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Why My Toxic Positivity Might Actually Be a Strength

By Art Harrison • July 1, 2025

Everyone says toxic positivity is harmful, but what if it's actually an entrepreneurial superpower in disguise? Here's how to transform relentless optimism into business resilience.

Everyone's talking about toxic positivity like it's the worst thing you can do to yourself. Psychology experts warn against it. Self-help gurus say it's harmful. Mental health advocates call it dangerous.

But what if they're wrong about entrepreneurs?

What if the same psychological pattern that therapists warn against is exactly what separates successful entrepreneurs from everyone else who gave up at the first sign of real difficulty?

I've been accused of toxic positivity more times than I can count. And after building and selling multiple businesses, I'm starting to think it might be one of my greatest strengths—not despite being labeled 'toxic,' but because of what that label actually represents.

The Problem with the Toxic Positivity Diagnosis

Here's what happened that made me question everything about toxic positivity. I was talking to a friend who'd been struggling with her career for months. Every conversation, she'd list everything wrong with her job, her boss, her industry, her prospects.

After listening for weeks, I finally said, "Look, I know it's hard, but what if you focused on what you could control instead of what's wrong?" I suggested she spend one week documenting opportunities instead of problems.

Her response? "That's toxic positivity. I need to process my negative emotions first."

Six months later, she's still processing. Still stuck. Still waiting for the perfect emotional state before taking action. And that's when I realized something crucial about the difference between toxic positivity as a therapy concept and what entrepreneurs actually need to survive.

The therapeutic definition of toxic positivity assumes you have the luxury of processing emotions before acting. But entrepreneurship doesn't work that way. In business, action while uncomfortable is often the only path to the life you actually want.

Why Entrepreneurs Need Different Rules

When I started my first business, I was terrified. Every day brought new problems I'd never seen before. Customer complaints, cash flow issues, employee conflicts, technology breakdowns. If I had stopped to "process" every negative emotion, I would have been processing full-time.

Instead, I developed what therapists would call toxic positivity: I focused relentlessly on solutions instead of problems. I assumed every setback was temporary. I acted confident even when I felt lost. I minimized the significance of failures and amplified the importance of small wins.

This approach saved my business. Not because it made me feel better—it often didn't. But because it kept me moving forward when stopping to process every fear would have meant never moving at all.

Here's the framework I developed for what I call "Productive Positivity"—the entrepreneurial version of toxic positivity that actually works:

The Productive Positivity Framework

1. Acknowledge the reality, then focus on the response. Yes, this customer complaint is real. Yes, this rejection stings. But what's my next move? This isn't about denying problems—it's about refusing to let them consume your mental energy.

2. Assume solutions exist, even when you can't see them. This isn't naive optimism—it's strategic thinking. If you assume the problem is unsolvable, you stop looking for solutions. If you assume solutions exist, you keep experimenting until you find them.

3. Act before you feel ready. Waiting to feel emotionally prepared for business challenges is like waiting to feel ready for a hurricane. The preparation happens through experience, not through emotional processing.

4. Reframe setbacks as data, not defeats. This is where toxic positivity becomes productive positivity. Instead of denying that failures hurt, you quickly shift to: "What does this teach me?" The emotional processing can happen later—after you've responded.

When Toxic Positivity Actually Becomes Toxic

I'm not advocating for ignoring your mental health or pushing through legitimate trauma. There's a crucial difference between productive positivity and actual toxic positivity.

Toxic positivity: Denies negative emotions exist, pressures others to "just be positive," and avoids addressing real problems.

Productive positivity: Acknowledges negative emotions but doesn't let them dictate action, focuses on solutions while accepting problems, and maintains forward momentum despite discomfort.

The boundary is simple: if your positivity helps you act despite fear, it's productive. If it prevents you from acknowledging real problems or forces others to suppress legitimate concerns, it's toxic.

How to Develop Productive Positivity

If you're naturally pessimistic or tend to get stuck in emotional processing, you can still develop this entrepreneurial strength. It's a learnable skill, not a personality trait.

The Two-Track System

Track 1: Immediate Response When something goes wrong, your first question is always: "What's my next move?" Not "How do I feel about this?" or "Why did this happen?" Just: "What's my next move?"

Track 2: Emotional Processing After you've responded, after you've taken action, then you can process the emotions. Journal about it. Talk to friends. Feel the disappointment or frustration fully. But not before you've acted.

Here's how this worked in my business:

When a major client unexpectedly canceled a $50,000 contract, my first emotion was panic. My productive positivity kicked in immediately: "This is temporary. I'll find two clients to replace this one." I spent the day reaching out to prospects instead of dwelling on the loss.

That evening, I allowed myself to feel the full weight of the disappointment. I called my wife and vented about how unfair it felt. I journaled about my fears of not being able to provide for my family. But by then, I'd already taken action to solve the problem.

