shahar uses three optimalist exercises, which he calls PRP. When he feels down— say, after giving a bad lecture—he grants himself permission (P) to be human. He reminds himself that not every lecture can be a Nobel winner; some will be less effective than others. Next is reconstruction (R). He analyses the weak lecture, learning lessons for the future about what works and what doesn’t. Finally, there’s perspective (P), which involves acknowledging that in the grand scheme of life, one lecture really doesn’t matter.
[H] Studies suggest that people who are able to focus on the positive aspects of a negative event—basically, cope with failure—can protect themselves from the physical toll of stress and anxiety. In a recent study at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), scientists asked a group of women to give a speech in front of a stone-faced audience of strangers. On the first day, all the participants said they felt threatened, and they showed fear hormones (荷尔蒙). On subsequent days, however, those women who had reported rebounding from a major life crisis in the past no longer felt the same subjective threat over speaking in public. They had learned that this negative event, too, would pass and they would survive. "It’s a back door to the same positive state because people are able to tolerate and accept the negative," says Elissa Epel, one of the psychologists involved in the study. Accept Pain and Sadness
[I] Being optimistic doesn’t mean shutting out sad or painful emotions. As a clinical psychologist, Martin Seligman, who runs the Positive Psychology Center at the University of Pennsylvania, says he used to feel proud whenever he helped depressed patients rid themselves of sadness, anxiety or anger. "I thought I would get a happy person," he says. "But I never did. What I got was an empty person." That’s what prompted him to launch the field of positive psychology, with a groundbreaking address to the American Psychological Association in 1998. Instead of focusing only on righting wrongs and lifting misery, he argued, psychologists need to help patients foster good mental health through constructive skills, like Ben-Shahar’s PRP. The idea is to teach patients to strengthen their strengths rather than simply improve their weaknesses. "It’s not enough to clear away the weeds," Seligman says. "If you want roses, you have to plant a rose."
[J] When a loved one dies or you lose your job, for example, it’s normal and healthy to mourn. You’re supposed to feel sad and even depressed. But you can’t put yourself in sadness for too long. A study by UCSF researchers of HIV-positive men whose partners had died found that the men who allowed themselves to grieve while also seeking to accept the death were better able to bounce back from the tragedy. Men who focused only on the loss as opposed to, say, viewing the death as a relief of their partner’s suffering, tended to grieve longer, presumably because they couldn’t find a way out of their sadness. Smile in Your Profile Picture
[K] If all else fails, try "catching" happiness from your friends. We are social beings, of course, and our outlook is influenced to no small degree by that of our friends and family.
[L] Christakis and his colleague James Fowler at the University of California, San Diego, are now studying happiness infection in perhaps the largest social network of all, Facebook. They noticed that people who smiled in their Facebook profile pictures tended to have other friends who smiled. This might simply be peer pressure at work, with members feeling obliged to flash a smile to fit in with the rest of the group, but Christakis and Fowler are investigating whether there isn’t a more infectious phenomenon at work.
[M] If you still aren’t convinced that your negative ways can ever be changed, consider this: only about 25% of a person’s optimism cannot be changed in his genes, according to some studies. That’s in contrast to the 40% to 60% heritability (遗传可能性) of most other personality traits, like agreeableness and conscientiousness. Science suggests that the greater part of an optimistic outlook can be acquired with the right instruction—a theory borne out in a study of college freshmen by Seligman. Pessimistic students who took a 12-week optimism-training course devised by Seligman—which included exercises like writing a letter of gratitude then reading it aloud to someone—were less likely to visit the student health center for illnesses during the next four years than their similarly pessimistic peers who weren’t tutored in positive thinking. And a larger study of more than 3,000 middle-school students who are being taught recovery techniques is under way in England. "It’s the largest-scale validation (确认) that optimism can be taught," says Seligman, who developed the techniques used in the study.
