Lagom---just right-- from Dr. Weil site

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Emotional Sea Level

meditating beach ART

More than any other group in history, modern Americans are told to be cheerful, no matter the circumstance. In her book, Bright Sided - How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking has Undermined America, Barbara Ehrenreich explores this culture of "toxic optimism" in various ways, but the most persuasive account she provides is a personal one.

Ehrenreich wrote that when she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2000, she found the wildly optimistic books, support groups and popular media surrounding the condition nearly as daunting as the disease itself. Instead of allowing her to have perfectly normal responses to a potentially life-threatening diagnosis - fear, worry, anger - she was told over and over that cancer was her chance to grow spiritually, to embrace life, to find God. The result, from her perspective, was simply exhaustion - denied the opportunity to react instinctively, recover her emotional balance, and then move on to therapy, she felt profoundly stressed. She surmised that others in her condition felt this way too, at least privately.

Ehrenreich makes a valuable point. The idea that one must be, and look, endlessly cheerful is a uniquely American, uniquely modern, uniquely destructive cultural imperative. I advise you to beware of the endless books, websites, television shows, seminars, religions, drugs (especially drugs) promising ceaseless bliss. Such a condition is, I feel, neither possible nor desirable.

A central premise of my book Spontaneous Happiness, and my website, SpontaneousHappiness.com, is that it is perfectly normal to experience "the blues," just as it is perfectly normal to experience joy and bliss. Optimizing emotional well-being means gaining greater control of the variability of moods, damping the oscillations, enjoying the rewards of the midpoint. It also means not shutting down that dynamic variability, not getting emotionally stuck.

I call that midpoint "emotional sea level." It is the place from which you can take pleasant excursions up into the mountains of joy, or challenging journeys down to the watery depths of sadness - but through it all, you remain aware and confident of your ability to return to the pleasant vistas of sea level. It is here that you will find resilience, contentment, comfort, and serenity. This is your emotional safe harbor, which you can leave but to which you should be able to return easily and naturally.

Let me introduce a foreign word that describes this emotional goal. Lagom is a Swedish term that does not have an exact English equivalent; it means something like "just right," or "exactly enough." It has been called the most Swedish of Swedish words and permeates the entire culture: architecture, politics, economics, and every aspect of daily life.

Contentment, serenity, comfort, balance, resilience, together constitute a lagom version of positive emotionality and, I think, a sane alternative to the perpetual happiness expected and demanded in our society. It should be more than enough to sustain us and will not burn us out or condemn us to alternating cycles of bliss and despair.

Comments

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited November 2011

    Wow!  That is profound.  Thanks for posting and reinforcing something in my mind that I already knew but was unable to practice because of outside influences!

  • AMP47
    AMP47 Member Posts: 200
    edited November 2011

    I could not have said it better myself.  

    I hope every woman  on this site, their loved ones and their doctors read this article.  Life threatening disease doesn't make you feel like running out with a smile on your face embracing everyone and everything.   

     When you stare death "straight in the face" wild optimism somehow gets lost in the translation.  Great article.  

    Wallycat thank you for posting.   

  • MsBliss
    MsBliss Member Posts: 536
    edited November 2011

    Brilliant observations. Thank you for sharing this.

  • PhunkyM
    PhunkyM Member Posts: 49
    edited November 2011

    This is brilliant. Thanks for saying it out loud.

  • Mandalala
    Mandalala Member Posts: 162
    edited November 2011

    As a Swede, I think it's nice to see that you like this verbal speciality :-) In Sweden, "lagom" is often regarded as being a bit boring, but I prefer your interpretation!

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