Six Habits of a So-Called Positive Person
written by Drew | 2010.16 Sun 17 Jan
Before I started writing this post, I had to think of a convenient name, or acronym, for what I call “so-called positive people”, or “delusional negative people”. Wayne Dyer once used the acronym NLP for what he called a “no limit person”, and women have the convenient term “weirdo” or “freak” for anyone who has a personality they don’t agree with. (Men have all kinds of terms for certain kinds of women.) So to clarify who I am talking about, I have to have some kind of definitive term.
In the end, I opted for the slightly longer acronym SCPP, for so-called positive person. It doesn’t do as good a job as getting across what these people really are, but it’s a little easier on the eyes and ears than something like DNP (delusional negative person).
So-called positive people, or SCPPs, are poisonous and toxic people: they are actually negative people in disguise. They are basically people who go around labelling others as either “positive” or “negative”, and usually claim to be “positive” people – while saying and doing arguably “negative” things. They differ from vanilla negative people (and negative thinkers) in that they have an unhealthily high regard for themselves, and a generally low regard for at least certain kinds of other people, if not everybody else.
SCPPs share exactly the same traits as negative people, but from my experience with being around these kinds of people, here are some common traits that I’ve identified as being common among SCPPs.