Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

Ego Subordination in Self-Defense

Ego steps aside —

clear water finds its own path,

the threat passes through.

 

Pride grips the fist tight;

the warrior opens his hand —

danger dissolves, gone.

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)

 

DISCLAIMER

The content presented here is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or a certified self-defense methodology. Laws governing the use of force vary by jurisdiction. Readers should consult a qualified attorney and seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection.


Introduction: The Enemy Within

In most discussions of self-defense, we talk about attackers, weapons, distance, timing, and force. What we talk about far less — and arguably what matters far more — is what is going on inside the defender's own head. Specifically, whether the ego is in charge. Ego subordination is the practice of deliberately setting aside pride, social identity, and the need to "win" a confrontation in favor of a clear-eyed focus on survival, safety, and lawful restraint. It is not weakness. It is, in fact, one of the most demanding and underappreciated disciplines in self-defense.


The ego is, in psychological terms, the conscious sense of self — the part of you that cares how you look, whether you are respected, and whether you back down from a challenge. In low-stakes social situations, ego is mostly harmless. In a self-defense confrontation, it can be catastrophic. It can cause you to escalate when you should de-escalate, to stand your ground out of pride rather than genuine necessity, to miss an opportunity to simply walk away, and to make choices that land you in handcuffs or a courtroom even when you were the one who was originally threatened.


Ego subordination asks you to do something genuinely hard: to act from wisdom rather than pride, from strategy rather than emotion, and from your values rather than your wounded sense of status. This piece explores what that means, why it matters, and how it connects to the practical and philosophical traditions of both Eastern martial arts and Western psychology.


The Ego in Conflict: What Goes Wrong

Humans are profoundly social animals, and our nervous systems evolved in environments where social standing was closely linked to survival. Losing status in a group — being seen as weak, being humiliated, being disrespected — could have real consequences for our ancestors. The amygdala, the brain's threat-detection center, does not carefully distinguish between a physical threat to your body and a social threat to your reputation. Both can trigger the same fight-or-flight cascade (LeDoux, 1996). This means that when someone insults you, cuts you off in traffic, or challenges you in front of witnesses, your body may respond with genuine alarm — surging adrenaline, narrowed attention, impaired higher-order reasoning.


This is the moment when the ego becomes dangerous. The prefrontal cortex — the seat of executive function, planning, and moral reasoning — goes partly offline under acute stress, while the older limbic structures take precedence (Arnsten, 1998). The result is that you are most likely to make poor decisions at precisely the moment when the stakes of your decisions are highest. You say things you regret. You throw the first punch. You fail to notice the exit. You escalate a situation that could have been resolved with a polite nod and a change of direction.


In self-defense terms, this ego-driven reactivity creates what researchers call "social violence" — conflict rooted not in predatory criminal attack but in dominance contests, face-saving, and mutual escalation (Miller, 2008). Marc MacYoung and Rory Miller have both written extensively about the distinction between asocial violence (a mugger who wants your wallet and will hurt you to get it regardless of your behavior) and social violence (a bar confrontation that started with a look and escalated through a predictable script). The uncomfortable truth is that many people who end up in violent confrontations were active participants in creating them — not because they wanted to fight, but because their ego would not let them back down.


De-escalation as a Martial Discipline

In classical Okinawan martial arts, there is a principle often rendered as "karate ni sente nashi" — in karate, there is no first strike. This is not a sporting rule. It is a philosophical and strategic statement: the martial artist does not initiate aggression. This principle requires ego subordination almost by definition, because the pressure to act first, to dominate the situation, to assert yourself before the other person does, is a pressure the ego constantly generates.


Isshin-ryu founder Tatsuo Shimabuku's approach to the art emphasized practical self-defense alongside deep ethical grounding. The kata — the formal practice sequences of Isshin-ryu — encode both the techniques and the principles that govern their use. Among those principles is the understanding that superior skill carries with it the responsibility of restraint. The person who can do the most damage is the person most obligated not to, unless the situation genuinely leaves no other choice.


Contemporary self-defense research strongly supports this traditional stance. Peyton Quinn's model of conflict de-escalation identifies verbal judo — the use of tone, phrasing, and body language to lower the temperature of an encounter — as a primary self-defense tool (Quinn, 2000). But verbal de-escalation only works if the defender can subordinate the ego's demand to win the verbal exchange. You cannot de-escalate a situation while simultaneously trying to have the last word.


Gavin de Becker, in his landmark work on threat assessment, makes essentially the same argument from a different direction. He identifies certain behaviors — arguing, maintaining eye contact as a dominance display, refusing to concede any ground — as escalatory rather than protective (de Becker, 1997). The ego does all of these things naturally. Safety often requires doing none of them.


