Optomism, Pessimism and Realism.

It has been suggested in the past couple of days that I am a pessimist.  I don't think I am.  I think I'm a realist, but the suggestion got me thinking about the differences between optomism, pessimism and realism.

The dictionary defines optomism as : A disposition to expect the best possible outcome or to emphasize the most positive aspects of a situation.  Nothing wrong with that, I hear you say?  No, not at all.  But when optomism is a person's sole view, and when optomism isn't based on experience...well, a person can be setting themselves up for disappointment.  To go through life with a purely optomistic attitude can be likened to viewing the world through rose-colored glasses, in my opinion.  A little optomism is healthy, but too much can be disatrous.

The definition of pessimism is: A tendency to take the least hopeful view of a situation.  Nothing wrong with that either, right?  If you expect the worst, you won't be disappointed when things go wrong.  But seeing or expecting the worst possible scenario in everything you do is unhealthy, and is certainly not the way to win friends and influence people.  The eternal pessimist walks through life with a big black raincloud hanging over their heads when the rest of the world walks in sunshine.  Again, a little pessimism can be good; too much disastrous.

Which brings me to realism, defined as: An inclination toward factual truth and pragmatism.  To me, realism is a subtle blend of both optomism and pessimism, with  both philosophies based on personal experience and acquired wisdom.  The realist knows that life isn't always great, but also knows that it's not always disappointing.  The realist sees, and knows from experience, that sunshine will almost always follow rain, but knows too that into each life a little rain must fall.  Knowing this, the realist is able to equip themselves to deal with each situation as it comes and hopefully avoid the disappointment of a rainshower - and allow themselves to be pleasantly surprised when the sun comes shining through again.

Yes, there are eternal pessimists, and there are eternal optomists.  I don't think I'm either one.  I think I'm an eternal realist, able to see both the potential good and the potential disater in every situation - and be equipped to take both the bad AND the good.  To me, the optomist sees only the white, the pessimist only the black.  The realist, however, sees that things aren't always black or white, but that the world is grey, a mix of optomism and pessimism.

So, what are you?

 

7,279 views 18 replies
Reply #1 Top
I hope for the best but plan for the worst. What's that make me?
Reply #2 Top
I hope for the best but plan for the worst. What's that make me?


That makes you an I.T. guy applying the latest service pack.

-- B
Reply #3 Top

I hope for the best but plan for the worst. What's that make me?


That makes you wise.


 

Reply #4 Top
Nice way of looking at things-but pessimism and optimism are relative things-dont you think so ?
Reply #5 Top
I am definitely a realist but it borders heavily on pessimism. I think realisticly and tend to see a lot of the what ifs, but I see a lot more of the negative outcomes in any situation than I do the positives. It has a lot to do with not settng myself up for disappointment, and I try not to let others get set up either, thus i get pinned frequently as being negative. I don't always agree with that though at all.

Reply #6 Top

I think realisticly and tend to see a lot of the what ifs, but I see a lot more of the negative outcomes in any situation than I do the positives. It has a lot to do with not settng myself up for disappointment, and I try not to let others get set up either, thus i get pinned frequently as being negative.

And that's what I do.  I don;t automatically assume that what I'm about to do will fail...I just try and see potential problems with things and try to have a plan should the worst happen.  That way, I;m prepared, and if things work out ok, I'm surprised and happy.

I think my attitude comes from being around the military for so long.  As anyone who's been there long enough can tell you, usually anything that can go wrong, does go wrong when you're dealing with military beaurocracy.

Reply #7 Top
I'm a optimist, who's trying to become a realist because I'm tired of being disappointed.
Reply #8 Top

I'm a optimist, who's trying to become a realist because I'm tired of being disappointed.

I think that everyone's been through that stage.  I think that we all have pieces of all three outlooks in our psyche, and that which one is dominant all depends on our life experience. 

Reply #9 Top
I think I just over analyze EVERYTHING.... This just makes me crazy!
Reply #10 Top
I'm a realist with a dash of skepticism into the seething cauldron that is my mind.
Reply #11 Top
I'm a realist with a dash of skepticism into the seething cauldron that is my mind.

Hmm...seething cauldron...now I'm in the mood for a hotdog.
Reply #12 Top

I'm a realist with a dash of skepticism into the seething cauldron that is my mind

Yeah, I'm pretty much a 'show me and I might believe' kind of gal too.

Like I told my husband when he said he'd be home next Friday night - I'll believe that he's coming home when I see him step off the damn plane and walk up the concourse towards me.

 

Reply #14 Top
A buddy of mine (Different Hanja) used to say, 'Some people say the glass is half full, some say it's half empty, I say it's completely unsanitary, because I pissed in it!"
Reply #15 Top
I don't see the glass as half full or half empty. I keep the other half in a redundant glass.

Some people say the glass is half-empty. Some people say the glass is half-full. An engineer says that the glass's design specified a volume that is too big by 100%.
Reply #16 Top
Everyone should strive for realism. But as far as I know, realism entails neither optimism nor pessimism. I say that because I don't know what's real. If in truth we are all doomed, then indeed we have good reason to be optimistic. If everything is going to be ok, well that just makes me sick.
Reply #17 Top
I must've heard the docs read my blood type outloud when I was born...

I'm a pessimist.
Reply #18 Top
I couldn't agree more if I tried.
A pessimist sees the beer mug as half-empty
A optimist sees the mug as half-full.
A realist sees the mug and realizes that it will probably take ten more before the girl at the end of the bar will be good-looking enough to hit on.