DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Why Positive Affirmations Make You Feel Worse When You Actually Need Them

February 22, 2026
in News
Why Positive Affirmations Make You Feel Worse When You Actually Need Them

We’ve all seen the daily mantra people while doomscrolling the night away. The ones who swear repeating “Everything works out for me” a dozen times a day fixed their anxiety, their dating life, their posture, their skin, their credit score, their aura, their everything. But do positive affirmations actually do anything?

Positive affirmations sell a simple promise. Repeat a good sentence about yourself often enough, and your brain will stop dunking on you. Madeleine Fraser, a psychologist writing in The Conversation, traces the idea back to self-affirmation theory, introduced by psychologist Claude Steele in the late 1980s. The theory says people want to see themselves as “adequate” and “worthy,” and threats to that self-image can spike shame and harsh self-talk.

The science gives affirmations a cautious thumbs-up, with a lot of fine print. A 2025 meta-analysis in American Psychologist looked at 67 studies and found self-affirmation interventions produced small but statistically significant improvements across several well-being outcomes. People reported improvements, just not the kind that changes your life overnight.

There’s also a catch that people skip when they post their morning mirror pep talk. A 2009 study in Psychological Science found that positive self-statements helped participants with high self-esteem feel better, while participants with low self-esteem felt worse after repeating “I’m a lovable person.” The authors summed it up with a line that should come printed on every “manifest your best life” candle. These statements can “backfire for the very people who ‘need’ them the most.”

Fraser also flags the cultural trapdoor. If affirmations become a rule that you must feel upbeat, they can turn into toxic positivity, where you bury hard feelings, then feel ashamed for even having them. Forced optimism can also blur your judgment in unsafe situations, where the healthiest move involves paying attention to reality, not polishing it.

If you’re going to do affirmations, keep them believable. Pick statements tied to your values, not a hype slogan you don’t buy. “I can handle a hard moment” lands better than “I am unstoppable” while you’re dealing with five deadlines at once.

Here’s where affirmations can turn into toxic positivity.

  • You use them to shove down feelings you’d normally name.
  • You pressure yourself to “reframe” right away, even during genuine stress.
  • You feel ashamed when the mantra doesn’t change your mood.
  • You stay upbeat in situations where safety and reality checks should lead.

Here are approaches psychologists keep finding useful.

  • Practice self-compassion during stress, which research links to better psychological well-being.
  • Use distanced self-talk by using your name or “you,” which studies link to reduced emotional reactivity.
  • Pick a specific, believable next step you can take today, which keeps self-talk grounded.

Affirmations can help, especially when they’re believable and tied to values. They can also irritate an already-fragile self-image. If your mantra feels like a lie, don’t fight harder. Switch tools.

The post Why Positive Affirmations Make You Feel Worse When You Actually Need Them appeared first on VICE.

Tickets for the 1984 Olympics in L.A. were $3. Could it happen again?
News

Tickets for the 1984 Olympics in L.A. were $3. Could it happen again?

by Washington Post
February 22, 2026

The day before the Milan Cortina Olympics started earlier this month, Sarah Dunlay pulled out an old Ghirardelli chocolate box ...

Read more
News

Do Gen Z and Millennials Still Have Boozy Nights Out?

February 22, 2026
News

We compared Costco and Sam’s Club prices on store brand products to see which is the better deal

February 22, 2026
News

Senate G.O.P. Faces Pressure to Force ‘Talking Filibuster’ for Voter ID Bill

February 22, 2026
News

Could This 5,000-Year-Old Bacteria Trapped in Ice Be the End of Us?

February 22, 2026
A top Anthropic engineer warns AI agents will transform every computer-based job in America — and it will be ‘painful’

A top Anthropic engineer warns AI agents will transform every computer-based job in America — and it will be ‘painful’

February 22, 2026
Arizona worker sued for buying $12.8M lottery ticket from his store after drawing — judge to decide who gets the prize

Arizona worker sued for buying $12.8M lottery ticket from his store after drawing — judge to decide who gets the prize

February 22, 2026
I worked 14-hour days at a startup. A stage 3 cancer diagnosis changed how I succeeded at Netflix and Meta.

I worked 14-hour days at a startup. A stage 3 cancer diagnosis changed how I succeeded at Netflix and Meta.

February 22, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026