Positive Imagination
Fred Johnson • July 1, 2024
This is a subtitle for your new post
I am a fan of positive imagination. Take a moment to consider this: How much time and effort do you spend in negative imagination (aka: anxiety) vs conceptualizing, visualizing, or simply imagining a positive outcome from the stressors or challenges in your life? Let’s discuss ways to build better thinking habits that contribute to our wellbeing.
Developmentally, we are expected and encouraged to imagine things from an early age. It comes naturally. No one thinks of it as a bad sign of development or neurotic behavior. My favorite quote on this is by Albert Einstein: “The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge, but imagination.” He wasn’t wrong either. There have been many studies on the role of imagination in development and as predictor of cognitive abilities or even future success in children as adults. One thing I’ve noticed in these types of studies is: imagination almost always shows positive results! I can’t remember reading a study where imaginative play amongst kids indicates poor development or long-term problematic outcomes.
Imaginative thinking helps us go beyond the present problem’s possibilities and explore the endless resolutions not currently apparent. Doing so encourages helpful and positive emotional affect.
Yet, in the developmental years, it is not long before we as teenagers and young adults begin to hear things like, “Get your head out of the clouds” or “Stop pretending” or even “Think seriously for a minute.” Whether we want to admit it or not, most adults have transitioned from positive imaginative thinking to a form of negative imaginative thinking called, anxiety. Anxiety is truly the imagination predicting things and playing out the outcome of those bad things.
So I return to my original question: How much time do you spend imagining the worst outcomes or negative situations verses a positive and hopeful future? If the answer is weighted more towards negative, let me give you some tools to try to help your thinking habits.
1. Split the Difference.
Anytime you catch yourself thinking through how something will turn out badly, stop and begin imagining an opposite, positive resolution. Even if at first, the possibility you’ve imagined seems fantastical, continue on for equal effort and time. Try to at first spend at least 50/50 on negative vs positive imagination. You will find quickly that if you have trouble imagining the positive, it will take more time away from anxiety.
2. Find New Solutions.
How often do you attempt to solve the same old problems and stressors with the same old solutions? Many times we do insanity by not stepping out of our grounded way of thinking. The next time you run into a problem you’ve been in before, try stopping and using your imagination for 5 minutes. Perhaps this will feel silly at first, but there’s a good chance your own brain, uninhibited by normal expectations, can create a new approach!
3. Read Fiction Books
Reading, especially fiction, can stretch our imagination and even reintroduce us to the habit of thought. I will admit that I read a lot of non-fiction material and every so often need to stop and just read for fun! Aside from activating our imagination, reading can also free our mind from the present problem, which can bring new insights.
4. Visualize
If “thinking” is your typical way of dealing with things, might I suggest you try a new approach? Create a flow chart, draw a picture that represents your situation, use colors, or even just simply doodle to introduce imagination and possibly better organize solutions.
I hope in reading this, you’ve been inspired to try a new way of dealing with problems! At the very least, challenged to reduce how often you practice imagining the worst outcomes. Either way, take a moment today to imagine what good may happen!

Saying you had a difficult childhood is harder than most people think. Our brains resist the idea. Admitting or acknowledging that the people who raised us had struggles, or hurt us intentionally or unententionally, can feel disloyal, frightening, or simply wrong. So instead, many of us make an unconscious agreement early in life that psychologists sometimes refer to as the “Dirty Deal.” Learning to say “no” to that deal can lead to lasting improvements in daily life and relationships. What is it? The Dirty Deal sounds something like this: "It is better that I am bad - and others are good, rather than I am good - and others are bad." Children instinctively protect their attachment to caregivers. When something feels wrong in the family system, it is often safer for a child to conclude “something must be wrong with me” than to believe that the people they depend on are unsafe. This dynamic is widely discussed in attachment and trauma psychology. For example, Gabor Maté notes that children often protect their connection to caregivers by assuming the problem lies within themselves. Over time, this pattern can extend beyond the family to friendships and social circles as well. That inner deal can sound like this: • “I’ll be the responsible one so Mom doesn’t fall apart.” • “I’ll take the blame so no one else has to face their faults.” • “If I’m the only one uncomfortable, I must be the problem.” In other words: I’ll carry the blame for what’s happening around me so I can keep believing the people I depend on are safe and good. It’s called “dirty” for two reasons: • The child (you or I) had no real choice in the matter. • The deal costs them later in life, usually unknowingly. This deal works in the short term, but costs us greatly in the long run. Psychologists sometimes describe