We often hear the message that positive thinking can solve almost anything. If you stay optimistic, focus on the good, and maintain a positive mindset, everything will work out.
Common Myth: Positivity Alone Fixes Everything
While positivity certainly has its place, the belief that positive thinking alone can save a relationship is a common myth.
Human emotional experience is complex. We move through a range of feelings—joy, frustration, disappointment, affection, anger, hope. Healthy relationships aren’t built by ignoring difficult emotions. Instead, they thrive when partners learn how to recognize emotions, respond to each other’s needs, and repair moments of disconnection. Relationship satisfaction and stability doesn’t come from constant positivity but from emotional responsiveness and trust.
The Role of Emotion in Relationships
All emotions are valid, even the ‘negative’ or uncomfortable ones. While we cannot always control what we feel, we can learn how to respond to emotion in ways that strengthen our relationships.
When difficult emotions show up, one of the most helpful approaches is surprisingly simple: allow the emotion to be present and acknowledge what you are feeling.
Neuroscience suggests that the body’s initial chemical response to emotion lasts about 90 seconds. However, emotions often last much longer because our thoughts repeatedly reactivate the emotional response.
For example, we may:
- Replay a hurtful comment
- Imagine future consequences
- Assume negative intent
- Continue to think about what happened
Each time we revisit the story, we can unintentionally restart the emotional cycle.
Yet emotions serve an important purpose. Feelings such as sadness, anger, or frustration often signal:
- An unmet need
- A boundary has been crossed
- Something important needs attention
Rather than trying to eliminate these emotions, healthy relationships involve learning how to move through them together.
When Positivity Becomes Toxic
Sometimes, in an effort to avoid conflict or discomfort, people try to maintain constant positivity. This can show up as dismissing difficult feelings, minimizing concerns, or pretending everything is fine. This pattern is sometimes referred to as toxic positivity.
Suppressing negative emotions doesn’t make them disappear. Instead, it can delay or redirect how they appear later.
In relationships, this kind of positivity may lead to:
- Emotional distance
- Less authentic communication
- Unresolved conflict
Partners are often able to sense when emotions are being hidden. When concerns go unspoken, it becomes harder to address problems together.
Healthy relationships are built on emotional awareness and responsiveness, not the absence of negative feelings.
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The Role of Bids for Connection
In Gottman research, relationships are strengthened through everyday moments of connection called bids for connection.
A bid is any attempt to gain attention, affection, affirmation, or emotional engagement from a partner.
These bids can be very small, such as:
- “Look at that sunset.”
- Sharing something about your day
- Touching your partner’s arm
- Asking a question
Partners typically respond to bids in one of three ways:
- Turning toward (acknowledging or engaging)
- Turning away (ignoring the bid)
- Turning against (responding with irritation or criticism)
Research found that couples who stayed together turned toward bids about 86% of the time, while couples who later divorced did so only about 33% of the time.
These small responses build what Dr. John Gottman calls the “emotional bank account.” Each moment of turning toward a partner is a deposit that strengthens trust and connection.
The Positive Perspective in Healthy Relationships
While constant positivity isn’t the goal, a positive perspective toward your partner plays an important role in long-term relationship success.
When couples experience a strong positive perspective:
- They interpreting each other’s behavior in a positive way.
- Neutral actions are assumed to have good intentions.
- Partners feel like teammates rather than opponents.
The opposite state, Negative Sentiment Override, occurs when frustration and resentment dominate the relationship. In this state, even neutral actions can be interpreted negatively.
A positive perspective doesn’t come from ignoring problems. Instead, it develops through many small moments of connection, such as turning toward bids and showing responsiveness.
How Positivity Strengthens Conflict Repair
A healthy positive perspective becomes especially important during moments of conflict.
When partners generally see each other as allies, they are more likely to:
- Remain emotionally regulated
- Listen to one another
- Give each other the benefit of the doubt
This makes it easier for repair attempts to succeed.
Repair attempts such as humor, affection, acknowledging a partner’s feelings, or taking responsibility are one of the strongest predictors of relationship stability.
Couples who maintain a strong emotional bank account are more likely to recognize and accept these repair attempts, allowing them to move through conflict more effectively.
The Takeaway
Positive thinking alone cannot save a relationship. Ignoring difficult emotions or forcing constant optimism can actually weaken connection.
Instead, healthy relationships grow when partners:
- Acknowledge emotions honestly
- Respond to bids for connection
- Build a strong emotional bank account
- Repair moments of disconnection
True positivity in relationships isn’t about avoiding negative emotions. It’s about creating enough trust, responsiveness, and goodwill that partners can navigate challenges together.