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Positive Psychology

Evidence-based concepts, exercises, and practical strategies from the science of human flourishing. Learn from decades of research on what makes life worth living.

Broaden-and-Build Theory

How Positive Emotions Expand Your Mind and Build Your Resources

Barbara Fredrickson's broaden-and-build theory explains that positive emotions are not just pleasant — they widen your awareness, encourage exploration, and build lasting personal resources including social bonds, resilience, and knowledge.

Character Strengths (VIA Classification)

Discover and Use Your Signature Strengths

The VIA Classification identifies 24 universal character strengths organized under six virtues. Research shows that knowing and using your signature strengths increases happiness, engagement, and meaning in life.

Emotional Regulation

Mastering Your Inner World

The ability to manage and respond to emotional experiences in flexible, situationally appropriate ways.

Eudaimonic Well-Being

The Good Life Beyond Happiness

Well-being derived from living in accordance with your true self, pursuing meaning, and realizing your potential — as distinct from hedonic pleasure.

Flow State

The Psychology of Optimal Experience

Flow is a mental state of complete absorption in an activity, where you lose track of time and perform at your peak. Discovered by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, it is one of the most studied concepts in positive psychology.

Grit

Passion and Perseverance for Long-Term Goals

Angela Duckworth's research demonstrates that grit — the combination of sustained passion and perseverance — predicts success more reliably than talent or IQ in contexts ranging from West Point cadets to National Spelling Bee competitors.

Growth Mindset

The Power of Believing You Can Improve

Carol Dweck's research reveals that people who believe their abilities can be developed through effort and learning (growth mindset) outperform those who believe talent is fixed, across academics, sports, business, and relationships.

Hope Theory

The Psychology of Goal-Directed Thinking

A cognitive model proposing that hope consists of two components: pathways thinking (finding ways to reach goals) and agency thinking (motivation to pursue those paths).

Ikigai

The Japanese Concept of a Life Worth Living

A Japanese concept meaning "reason for being" — the intersection of what you love, what you are good at, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for.

Intrinsic Motivation

The Drive That Comes From Within

Motivation that arises from internal satisfaction rather than external rewards — doing something because it is inherently interesting or enjoyable.

Learned Optimism

How to Change Your Explanatory Style and Build Resilience

Martin Seligman's research shows that optimism is not a fixed trait — it can be learned. By changing how you explain negative events to yourself, you can reduce depression, improve health, and increase achievement.

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction

The Gold Standard of Mindfulness Programs

A structured 8-week program that uses mindfulness meditation to help people manage stress, pain, and illness.

PERMA Model

The Five Pillars of Well-Being

Martin Seligman's PERMA model identifies five measurable elements of well-being: Positive Emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment. Together, they form a comprehensive framework for flourishing.

Post-Traumatic Growth

Finding Meaning After Adversity

The positive psychological change that can emerge from the struggle with major life crises or traumatic events.

Psychological Capital

The HERO Within

A positive psychological state comprising Hope, Efficacy, Resilience, and Optimism (HERO) that drives performance and well-being.

Psychological Flexibility

The Core of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

The ability to contact the present moment fully and change or persist in behavior when doing so serves valued ends.

Resilience Factors

What Makes People Bounce Back

The protective factors and skills that enable individuals to adapt well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy, or significant stress.

Savoring

The Art of Amplifying Positive Experiences

The capacity to attend to, appreciate, and enhance positive experiences as they occur, through anticipation, or through reminiscence.

Self-Compassion

Treating Yourself Like You Would a Good Friend

The practice of extending the same kindness to yourself that you would to someone you care about during times of suffering or failure.

Self-Determination Theory

The Three Universal Psychological Needs

Self-Determination Theory (SDT) identifies three innate psychological needs — autonomy, competence, and relatedness — that drive human motivation and well-being across all cultures and contexts.

Self-Efficacy

The Belief in Your Own Capability

Your belief in your ability to succeed in specific situations — the foundation of motivation, accomplishment, and personal wellbeing.

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