3 methods to overcome learned helplessness and boost optimism

Starting and maintaining a new business comes with many setbacks. Failure is inevitable. How we deal with this failure can condition us for how we approach our future goals. It’s a feedback cycle that can sometimes go awry if not examined carefully. In particular, experiencing failure can cause the psychological response called learned helplessness.

Because helplessness is a learned behavior, there are ways it can be unlearned.

What is learned helplessness?

Learned helplessness is a mental state where someone who is forced to bear repeated adverse situations, becomes unable or unwilling to avoid these situations.

This happens because past experiences have made them believe they don’t have the ability to avoid them. Essentially, they’ve trained themselves (and their brain) to believe they have no control over the situation, and so they don’t even try.

Filling our minds with limiting beliefs of what we’re able to achieve (or not) is dangerous. It generates a cycle of self-defeatist thinking. And when caught in the middle of this cycle, your motivation and overall productivity will inevitably start to suffer.

By the end of this article, you will have a better understanding of the common ways your brain deals with failure and the tools to unlearn these adverse behaviours.

As always, our team of psychology and neuroscience PhDs have gone through a vast number of scientific papers and research so that you can have the utmost confidence in all our recommendations.

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The question is, what goes on in the mind/brain during states of learned helplessness? And more important, how do you overcome it?

Learned helplessness in psychology

Learned helplessness results from negative conditioned learning. It’s mostly unconscious. By experiencing the “helpless” feelings of negativity, you become more likely to “learn” that you shouldn’t try new things for fear of failure or rejection. And with enough of these experiences, the adoption of these defeatist attitudes becomes highly problematic.

Scientists have documented the causes and effects of learned helplessness. It all begins with some dogs and a few mild shocks.

In a famous experiment in 1965, Dr. Martin Seligman conditioned dogs so that every time they heard the ring of a bell they would receive (and in time expect) a mild shock. I know, not the nicest way to treat our best pals, but this study was done a long time ago!

seligman experiment on learned helplessness - 1

seligman experiment on learned helplessness - 2

After they were conditioned, Seligman put the dogs in a large crate with a low fence dividing the two sides. One side was wired with the slight shocks. The other wasn’t. They figured that if they rang the bell, the dog would hop over the fence to escape the mild shock and go to the safe side. But the dogs stayed put. They laid down and took the shock.

You see, the dogs were conditioned to learn from the previous experience that there was nothing they could do to avoid the shocks.

Seligman attributed this helpless behavior as something that was learned after repeated failure, because when they had done the same test to another dog who had NOT been shocked before, the dog easily jumped over the barrier.

And as it turns out, we humans are not so different from dogs.

Methods for unlearning learned helplessness

At the root of it, learned helplessness is a form of conditioning. Conditioning is based on the idea that human behavior is learned via associations and responses in the environment. Simply put: If something is reinforced/rewarded, we are more likely to repeat that behavior again. And likewise, if we are punished, we’re more likely to avoid that same behavior in the future.

Unlearning this association and deconditioning the response takes just a little bit of practice. In the sections that follow we’ll focus on how to reverse this way of thinking/behaving so that you can grow positively and be motivated in taking risks and trying new things out.

Method 1: Adopt an optimistic explanatory style

You need to first identify your characteristic explanatory style. This refers to how you explain the events that happen in your day to day. The patterns of this are tightly linked to learned helplessness. It all comes down to differences in optimism vs. pessimism.

First, take this survey adapted from Dr. Seligman’s book, Learned Optimism. This will tell you your baseline explanatory style. Don’t read on until you’ve finished the survey and gotten your results. We’ll explain what they mean below.

Done? Got your results? Okay great. Your final output should look something like this:

learned helplessness assessment

Before diving into your results though, we’ll walk through the different features of the assessment.

The main goal in unlearning learned helplessness is to adopt a more optimistic explanatory style.

Psychologists believe that you can change learned helplessness behavior by changing the way you look at the causes of events in your life. This is known as something called attributional style or explanatory style. Your attributional style can be categorized in three ways: