positive psychology in application

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Positive Psychology in Application Sukhvinder Pabial

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Page 1: Positive psychology in application

Positive Psychology in Application

Sukhvinder Pabial

Page 2: Positive psychology in application

An Introduction toPositive Psychology

A Pecha Kucha presentation

Page 3: Positive psychology in application

Pecha Kucha

• Insight into Positive Psychology• Give basis for some discussion later

Page 4: Positive psychology in application

Sukh Pabial

• Learning and Development professional of ten years

• Use a range of tools and techniques• Growing appreciation of Positive Psychology

and using it at work and in personal life

Page 5: Positive psychology in application

My history with Psychology

• Studied at ‘A’ Level• Then at under-graduate• Post-graduate in Occupational Psychology• Personal reading into the field

Page 6: Positive psychology in application

Martin Seligman

• Started this field of thought more than ten years ago

• Psychotherapist• Suffers bi-polar depression• Helped many clients suffering mental illness

Page 7: Positive psychology in application

Traditional Therapy

• Helping people diagnosed with mental illness• Moving them from -5 to 0• Giving them interventions to deal with their

illness

Page 8: Positive psychology in application

State of Vibrancy

• Don’t focus enough on strengths and things going well in our lives

• Intended for everyone, not just those with illnesses

• Move from 0 to +5

Page 9: Positive psychology in application

Positive Thinking

• Difficult not to confuse the two• This is just about a mindset you have• E.G. ‘bad commute into work’ > ‘at least I got

to read my book’

Page 10: Positive psychology in application

Positive Psychology

• Concerned with the study of behaviours that help create lasting effects of feeling positive

• ‘Authentic Happiness’

Page 11: Positive psychology in application

Positive Living

• Look at different activities we get involved with on day to day basis

• Seligman identifies three ways we can lead positive lives

• Not doing activities that are harmful

Page 12: Positive psychology in application

Emotions

• Instant gratification• E.G. Enjoy food, have a good meal; enjoy

exercise, go for a run

Page 13: Positive psychology in application

Flow

• Where we learn how to mix different aspects of life

• Enjoyment created with work, family, friends

Page 14: Positive psychology in application

Meaning

• Start to move beyond the today• Doing things that create better interactions• Identifying signature strengths• Helping others through community/society

Page 15: Positive psychology in application

It’s about the mix

• It’s about how you find the blend of all three which is important

• Doing them in isolation will feel fragmented and incongruous

Page 16: Positive psychology in application

Positive Language

• Important part of interactions we have• Using ‘and’ in place of ‘but’

Page 17: Positive psychology in application

Conversations

• Core to the way we interact with others• Positive Psychology is all about encouraging

better conversations

Page 18: Positive psychology in application

Your Third Place

• Work and Home are your first and second place you occupy

• Your third place is where you can be your best self free of judgement and pressure

Page 19: Positive psychology in application

Your Third Place cont’d

• Can be any form of activity – reading, exercise, writing, physical

• Where you can play to your inner strength and feel great

Page 20: Positive psychology in application

#3GoodThings

• Daily task done at the end of the day• Take the time to reflect on what’s been

important for you that day

Page 21: Positive psychology in application

#3GoodThings cont’d

• The challenge is to think about what was important that day

• And to remember to do it daily

Page 22: Positive psychology in application

Summary

• Brief history and insight into key techniques from Positive Psychology

• Things to remember:– Positive Thinking different to Positive Psychology– Have better conversations– Third place– #3GoodThings

Page 23: Positive psychology in application

Q&A

Page 24: Positive psychology in application

Open Space

• What was important from that pecha kucha for you?

• What does it start to unlock for you and get you thinking about?

• Write on the flipchart anything you think you want to capture

Page 25: Positive psychology in application

Positive Psychology Interventions

Page 26: Positive psychology in application

The Gratitude Visit

• One of the most powerful interventions in Positive Pscyhology

• Hardest part is to think about one person who made a positive different in your life

• Articulate and write it down• Feelings of positivity months after the fact for

both parties

Page 27: Positive psychology in application

Signature Strengths

• Once you identify it, becomes your defining feature

• You use the strength in the work you do, the way you live and the way you are

Page 28: Positive psychology in application

Positive Institutions

“Understanding positive institutions entails the study of meaning and purpose as well as the strengths that foster better communities, such as justice, responsibility, civility, parenting, nurturance, work ethic, leadership, teamwork, purpose, and tolerance.”

http://www.ppc.sas.upenn.edu/

Page 29: Positive psychology in application

Positive Institutions

• Your home• Your friends• Your education• Your work• Your community• Your society• Your ethics

Page 30: Positive psychology in application

Positive Deviance

“Positive Deviance is based on the observation that in every community there are certain individuals or groups whose uncommon behaviours and strategies enable them to find better solutions to problems than their peers, while having access to the same resources and facing similar or worse challenges.”

http://www.positivedeviance.org/

Page 31: Positive psychology in application

Positive Deviance

• For finding behavioural solutions not technical solutions

• Trusting the people to find a way that works for them

• They’re the ones who live and breathe it• It must create sustainable action• Responsibility for success is with everyone

Page 32: Positive psychology in application

Positive Energy Networks

• Those who create natural energy• They do all the good things just by being in

tune with their surroundings• The kind of person who naturally draws others

to them

Page 33: Positive psychology in application

High Quality Connections

• Recognising that we all have moments to make a difference to others

• Making things happen for other people just by the virtue of being you

• An experience that makes a difference to you no matter how small or significant the act

Page 34: Positive psychology in application

Bad Things Happen

• Sad fact of life• Can’t always ‘positively think your way out of

it’• Accept and get back on track later

Page 35: Positive psychology in application

Social Connectivity

• Giving people ways to connect• Work parties, etc, are good fun but not for

everyone• A place for the inner geek to be unleashed and

indulged with others

Page 36: Positive psychology in application

Stop, Reflection Time

• What are you thinking about?• Which intervention(s) so far resonates with

you?• What are you motivated to do?

Page 37: Positive psychology in application

Turning theory into practise

Page 38: Positive psychology in application

Appreciative Inquiry

• Focuses on the strength of actions and outcomes

• Gets people to consider a complete lifecycle of an event and have robust discussion

• Outcome is to create automatic buy-in from the people involved

Page 39: Positive psychology in application

Health and Well-being

• Natural domino effect• Focus on one part of life influences other

areas too

Page 40: Positive psychology in application

Employee Engagement

• Using techniques such as AI or Open Space• Not just about being consultative• Creates true discussion and engagement• Power of the voice is with the people

Page 41: Positive psychology in application

Innovation

• Good ideas can come from anywhere• Internal communities of practise• Social clubs• Collaborative atmosphere

Page 42: Positive psychology in application

Redundancies

• ‘Bad Things Happen’• Opportunities for engagement despite the

reality• Not just “Here’s an outreach programme”• Internal groups for collective thought/support• Informal mentoring/coaching from those left

in the business about what’s next

Page 43: Positive psychology in application

Company Processes

• As companies grow and become larger, process becomes core part of efficiency

• Efficiency starts to equal process• We create efficiencies that neglect the human

touch – we factor out the human touch

Page 44: Positive psychology in application

Open Space part 2

• What has been interesting to learn about?• What are you thinking you can do differently?• What burning desire (if any) is rushing through

your body?• Same process as before

Page 45: Positive psychology in application

Is the grass greener?

• All or none of these may work for you• They are very adaptable, and you have to find

what works for you• Not everyone will be responsive to these

interventions

Page 46: Positive psychology in application

What do the experts say?

• Sarah Lewis• Henry Stewart (Happy Ltd)• Tony Hsieh (Zappos)• Ricardo Semler (Semco)

Page 47: Positive psychology in application

Positive Life

• Ultimately it’s about creating greater sense of fulfilment and engagement in your life

• That’s always a continuing journey• This is only to raise awareness

Page 48: Positive psychology in application

Good luck!

Sukhvinder [email protected]

@sukhpabial