We need to understand how deeply the negativity of our world can affect us to make it right. The purpose of exploring negativity is to help people realise the effects and consequences of behaving and experiencing negativity, rather than overlooking the problems they may face. Sometimes, we need to experience the challenge and have our beliefs and ideas questioned to face our problems and the way we want to behave. Our choice is to decide whether we will make decisive changes that make the world a more positive place, both for the worldwide community and us.
Negativity Within
Most of us feel a significant amount of negativity within ourselves. Our challenge is to analyse and assess why and how we think the negativity we have within and decipher how we can get rid of it. Below are some descriptions of familiar feelings of negativity and what they might feel like.
Self-esteem causes excellent problems with negativity within. Self-esteem may even develop into self-hatred or mental illnesses revolving around the issues you find with your self-image. As a result of the society we live in, our sense of self can easily be warped and become a lasting cause of negativity for many of us.
Feeling torn is another experience that causes great anxiety and fear within us. When we think our allegiances challenged, we can often find it highly disrupting and uncomfortable. A lot of discomforts, in general, derives from having our worldview challenged or finding out that we are wrong. The problems we face, such as this one, may not be our fault, but they result in inner turmoil and feelings of wrongdoing that deeply penetrate the psyche and make us feel bad.
Why Do We Experience Inner Turmoil?
In life, feelings of negativity are pretty inevitable. We are made to feel as though we are wrong throughout life, whether by parents, peers, media, or our minds. The cataclysm that results can be devastating. We build up so much of our self-esteem in our formative years based on what others think of us. Upon finding ourselves in a situation of adulthood or aloneness (or both), we find that we have little knowledge of what we are really like, what we enjoy, and in some cases, which we even are. The negativity that has informed our lives can seem endless, and we often realise we have made certain decisions based on this notion.