研究生英语精读教程第三版上unitone原文Word版.doc

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1、传播优秀Word版文档 ,希望对您有帮助,可双击去除!Unit OneText:You Are What You ThinkAnd if you change your mind-from pessimism to optimism-you can change your lifeClaipe Safran1 Do you see the glass as half full rather than half empty? Do you keep your eye upon the doughnut, not upon the hole? Suddenly these clichs are s

2、cientific questions, as researchers scrutinize the power of positive thinking. 2 A fast-growing body of research104 studies so far, involving some 15,000 peopleis proving that optimism can help you to be happier, healthier and more successful. Pessimism leads, by contrast, to hopelessness, sickness

3、and failure, and is linked to depression, loneliness and painful shyness. If we could teach people to think more positively, says psychologist Craig A. Anderson of Rice University in Houston,it would be like inoculating them against these mental ills.3 Your abilities count, explains psychologist Mic

4、hael F. Scheier of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, but the belief that you can succeed affects whether or not you will. In part , thats because optimists and pessimists deal with the same challenges and disappointments in very different ways.4 Take, for example, your job. In a major study,

5、 psychologist Martin E. P. Seligman of the University of Pennsylvania and colleague Peter Schulman surveyed sales representatives at the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. They found that the positive-thinkers among longtime representatives sold 37-percent more insurance than did the negative-thinkers.

6、 Of newly hired representatives, optimists sold 20-percent more.5 Impressed, the company hired 100 people who had failed the standard industry test but had scored high on optimism. These people, who might never have been hired, sold 10 percent more insurance than did the average representative. 6 Ho

7、w did they do it? The secret to an optimists success, according to Seligman, is in his explanatory style. When things go wrong the pessimist tends to blame himself. Im no good at this, he says, I always fail. The optimist looks for loopholes. He blames the weather, the phone connection, even the oth

8、er person. That customer was in a bad mood, he thinks. When things go right, the optimist takes credit while the pessimist sees success as a fluke. 7 Craig Anderson had a group of students phone strangers and ask them to donate blood to the Red Cross. When they failed on the first call or two, pessi

9、mists said, I cant do this. Optimists told themselves, I need to try a different approach. 8 Negative or positive, it was a self-fulfilling prophecy. If people feel hopeless, says Anderson, they dont bother to acquire the skills they need to succeed.9 A sense of control, according to Anderson, is th

10、e litmus test for success. The optimist feels in control of his own life. If things are going badly, he acts quickly, looking for solutions, forming a new plan of action, and reaching out for advice. The pessimist feels like fates plaything and moves slowly. He doesnt seek advice, since he assumes n

11、othing can be done. 10 Optimists may think they are better than the facts would justifyand sometimes thats what keeps them alive. Dr. Sandra Levy of the Pittsburgh Cancer Institute studied women with advanced breast cancer. For the women who were generally optimistic, there was a longer disease-free

12、 interval, the best predictor of survival. In a pilot study of women in the early stages of breast cancer, Dr. Levy found the disease recurred sooner among the pessimists. 11 Optimism wont cure the incurable, but it may prevent illness. In a long term study, researchers examined the health histories

13、 of a group of Harvard graduates, all of whom were in the top half of their class and in fine physical condition. Yet some were positive thinkers, and some negative. Twenty years later, there were more middle-age diseaseshypertension, diabetes, heart ailments among the pessimists than the optimists.

14、 12 Many studies suggest that the pessimists feeling of helplessness undermines the bodys natural defenses, the immune system. Dr. Christopher Peterson of the University of Michigan has found that the pessimist doesnt take good care of himself. Feeling passive and unable to dodge lifes blows, he exp

15、ects ill health and other misfortunes, no matter what he does. He munches on junk food ,avoids exercise, ignores the doctor, has another drink. 13 Most people are a mix of optimism and pessimism, but are inclined in one direction or the other. It is a pattern of thinking learned “at your mothers kne

16、e”,says Seligman. It grows out of thousands of cautions or encouragements, negative statements or positive ones. Too many “donts” and warnings of danger can make a child feel incompetent, fearfuland pessimistic. 14 As they grow, children experience small triumphs, such as learning to tie shoelaces.

17、Parents can help turn these successes into a sense of control, and that breeds optimism. 15 Pessimism is a hard habit to breakbut it can be done. In a series of landmark studies, Dr. Carol Dweck11 of the University of Illinois12 has been working with children in the early grades of school. As she he

18、lps floundering students to change the explanations for their failuresfrom I must be dumb to I didnt study hard enough“their academic performance improves. 16 Pittsburghs Dr. Levy wondered if turning patients into optimists would lengthen their lives. In a pilot study, two groups of colon-cancer pat

19、ients were given the same medical treatment, but some were also given psychological help to encourage optimism. Results showed that this worked. Now a major study is planned to determine whether this psychological change can alter the course of the disease. 17 So, if youre a pessimist, theres reason

20、 for optimism. You can change. Heres how, says Steve Hollon, a psychologist at Vanderbilt University13: 18 1. Pay careful attention to your thoughts when bad things happen. Write down the first thing that comes to mind, unedited and uncensored 19 2. Now try an experiment. Do something thats contrary

21、 to any negative reactions. Lets say something has gone wrong at work. Do you think, I hate my job, but I could never get a better one? Act as if that werent so. Send out resums. Go to interviews. Look into training and check job leads 20 3. Keep track of what happens. Were your first thoughts right or wrong? If your thoughts are holding you back, change them, says Hollon. Its trial and error, no guarantees, but give yourself a chance. 21 Positive thinking leads to positive action, and reaction. What you expect from the world, the evidence suggests, is what youre likely to get. .

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