OPTIMISM, PESSIMISM AND PRAGMATISM - WHICH IS BEST?
Two Perspectives on "Optimism, Pessimism and Pragmatism-Which is best?"
Dr Janet Smith Warfield, Florida, USA &
Dr Amit Nagpal, India
Dr Janet Smith Warfield's Perspective
Here’s the proverbial half full -
half empty glass. Which way do you see it? How does your choice affect your
emotions? How does it affect your well-being?
When we see the glass as half
empty, we see possibilities that have not yet manifested. The choir director
working with a newly-formed chorus sees the possibility of a beautiful,
harmonious, balanced chorale, energizing and magnetizing its audience into a
larger human symphony. Michaelangelo saw a block of marble and envisioned
David. Jesus, the Buddha, Lao Tzu, Confucius, Plato, Socrates, and many others
saw human suffering and dysfunction and envisioned an all-inclusive humanity
connecting needs and resources and co-creating a dynamic, peaceful, respectful,
accountable, functional society.
And yet, when we see the glass as
half full, aren’t we envisioning the same things? Isn’t the space at the top of
the glass simply a metaphor for our unmanifested dreams, hopes, and visions for
a better life and world?
How do we manifest these visions
together, in harmony? Or don’t we? Do we choose instead to blow ourselves up?
It is All Very Simple
Each of us has only
one soul to fix…
Each of us has only
one heart to heal…
Each of us has only
one head to clear…
our own.
But we need all of
us.
Without one, there is
disorder…
Without one, there is
imperfection…
Without one, there is
a hole in harmony…
no whole.
It is all very
simple.
We all matter.
Previously published in
Shift: Change Your Words, Change
Your World
by Janet Smith Warfield
Additional Resources:
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Dr Janet Smith Warfield serves wisdom seekers who want understanding and clarity so they can live peaceful, powerful, prosperous lives. Through her unique combination of holistic, creative right brain transformational experiences and 22 years of rigorous, left brain law practice she has learned how to sculpt words in atypical ways to shift her listeners into experiences beyond words transforming turmoil into inner peace.
To learn more, see www.wordsculptures.com,www.wordsculpturespublishing.com, www.janetsmithwarfield.com
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Dr Amit Nagpal's Perspective
“Two men look out through the same bars,
One sees the mud, the other sees the stars.”
Frederick Langbridge believed so, but I think he forgot people like
me. I believe you should neither see the mud nor the stars, but rather
see what is in the front. Optimism may make us unrealistic; pessimism may
depress us (and make us lonely also) so pragmatism is the best policy.
But Optimism sounds better
But people love optimistic company (and not pragmatic) and (on
a lighter note) the most optimistic people end up becoming the best motivational
speakers. Nobody wants pessimistic company (unless you want to crib and share
your pessimism at times). Also, it is easier to be a leader when you are optimistic
because people tend to have more faith in your success. Everyone is struggling in the world in some
way and we all are looking for someone to motivate and inspire us all the time,
more so from our leaders.
Best case scenario and the worst case
Even the organisations create two scenarios-best case
scenario and worst case scenario. I believe neither the best happens in
reality, nor the worst. What usually happens is the average. Or sometimes the
best happens, sometimes the worst, and end up on the whole with the average.
Which is best?
Who gets the optimum in life, the optimistic, the
pessimistic or the pragmatic? Should you be pragmatic for yourself and
optimistic sounding with people? Should you expect the best and be prepared for
the worst? Should you listen to the eternal optimist-soul or eternal
pessimist-mind? Tough questions indeed and the answer is different for each
person at a different point of time.
The mind is busy in feasibility studies; the soul is busy in
possibility studies. The soul is divinely optimistic, the mind is animally
pessimistic. You must move from the mind to the soul, which is a long journey. When
you have mastered the law of attraction (or have become fully enlightened and under the influence of the soul), you can be optimistic all the time. Till then,
it would be good to be pragmatic.
I can read your mind. You are wondering. “So what do you personally
do?”
I ask both my soul and my mind, and then divide it by two. J
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Dr Amit Nagpal is a Personal Branding Consultant & Deepest
Passion Coach. He is based in New Delhi, India and specializes in personal
branding with a holistic touch. His philosophy is, "Enlarge as a Human
Being, Excel as a Social Media Being and Evolve as a Personal Brand"
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