How We Train the Brain for More Positivity
You might be wondering, “how to train your brain to be more positive?” It can feel like our thought patterns are set in stone, especially after decades of habit. However, our brains are remarkably adaptable throughout our entire lives. This ability to form new connections and pathways is often called neuroplasticity. Thinking of it in simpler terms can be helpful.
Imagine your mind is a grassy field. When you repeatedly think a certain thought—say, a worry about the future—you are walking the same path across that field. Over time, that path becomes well-worn, easy to see, and almost automatic to follow. A negative thought pattern is just a very well-worn path. Cultivating optimism is the act of consciously choosing to walk a new path. At first, the grass is tall and it takes effort. But the more you walk it, the clearer it becomes, until it, too, becomes a familiar and easy route.
Many positivity practices are a form of attention training. Our brains have a natural “negativity bias,” an evolutionary feature that helped our ancestors survive by being hyper-aware of threats. While helpful in the wild, in modern life it can mean we disproportionately focus on what’s wrong, what could go wrong, or what went wrong in the past. Practices like gratitude journaling or noting “one good thing” are not about pretending threats don’t exist; they are about deliberately training your attention to also notice what is safe, good, and working well.
By repeatedly and intentionally focusing on positive experiences, you are strengthening the neural pathways associated with them. You are teaching your brain a new pattern to recognize. Over time, your brain gets better at automatically spotting the good, just as it was once highly skilled at spotting the bad. This doesn’t happen overnight, but with gentle consistency, you are actively reshaping your internal landscape to be a more supportive and balanced place. General health information can be found at the NIH.