How to Look at the Bright Side

Creating positive change in your life and in your community might hinge on how well you can check your cynicism

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Creating positive change in your life and in your community might hinge on how well you can check your cynicism

As an undergraduate in his early 20s, Christopher McKinnon often attended political protests. In 1999 and the early 2000s, he went to rallies in Toronto, Canada, in support of anti-globalization actions worldwide, such as the World Trade Organization protests in Seattle. Instead of being filled with hope by these actions, however, after a few years he became skeptical when he saw what little progress was being made both in the political sphere and within his own communities.

“I realized people weren’t really approaching the issues with a deep level of analysis; they were just arguing and fighting,” he says. “I felt powerless and thought, ‘I can’t possibly change anything. The world is just a mess.’”

It’s understandable that one could view humanity as being on an irreversibly wrong path. News headlines are dominated by school shootings, rising climate change, threats to democratic institutions, economic and racial inequality and violence against women, children and minorities.

If anything is guaranteed to make things worse, however, it’s checking out and giving up. Thankfully, there are ways to keep caring and even maintain a positive outlook.

Unlock critical thinking

According to the 2018 Edelman Trust Barometer Global Report, public trust in institutions such as governments, corporations and NGOs is down by an aggregate of 13 percentage points compared to 2017. Trust in the media saw the steepest decline—five per cent lower than last year.

Similar surveys in the United States conducted by Gallup, a global analytics company headquartere...

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