The result? I landed a $75,000 contract within two weeks because I was actively solving the problem instead of sitting with the emotion. The fear didn't go away—but it didn't stop me either.

The Competitive Advantage Nobody Talks About

Most people stop when things get emotionally difficult. They need to feel good before they can act good. This creates a massive competitive advantage for anyone who can act while feeling bad.

While your competitors are waiting to feel confident before making sales calls, you're making sales calls to build confidence. While they're processing their feelings about rejection, you're collecting rejections to find the yeses hidden in the nos.

This isn't about being emotionally reckless. It's about understanding that in entrepreneurship, emotional comfort often comes after success, not before it. You don't feel like an entrepreneur until you've acted like one long enough to see results.

The Three Pillars of Entrepreneurial Resilience

1. Solution Orientation: Your default response to any problem is "What can I do about this?" not "How terrible is this?"

2. Temporal Optimism: You believe that today's problems are temporary and tomorrow's opportunities are possible, even when you can't see how.

3. Action Bias: When in doubt, you choose action over analysis, movement over meditation, doing over feeling.

These aren't personality traits—they're practiced responses. And like any skill, they get stronger with repetition.

How to Practice Productive Positivity Today

You don't need to wait for a crisis to start building this strength. Here's how to practice productive positivity in low-stakes situations so it's available when you really need it:

The Daily Practice

Morning Question: "What's one action I can take today toward my goal, regardless of how I feel about it?"

Evening Reflection: "What problems did I solve today?" (Focus on solutions you created, not problems you encountered)

Weekly Challenge: Do something that makes you uncomfortable but moves you forward. Practice acting despite fear in small ways so you can handle it in big ways.

The Entrepreneur's Emotional Hierarchy

Level 1: Action What can I do right now to move forward?

Level 2: Learning What does this situation teach me?

Level 3: Processing How do I feel about what happened?

Notice the order. In therapy, you might reverse this hierarchy. In entrepreneurship, action comes first—not because emotions don't matter, but because action often resolves the emotional problem faster than emotional processing resolves the practical problem.

What This Means for Your Business

If you've been told you're "too positive" or that you "don't take problems seriously enough," consider this: you might already have an entrepreneurial superpower that others are trying to therapy away.

The ability to maintain optimism in the face of repeated setbacks isn't naive—it's exactly what separates entrepreneurs who succeed from those who quit after the first few rejections.

If you struggle with this kind of resilience, you're not broken. You just need practice. Start with the free challenge where you can build this muscle in small, manageable ways.

The world needs fewer people who process their way to paralysis and more people who act their way to solutions. If you're already wired for productive positivity, don't let anyone convince you it's a problem. If you're not, you can develop it through practice with building entrepreneurial confidence.

Your Toxic Positivity Action Plan

This week: When something goes wrong, ask "What's my next move?" before asking "How do I feel about this?"

This month: Practice acting while uncomfortable. Take one action every day that moves you forward, regardless of your emotional state.

Long-term: Build the habit of responding to challenges with solution-seeking behavior instead of problem-dwelling behavior.

If you're struggling with taking action despite fear, read 5 Actions You Can Take Today (Even If You're Scared). If analysis paralysis is your main challenge, the complete guide to overcoming analysis paralysis in business provides the systematic approach you need.

Your toxic positivity isn't a character flaw to fix—it's an entrepreneurial strength to leverage. The question isn't whether you should be more positive or more realistic. The question is whether your positivity leads to action or just makes you feel better about inaction.

Choose action. Choose solutions. Choose the kind of positivity that builds businesses, not just good feelings.

Ready to Take Action?

Stop planning and start building. Take the first step toward turning your ideas into reality.

