I receive a mischievous communication from my very good friend Mark McGuinness who wants me to comment on a research article he has looked into, written by some ‘Australian psychologists’, which claims that being in a ‘bad mood’ can be ‘good’ for you.
Now, some of my best experiences in life have been prompted by my ‘bad’ moods. With the aid of those I have got rid of countless annoying relationships, irritating jobs and pointless activities. So my first thought was that – yet again – a bunch of overpaid academics were being subsidised to announce discoveries most of us learned in primary school. And that Mark had forgotten our many rambling midnight conversations about emotions and the meaning of life.
Yet I realised immediately that these gorgeous, Bondi-beach seeking academics have made yet another category mistake: While bad moods can, indeed, be ‘good’, those are not the same as ‘bad emotions’.
To remind you: there is no such thing as a bad emotion. Emotions are an expression of Bodymind
intelligence. A mood is different. It is a Headmind attitude. It expresses a relationship between our attitudes and the world as we find it. You can read more about moods here.
A grumpy mood, for me, is a relationship based on suspicion. It means that I no longer trust that experiences, situations, people, or the Lord God himself are doing me any favours. And that, in turn, is a cue that I need to revise my trusting attitude towards these entities. I need to retreat, stand-off, complain, and have a moan. I may even need to disengage – permanently.
So yes – a grumpy mood can be good for you if it helps you get rid of your intellectual garbage.
The funny thing is that I actually find grumpy moods enjoyable. Entraining my suspicion and pessimism on the planet gives me a god-like sense of detachment and playfulness. It also gives me a playground for wit.
Rather like one of my favourite philosophers – Arthur Schopenhauer – who once wrote:
“If we were not all so interested in ourselves, life would be so uninteresting that none of us would be able to endure it.”
Come to think of it, Schopenhauer deserves an article all to himself, so I will write that next.
Probably the Australian academic (who may have confused mood with emotion) thought he was being very revolutionary in suggesting that bad mood can be ‘good’ for you. In an environment of emotional (and sexual) repression, his idea may well seem unorthodox!
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That’s all very well, but what about the meaning of life?
Or is that coming in the Schopenhauer post…?
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Haha Mark! Forgotten what it was you told me about the meaning of life so will have to book another ramble soon…
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