The Pause: Where Ego Subordination Lives

One of the most valuable concepts in practical self-defense is what has been called "the pause" — that moment between stimulus and response where trained awareness and conscious choice can override automatic reaction. Viktor Frankl, writing from an entirely different context, articulated the core idea as well as anyone ever has: between stimulus and response there is a space, and in that space lies our freedom (Frankl, 1959). In self-defense, that space is where ego subordination either happens or fails.


The pause is where you ask: Do I actually need to do this? Is this person a genuine threat, or are they posturing? Do I have a way out? If I escalate right now, where does this realistically go? These are not the questions the ego asks. The ego asks: Does this person think they can disrespect me? The pause is the discipline of asking the right question instead of the ego's question.


Building the pause under pressure is a training goal, not a personality trait you either have or do not have. It can be developed through scenario-based training, through adrenal stress conditioning, and through the cultivation of mindfulness practices that strengthen the ability to observe one's own mental and emotional state without being consumed by it. The martial arts tradition of zazen and mushin — a mind of no fixed thought, capable of responding without being hijacked by emotion — speaks directly to this capacity (Suzuki, 1959).


Legal Dimensions of Ego-Driven Escalation

Beyond the tactical, there are serious legal reasons to subordinate the ego in a self-defense situation. Use-of-force law — in Nevada and in most other American jurisdictions — is built around the concept of reasonableness. The question is not merely whether you were afraid, but whether a reasonable person in your situation would have believed force was necessary, and whether the force used was proportionate to the threat (Nevada Revised Statutes § 200.200; Branca, 2017).


Ego-driven choices tend to fail the reasonableness test in predictable ways. If the evidence shows that you had multiple opportunities to disengage but chose not to, your claim of self-defense is weakened significantly. If the evidence shows that you were trading insults before the physical confrontation began, the prosecution will argue — often successfully — that you were a mutual combatant rather than an innocent party exercising a right of defense. If you were the more physically capable party and you chose to fight rather than leave, you may find that "I felt threatened" is not the same thing as "the law excuses my use of force."


Andrew Branca's analysis of self-defense law distills the issue clearly: the duty to avoid or retreat (where it exists) and the requirement of proportionality are both built on the assumption that a reasonable person prefers not to fight (Branca, 2017). Ego does not prefer not to fight. Ego prefers to be right, to be respected, and to not appear weak. Every place that ego overrides the preference not to fight is a place where your legal defense is at risk.


Psychological Dimensions: Identity and the Threat Response

One reason ego subordination is so difficult is that the ego is not just a bad habit — it is deeply entangled with identity. Research on terror management theory (TMT) suggests that much of human social behavior is driven by anxiety about mortality and the need to maintain a meaningful sense of self (Solomon, Greenberg, & Pyszczynski, 2004). When someone challenges your identity — calls you a coward, disrespects you in front of your social group, violates what you take to be your honor — the response can feel existential, because psychologically, it is touching something close to the self's core.


This is not an excuse for ego-driven behavior. It is an explanation of why the work of subordinating the ego requires genuine psychological maturity and practice, not just an intellectual decision. The practitioner who can be called a coward and walk away without it meaning anything damaging about who they are has achieved something real. That achievement is not passivity — it is the security of someone who knows what they are and does not need a stranger's approval or fear to confirm it.


This connects to what psychologists describe as ego strength — the capacity to tolerate frustration, ambiguity, and threat without disintegrating into reactive behavior (Vaillant, 1993). Paradoxically, ego subordination in the sense used here actually requires genuine ego strength. The person who cannot walk away from a challenge is often the person who is most fragile underneath, most dependent on external validation to sustain a sense of self. The person who can choose not to fight, when not fighting is the wiser choice, is operating from a place of real security.


Training the Subordinated Ego

Practically speaking, how does a self-defense practitioner develop ego subordination? Several approaches have proven useful.


First, scenario-based training that specifically tests the willingness to disengage, to be verbally challenged without responding physically, and to accept apparent "loss" in a training context helps build the muscle memory of restraint. Rory Miller's work on scenario training and force decision-making is particularly valuable here (Miller, 2012). The goal is not to make the practitioner passive, but to give them the experience of choosing restraint under realistic pressure.


Second, the cultivation of awareness practices — whether drawn from the Zen tradition, from modern mindfulness-based stress reduction, or from the tactical awareness frameworks of practitioners like Jeff Cooper — trains the ability to observe without immediately reacting (Williams & Penman, 2011; Cooper, 1989). The observer self, as opposed to the reactive ego, is the part of you that can notice "I am feeling challenged right now" without that observation immediately converting into a challenge response.


