I don’t know a kinder way to say it: this is not a good article.
There’s no simplistic “one way” of being optimistic, pessimistic, or complacent. They are spectrums of viewpoints. Each attitude offers usefulness in some situations (e.g. the complacent person, unsatisfied with things being broken that are expected to be unbroken, might get up and fix them, or alert someone else to the cause of the break and get help; meanwhile the optimist might not register a problem because he sees a future upside when it will improve, and thus is less morivated to act in favor of change).
I think the cultural idea that optimism is all good while complacency or pessimism are all bad, is harmful. Optimism has many benefits and it may be true that cultivating a more optimistic disposition is usually beneficial.
But this doesn’t preclude there being destructive modes of optimism or constructive modes of complacency or pessimism, and for some people, their disposition might just be complacent or pessimistic, and often it may not even be their conscious choice — it’s just how they are wired. Yet they can still be amazingly effective people, good partners, friends, parents, workers, etc.
It’s just another way of living life. Some people are cautious, spontaneous, cheerful, miserly, non-serious, cold, possessive, controlling, loving, kind, happy, neutral, antagonistic, deferential, etc., etc.
Being pessimistic, optimistic or complacent is just yet another aspect of different ways to live life. Not unequivocally better, not unequivocally worse.
It gets tiresome to see a topic of personality treated in such a shallow good vs. bad sort of way.
There’s no simplistic “one way” of being optimistic, pessimistic, or complacent. They are spectrums of viewpoints. Each attitude offers usefulness in some situations (e.g. the complacent person, unsatisfied with things being broken that are expected to be unbroken, might get up and fix them, or alert someone else to the cause of the break and get help; meanwhile the optimist might not register a problem because he sees a future upside when it will improve, and thus is less morivated to act in favor of change).
I think the cultural idea that optimism is all good while complacency or pessimism are all bad, is harmful. Optimism has many benefits and it may be true that cultivating a more optimistic disposition is usually beneficial.
But this doesn’t preclude there being destructive modes of optimism or constructive modes of complacency or pessimism, and for some people, their disposition might just be complacent or pessimistic, and often it may not even be their conscious choice — it’s just how they are wired. Yet they can still be amazingly effective people, good partners, friends, parents, workers, etc.
It’s just another way of living life. Some people are cautious, spontaneous, cheerful, miserly, non-serious, cold, possessive, controlling, loving, kind, happy, neutral, antagonistic, deferential, etc., etc.
Being pessimistic, optimistic or complacent is just yet another aspect of different ways to live life. Not unequivocally better, not unequivocally worse.
It gets tiresome to see a topic of personality treated in such a shallow good vs. bad sort of way.