Easter Bunnies: Positive Psychology and the Need for Superfetation

By Angus Skinner Angus Skinner's website Angus Skinner's email
Positive Psychology News Daily, NY (Angus Skinner) - March 19, 2008, 11:46 pm

Angus Skinner, MAPP, works in his beloved and beautiful Scotland as a visiting Professor at the University of Strathclyde. Contact Angus at angus.skinner@mac.com. Full bio.

Angus writes on the 19th of each month, and his past articles are here.


Rabbits are ancient symbols of fertility and so symbolize the return of spring. In thinking of them, of Easter, and of Sherri Fisher’s excellent article, Positive Psychology is more than happiness, I spoke with a friend who had just returned from working near the equator. “What did you miss most?” I asked. Quickly came the reply: “Seasons. I missed the seasons.”

Seasons give us rhythm though life. We mark the transitions as times for reflection, celebration, and above all engagement with family, friends, and meaning in our lives. And as times to look forward.

Positive psychology is described by many, though not Martin Seligman, as a paradigm shift. I wonder, though I don’t know, whether one reason Seligman doesn’t like the term is because it implies an under-valuation not only of the rest of psychology but also of all that has been achieved by psychology’s late 20th century focus on illness and distress - a focus that achieved much and must be carried forward.

It would be awful if the New Year, spring, and autumn were all “paradigm shifts.” Music, as in much, often expresses and engages us best in these matters. A symphony evolves, argues, disputes, and resolves with reflection.

New ideas need careful husbandry. Positive psychology is a “legitimate enterprise,” a very worthwhile turn. Increasingly rich (and accepted) in analysis, it may have remained perceived as weak in direct applications. Thus, the creation of MAPP (the Masters of Applied Positive Psychology degree), informing engineers of the future.

Easter BunnySuperfetation (I know you have been dying to know) is the rabbit’s natural state. Rabbits are able to conceive new children even before others are born. We repel a bit at this. I would not wish to be a rabbit, not in the least since they have such pain in the early deaths of so many children. But ideas are not children.

Any idea is based on knowledge which is partial, flawed, and self-protective. But once we utter an idea, we protect it and seek its flourishing in the world. So should we, but not to the exclusion of other ideas.

For positive psychology to truly flourish in its contribution to the century ahead, we need not to fight for specific ideas, but to accept superfetation - to let a thousand flowers bloom. It is spring.

References

Daniel Barenboim - Reith Lectures
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/reith2006/lectures.shtml

Kahneman, D., Diener, E., Schwartz, N. (Eds.) (2003). Well Being: the foundations of Hedonic Psychology. Russell Sage Foundation Publications.

Superfetation – dictionary.com

Image: Easter Bunny.

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