Unit 5: Mental and Physical Health
Topic 5.2: Positive Psychology
Last Updated: July 13, 2026
The Big Picture: Thriving, Not Just Surviving
While many branches of psychology focus on treating mental illness and psychological disorders, Positive Psychology takes a different approach. It is the branch of psychology that focuses on the study of strengths, positive emotions, and factors that contribute to happiness, well-being, and human flourishing. Ultimately, positive psychology seeks to identify factors that lead to well-being, resilience, positive emotions, and psychological health.
1. Subjective Experiences and Well-Being
Understanding how people experience joy and meaning is central to this topic. Subjective Well-Being is a person's self-reported evaluation of their own happiness and life satisfaction, including the balance of positive and negative emotions.
- Happiness and Positive Emotions: The general state of well-being characterized by life satisfaction and a sense of fulfillment is known as Happiness. This state relies heavily on experiencing Positive Emotions—pleasant emotional states such as joy, gratitude, interest, and contentment that contribute to life satisfaction.
- The Power of Gratitude: One proven way to boost your mood is through Gratitude, a positive emotional response that involves recognizing and appreciating the benefits, kindness, or support received from others. Expressing gratitude, a positive subjective experience, increases subjective well-being. (Example: Keeping a daily "gratitude journal" where you list three things you are thankful for before bed can significantly improve your overall mood over time).
2. Signature Strengths and Virtues
Positive psychologists, like Martin Seligman, emphasize that focusing on what we do best naturally leads to a better life. People who exercise their signature strengths or virtues report higher levels of positive objective experiences such as happiness and subjective well-being.
A classification of character strengths has been developed around 6 categories of virtues:
- Wisdom: Characterized by the ability to think critically, use knowledge effectively, and make sound judgments based on experience and understanding.
- Courage: Characterized by persistence, bravery, and the willingness to act despite fear or adversity. (Example: Speaking up for a classmate who is being treated unfairly, even if you are afraid of the social backlash).
- Humanity: Involves caring, valuing close relationships, and showing kindness and compassion toward others.
- Justice: Involves fairness, treating others equally, and contributing to the well-being of the community or society.
- Temperance: Involves self-control, moderation, and the ability to regulate impulses and behaviors.
- Transcendence: Involves appreciating beauty, finding meaning, and feeling a connection to something larger than oneself.
3. Overcoming Adversity
Positive psychology isn't just about ignoring the bad things in life; it's about how we respond to them. Resilience is the ability to adapt, recover, and maintain functioning in the face of stress, adversity, or trauma. Beyond just bouncing back, some people experience profound personal improvement.
- Posttraumatic Growth: This is the positive psychological change that can occur as a result of struggling with highly challenging or traumatic life experiences. Posttraumatic growth, a positive subjective experience, may result after the experience of trauma or stress. (Example: A student who goes through a severe and life-threatening illness may emerge from the hospital with a brand-new appreciation for life and a desire to start a foundation to help others with the same disease).
4. Don't Trip Up! (Common Misconceptions)
⚠️ Resilience vs. Posttraumatic Growth: Students sometimes use these terms interchangeably on FRQs. Resilience means "bouncing back" to your normal baseline after a hardship. Posttraumatic Growth means exceeding your previous baseline and becoming stronger, more purposeful, or more appreciative of life because of the trauma.
5. Level Up Your Score: Interactive Review
Positive Psychology requires knowing how human strengths are classified and applied to real scenarios. Keep practicing:
- Flashcard Drill: Head to our Flashcards page to memorize the 6 categories of virtues (Wisdom, Courage, Humanity, Justice, Temperance, Transcendence).
- Oddball Game: Can you identify which strength doesn't belong in a given category? Play a round of Oddball to sharpen your classification skills.
- Topic 5.2 Quiz: Verify your mastery of subjective well-being and positive emotions with our adaptive quiz before moving on to Psychological Disorders.