Wishing and hoping really does make you more successful: study

Believe it, achieve it. 

That’s the key to success, according to a new study from the University of Essex, which was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

Researchers found that hope, positive perceptions and feelings of being in control yield a greater desire for accomplishment.

The study featured more than 1,000 students across four different countries — the US, Britain, Germany and Canada — and looked at their reactions and emotional reasoning when faced with challenging circumstances.

Researchers investigated whether individuals in a typical performance-based challenge – such as completing a task or taking a test – experience one of 12 “achievement emotions.” Positive emotions included enjoyment, relaxation, hope, assurance, pride and relief while negative ones were anger, boredom, anxiety, hopelessness, shame/guilt and disappointment.


Happy employee works at the office.
A positive mindset could lead to greater success than negative thinking, according to a new study.
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Participants then filled out a questionnaire indicating how they felt in certain situations, such as attending class and studying. They had to rank their feelings towards an assignment with answers like “I enjoy doing my work assignments;” “I am hopeful that I will perform well at my work;” “Doing my work makes me irritated;” or “I worry that I might fail.”

Negative feelings like anxiety and anger were found to act as stimulators to get tasks done much like enjoyment and hope. But there’s a caveat to this negative thinking — dark thoughts can be self-sabotaging, leading to a lack of strategic thinking and stress-related ailments such as headaches, back pain and lack of sleep, the authors suggested.

“Interestingly we found feelings like anxiety and anger can sometimes motivate us more than enjoyment or relaxation. However, despite its energizing powers, the knife edge of anxiety can lead to mental health issues, undermine the functioning of the immune system, and lead to a drop in performance in the long run,” Professor Reinhard Pekrun, a lead professor on the study from Essex’s Department of Psychology, said in a statement.

Indeed, the findings suggest that if two students of equal academic ability took a test, the hopeful of the two would get a higher grade than their negative-minded counterpart.


Stressed employee.
Dark thoughts can be self-sabotaging, leading to a lack of strategic thinking and stress-related ailments such as headaches, back pain and lack of sleep, the authors suggested.
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“Although the model might seem abstract at first sight, it shows how achievement emotions relate to critically important parts of our lives and can define how we perform in job interviews, tests and other stressful situations,” Pekrun said.

Separate research suggests myriad health benefits of optimistic thinking — and its positive impact on health. Researchers say hopeful thinking can increase life span, lower rates of depression, promote cardiovascular health and boost resistance to illness, according to the Mayo Clinic.

The takeaway can be translated in the workplace or classroom. If leaders show excitement for a task or assignment, it can spark hope in employees, students, athletes and others doing the work.

“Overall hope was the healthiest and best way to spark success and promote long-term happiness,” Pekrun said.