Video Transcript

"I think this is gonna be the best video I ever make and even if it's not I bet you I'm gonna learn something from it. I bet just somehow this video is gonna change my life for the better, Yeah." "I don't think this video is gonna be any good. I doubt anyone is even gonna watch it. I don't know why I'm gonna make it. I guess this is what it's like when nobody really cares" When you're going through something when you're trying to figure out how to move forward, how to advance your career, how to just be more motivated, be more productive, whatever it may be: Do you want someone around you that is endlessly positive or do you want someone that will empathize maybe even wallow in the negative feelings that you're having and your fears in your doubts? Which one is it? I and I want you to actually share with me which one it is because I I think I have a little bit of a problem. I have a problem because I'm an optimist and I've been doing a lot of reading lately as I think about how I can present my information in my ideas on this channel and beyond and I started reading about something called Toxic Positivity and well, I don't think that that's what I am it really did get me wondering How people Look for support. I am someone that can absolutely empathize with the pains and the struggles. If you've watched my videos if you've listened to me, you know that I've had countless failures. I have good days. I have bad days. There's days where I am extremely productive and motivated and days where I really can't get anything done, but at the end of it at the end of any given day, this is the energy that I bring to most of my conversations. I don't know where it comes from but I wake up and a pretty good mood. And I go to sleep in a good mood even on days where I'm disappointed in what I did I still have that potentially toxic positivity that says you know what tomorrow is going to be better just keep at it. Eventually it will work out for you. I genuinely believe that things are just going to work out for me I don't think that I'm someone that is toxic in the way that I'm positive most of the people that actually get to know me know that is genuine. I'm not just telling you to forgive and forget. Sometimes I am all for revenge and vengeance. Sometimes I am all about just embracing the bad day you're having. So it's not a toxic positivity that says you should ignore anything negative. But there is an underlying positivity to me. And, I'm curious to know if that's gonna be a problem - is that a limiting factor? When you come across someone like that, when you're looking at this video - Maybe you clicked on it because I titled it something that intrigued you about the benefits of positivity versus negativity or something else. Were you hoping to hear someone in a melancholy voice talk about the struggles they were going through? Was that the thing that was going to make you feel better today because you felt heard and understood or were you looking for someone that was gonna maybe wake you up a little bit or or give you a new sense of energy or make you believe that it's okay to be whoever you are and that things are gonna get better? I hope it's the latter because I'm all about authenticity it's one of the core things that I'm trying to do here just to have conversations to bring my experience to connect with new people the share ideas to build something of a community where people can be themselves get support but I'm gonna ultimately do it from a place of positive energy because that's who I am. I'm a very unique person maybe not very unique but one of the weird things about me is that I am both the most extroverted person that you'll meet in some situations and I am an absolute loner and homebody. I am the person that comes to the party probably late, and makes a grand entrance, makes the rounds, tell some jokes, you know, is happy to give the speech if it's time to give the speech and I'm also the first one to leave. In fact I was probably the one who didn't want to come and tried to get out of that event before it ever happened. I have been a software developer I've spent so much of my career with people that are introverted and I've been the lone person that was willing to go out and do some more things but I absolutely understand what it's like to struggle, to not want to talk to not want to engage, but I can't turn off who I am and I'm just really kind of curious to hear from the rest of you. To understand what it is you want. I personally believe that we need people around us that will listen. I do hate someone that hears your problem and immediately tries to solve it. I don't think that that's always the best way to go about anything. Sometimes you do just have to listen. You have to be there. You just have to empathize, sympathize, relate to the people that are around you but I think constructive positivity is essential, because at the end of the day if you're communicating the problems that you're having. If you're sharing with people the things you want to do but you don't know if you can do it. I think that underlying that entire conversation is a bit of an ask for help and I think it's all about how you deliver that. So this is my kind of plea to you. I really want to know whether or not someone that brings optimism to even the biggest failures. Is that resonating? Is that something that you want or would you rather I take the time to really explore the negative feelings that I have? Because I have them! It's just that my way of moving through is to remember that something good will come from this. That something good can happen. That I have qualities and attributes and skills and ideas that even if they're not resonating right now in any way whatsoever will eventually guide me where I want to go. And I want to share that with the world. But I also want to do it in a way that doesn't turn off or make the people that don't feel that way tune out. I don't have an answer for you. I can't tell you which one's better but I can tell you that in order to get the type of support you want. Whether it is from people like me who are creating content or whether it's just the people around you. Sometimes you have to tell them. And that's why I'm asking. You have to let people know, "Hey listen, this is why I'm telling you this. This is the problem I'm facing and I don't actually want a solution for it at all. I just want you to hear me today. I just want to vent." That is absolutely okay. And there are days where that's something that I am absolutely capable of doing and willing to do. I haven't done it really on video yet, but in my personal life with my friends, with my co-workers, my family, I absolutely do it. But there's other times where what I think you want and need is not someone to tell you to just pull yourselves up by your bootstraps and not someone to tell you that it doesn't matter however bad you feel just put on a smile and go out there. None of that. That's not good. But you do need someone that says, "Hey listen, I get it. I get how bad that is but do you want to accomplish that thing?" Well then you're going to have to find a way to wake up tomorrow and try again." And that's where the positivity comes from. It's not blind. It's not neglectful of circumstances. It's just a belief that every problem is solvable. And I'm excited to bring that to the world. But I said in my last video, so I'm just going to have more conversations with people. And one of those conversations is this: Do you want someone to be positive and to help you look for ways forward or you want someone just to wallow in the bad times with you? I can do both. I'm going to do one a little bit better than the other because eventually even in talking about pain, I smile and I joke and I become a little bit of a storyteller and an evangelist. But I can adjust the stories I tell and some of the other stories I share to make sure that it's connecting with all of you. So let me know in the comments. Let me know what is more important to you. And take a look at this last video I made about being authentic because I think that this is my authentic self, both parts. But the way I present it currently is exclusively through optimism. And if you think there's something that would be more valuable to you, if you have questions that you want addressed or just if you want to hear someone talk about some of the things you're going through and to help you understand that you're not alone, then let me know. And I'll see what I can do about that. All right, I'll talk to you next time.