[N] The thing about being optimistic, though, is that it takes hard work—and that’s a drag. It’s an active process, say psychologists, through which you force yourself to see your life a certain way. Indeed, the leading optimism and happiness experts consider themselves born pessimists. But if they have learned over time and with lots of practice to become more hopeful, take heart. So can you.
Healthy optimism means knowing and accepting the reality.
选项
答案
E
解析
根据healthy optimism和reality定位到E段第3句。该句是Tal Ben—Shahar对healthy optimism的解释,他认为健康的乐观主义就是与现实接触。本题句子是对这一解释的同义表达。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/ufU7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Lastweek.B、Threeweeksago.C、Twomonthsago.D、Threeyearsago.B细节题。文章详细说明了购物中心的情况:花费三年打造,终于在三个星期前正式营业,比预期晚了两个月,故选B。由选项可知,
WhatisAprilFoolsDayandwhatareitsorigins?Itis【B1】______believedthatinmedievalFrance,NewYearwascelebratedon1
A、Ateacher.B、ApsychologistC、Alibrarian.D、Apublisher.C从男士的话“书本在24区书架的最上面”,可知男士非常熟悉课本所在的位置,从而判断出他是图书管理员,故选C。
A、Itallowsthemtomeetstudentsfromotheruniversities.B、Itpromotestheconceptofself-learning.C、Itallowsmoreflexibil
A、Theprofessoristired.B、Theprofessorislazy.C、Theprofessorissick.D、Theprofessorisawesome.A男士说:“今天早上我们发现教授在办公室睡觉。”
A、Itinterestsstudentsinacareerincounseling.B、Itrecruitscounselorstoworkintheplacementoffice.C、Itfacilitatesst
月饼是中国人在中秋节食用的传统食品,一般呈圆形,寓意团圆幸福,反映了人们对家人团聚的美好愿望。在古代的中秋节,月饼被用来祭拜月神(Luna),后来逐渐形成了中秋吃月饼的传统。月饼通常是烤制而成的,外皮(crust)一般是由面粉制成,里面包进某种馅(stuf
Googlemustbethemostambitiouscompanyintheworld.Itsstatedgoal,"toorganizetheworld’sinformationandmakeitunive
A、Theyareindulgedinthevirtualworld.B、Theyspendlittletimeontheirschoolwork.C、TheytakeadvantageoftheInternetto
A、Theirbusinesshoursarelimited.B、Theirsafetymeasuresareinadequate.C、Theirbankingproceduresarecomplicated.D、Theyd
随机试题
“4Rs”是指关联(Relevance)、______、关系(Relationship)、报酬(Reward)。
梅尼埃病患者
手术广新生儿护理中,错误的护理措施是
工作人员携带行李物品从登机通道进入隔离区时,必须经过安全检查。对未经过检查的()通过手检可排除疑点的,监护人员可检查放行。
2009年5月,某市国税局稽查局在一次检查中发现,浩华公司于2005年6月至2007年1月期间,以2万元价格从威力公司购买增值税专用发票75份,涉及税额近120万元,已全部抵扣。2005年6月至2009年2月,在没有货物交易的情况下,浩华公司向7人开具增值
某公司2004年度息税前盈余为1000万元,资金全部由普通股资本组成,所得税率为30%。该公司认为目前的资本结构不合理,准备用平价发行债券(不考虑筹资费率)购回部分股票的办法予以调整。经过咨询调查,债券成本和普通股成本的情况如表所示:要求:假定债
食品中检出(),表明食品曾受到人和动物粪便的近期污染。
云云在某超市第一次买到了一瓶过期的酸奶,第二次又买到了没有生产日期的糖果,她从此再也没有到那家超市买过东西,她觉得那里卖的都是劣质产品。以下哪项推理方式与题干相似?
ManyAmericanwomenhaveapoorknowledgeofcancer.Peoplewithnofamilyhistoryofcancerareunlikelytodevelopcancer.
A、Tocleanmyroom.B、ToQingdao.C、Togowithmysister.B对于where的回答应该是具体地点。
最新回复
(
0
)