these unconscious agreements as “life scripts” or "implicit rules." They help us survive confusing or painful environments by creating a story that makes the world feel predictable. Unfortunately, s urvival strategies from childhood don’t always serve us well as adults. How the Deal Shows Up Later The real challenge is that the system doesn’t disappear when we grow up. Many of us continue interpreting relationships through the same lens we learned early in life. Here's a few rhetorical examples: - A spouse who dismisses your needs, guilts you in conversations, or dominates in decisions. This might feel strangely familiar. Maybe that’s just what love looks like in a marriage? - A friend who ignores boundaries and constantly drains your time and energy to the point of your suffering, might seem normal. Isn’t that what loyalty means? - A boss who demeans or verbally abuses employees might be excused as “just how authority works.” Something about those examples should bother us. They’re unfair. They’re unhealthy. And they often rely on the same old agreement: the Dirty Deal. Saying “ No ” to the deal can feel terrifying. It can feel like you’re about to lose something important—approval, connection, stability. If you’ve ever spent a sleepless night worrying that telling someone “no” might destroy a relationship forever, there’s a good chance you’ve brushed up against this old deal. Welcome to the club. How Therapy Often Helps In counseling, many people eventually begin to recognize three things: What deal they made W hat it cost them That they can now safely renegotiate Simply seeing the pattern can be incredibly freeing. What to Do Next Therapy isn’t always accessible right away. Fortunately, there are small steps you can begin practicing that don’t create emotional shock for you or those around you. 1. Begin Recognizing and Expressing Your Needs Many childhood survival patterns required pushing personal needs aside. A gentle first step toward change is simply acknowledging what you need and expressing it calmly when appropriate. When you do this, you slowly teach yourself that your needs are valid and worthy of consideration. 2. Pause Before Responding Old patterns often lead people to say yes automatically in order to keep peace or avoid disappointment. Practicing a brief pause - such as saying you’ll think about it or check your schedule - creates space to respond thoughtfully instead of reactively. That small delay allows your present-day judgment to guide the decision. 3. Start With Small Boundaries You don’t have to overhaul every relationship at once; small boundaries are a good place to begin. Let someone handle a problem you would normally solve, decline a minor request, or respectfully express a different opinion. These small steps help you discover that relationships can remain stable even when you stop playing the old role. Closing the Deal Sometimes when people pursue counseling, we become overly focused on diagnostic labels—depression, anxiety, OCD, trauma-related disorders. Those labels can be helpful, but underneath them is something even more universal: We are human beings shaped by relationships. None of us are exempt from that reality. So perhaps the invitation here is simple. Give yourself a little room to stop being everything for everyone around you, just to be ok. You don’t always have to burn relationships down in order to grow. Usually turning away from our problems only worsens them. Sometimes the real work is simply learning to renegotiate the old deals you never knowingly signed.

Most of us don’t want to admit it, but the arrival of October signals the official start to the holiday season. Within the next 91 days, there will be everything from spooky lanterns, stuffed turkeys, and sales catalogues arriving in the mail or inbox on the regular. Parties to attend, events to support, and special “once a year” gatherings will all demand our focus and presence. One thing is for certain, If you’re of adult age with even a mild case of responsibility, you will begin to experience what I call, “Holiday Time-Slippage.” Holiday Time-Slippage is the phenomenon wherein the busier and faster our lives become during the holidays, the less time we have to enjoy the holidays. In trying to do it all, we miss all that we do. Ok, I’ll admit I made that up. I even googled it to see if it was a thing. It’s not. Perhaps I just made it a thing, but more likely it is just a fun play on words that ends with this blog post. In either case, I think it’s important to be mindful of the changing of the seasons and what those signals for many. The 16th century produced a carol of Welsh origin we now know as “Deck the Halls.” Within the lyrics, the phrase “‘Tis the season” has become a popular connotation of the holidays in general. Sometimes we use it as a greeting, coping phrase, or in an excusing manner, because after all, “’Tis the season, right?” What we miss in doing so, is the instructive reply the original lyric provides: “… to be jolly.” To experience a cheerful and happy time. In talking with people daily about their lives, I am reminded that not everyone enters this season with the hope of joy and jolly nature. Life can be hard. Holidays can bring triggers, those sharp painful reminders. The holiday seasons can be an extremely isolating time for many. We need the care of each other in these times. We need connection. We need people in our life who will laugh and love, who will share a moment. Maybe you are the person able to provide that for another. Maybe you’re the person who needs that. If I can remind and encourage you today, that in all your seasons upcoming, allow time to simply be jolly.

