I am..
- 36yo
- most probably not depressed
- live in a 1st world country
- privileged to have a job that pays well
- expecting my first child after years of trying
..and deeply believe the future will be truly bleak. Even if we somehow manage to not find ourselves in a nuclear holocaust, there is no escape from climate change.
I really want to be optimistic, both for me and the people around me, but it's hard to see how or why I could start being an optimist.
Reading the stoics didn't have a significant effect; it felt more like a coping mechanism than a way forward. Moving to an industry that tries to build a future - not a better future, just a future - is quite challenging without a meaningful background in hard sciences. "Think globally, act locally" is a dogma I've been following since forever but it feels insufficient when it comes to some of the great challenges we are going to face soon.
Help me and others like me see the world with different eyes.
Although I can't advise you how to think more optimistically, I can recommend this 30min podcast/programme on the topic. It is very informative and will give you lots of food for thought:
Which is better: Optimism or pessimism? https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct1prd
Some points discussed in the programme:
- The optimism outlook is a u-curve shape: high in young ages, drops in mid-life (the bottom of the U shape), then climbs again in older populations. How do we explain this? We don't know, but there are some theories e.g. mid-life can be a stressful time for many people.
- An optimism bias is good for people's mental health and physical health; optimists live longer.
- Pessimism can make some people work through lots of scenarios as a way of anticipating events and preparing for them i.e. stop those events from happening, manage the associated anxiety and take effective action. Also referred as 'defensive pessimism'.
- The Pessimist is less likely to be surprised or disappointed when things go wrong (because they anticipated different scenarios).
- There are nuances in different outlooks and it's too simplistic to say optimists do better.
- Are there cultural differences between countries? Can cultural norms particular to a country change our outlook? More research is needed, but the programme features a person's anecdotal experience from USA and Germany.
There is much more in the programme - it's a very stimulating listen.