Third, honest after-action review of past conflicts — including conflicts where the ego made poor decisions — builds genuine self-knowledge. The martial artist who can look at a past altercation and say "I escalated that, and it was not necessary, and here is why I did it" is doing the most important kind of self-defense training there is. The ego hates this review. The warrior benefits from it enormously.


Conclusion: Strength Through Surrender

Ego subordination in self-defense is one of those ideas that seems simple and proves difficult. Intellectually, most practitioners agree with it immediately. In practice, in the moment when the adrenaline is up and someone is in your face and there are witnesses, the ego screams to stand its ground. The discipline is to hear that scream, acknowledge it, and act from wisdom anyway.


The classical martial traditions understood this. The samurai concept of Zanshin — sustained awareness without emotional reactivity — is ego subordination in action. Mushin, the mind without obstruction, is impossible as long as the ego is running the show. The self-defense practitioner who has genuinely integrated these principles does not fight to prove something. They fight only when there is no other choice, and with exactly the force the situation requires — nothing more, nothing less.

That is not weakness. That is the highest expression of what the martial arts, at their best, have always been trying to teach.

 

References

Arnsten, A. F. T. (1998). Catecholamine modulation of prefrontal cortical cognitive function. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2(11), 436–447. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1364-6613(98)01219-X

Branca, A. (2017). The law of self defense: The indispensable guide for the armed citizen (3rd ed.). Law of Self Defense, LLC.

Cooper, J. (1989). Principles of personal defense. Paladin Press.

de Becker, G. (1997). The gift of fear: Survival signals that protect us from violence. Little, Brown.

Frankl, V. E. (1959). Man's search for meaning. Beacon Press.

LeDoux, J. (1996). The emotional brain: The mysterious underpinnings of emotional life. Simon & Schuster.

MacYoung, M. (2014). A professional's guide to ending violence quickly. YMAA Publication Center.

Miller, R. (2008). Meditations on violence: A comparison of martial arts training and real world violence. YMAA Publication Center.

Miller, R. (2012). Force decisions: A citizen's guide to understanding how police determine appropriate use of force. YMAA Publication Center.

Nevada Revised Statutes § 200.200. Justifiable homicide by any person. Nevada Legislature.

Quinn, P. (2000). Real fighting: Adrenaline stress conditioning through scenario-based training. Paladin Press.

Solomon, S., Greenberg, J., & Pyszczynski, T. (2004). The cultural animal: Twenty years of terror management theory and research. In J. Greenberg, S. L. Koole, & T. Pyszczynski (Eds.), Handbook of experimental existential psychology (pp. 13–34). Guilford Press.

Suzuki, D. T. (1959). Zen and Japanese culture. Princeton University Press.

Vaillant, G. E. (1993). The wisdom of the ego. Harvard University Press.

Williams, M., & Penman, D. (2011). Mindfulness: An eight-week plan for finding peace in a frantic world. Rodale Press.

The Toxic Tide

How Constant Negativity Damages Your Health and Well-Being


Dark words fill the air —

the body hears every blow,

cells begin to grieve.

 

Storm clouds never lift —

the heart grows heavy with doubt,

breath comes hard and slow.

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


DISCLAIMER

The content presented here is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or a certified self-defense methodology. Laws governing the use of force vary by jurisdiction. Readers should consult a qualified attorney and seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection.

 

IMG_0995.jpeg


Introduction: Words Are More Than Just Words

Most of us were taught as kids that sticks and stones may break our bones, but words can never hurt us. That little rhyme, well-intentioned as it was, turns out to be flat-out wrong. Science has made it pretty clear over the last few decades that words — especially negative ones repeated day after day — can absolutely hurt usNot just emotionally, but physically, at the cellular and hormonal level.


Whether it's the coworker who gripes constantly, the family member who sees doom in every silver lining, a social media feed stuffed with outrage, or even the inner critic who won't shut up, a constant drip of negativity puts your body and brain under real stress. And stress, as we'll see, is a serious health threat when it becomes chronic.


This piece walks you through what researchers have found about how negative attitudes and communications affect your health — from your heart and immune system to your brain chemistry and even your lifespan. It's not a doom-and-gloom lecture; it's an honest look at what the evidence says, and hopefully a nudge toward healthier habits of mind and communication.

 

What Is Negativity, Exactly?

When we talk about a constant flow of negativity, we're not talking about someone having a bad day or expressing a legitimate concern. Life is hard, and honest negative emotions — grief, frustration, fear — are healthy and necessary. The problem arises when negativity becomes a fixed lens: a default way of interpreting the world as threatening, hopeless, or unfair.


Psychologists call this kind of pattern 'negative affectivity' — a broad tendency toward distressing emotional states. It shows up in attitudes like chronic pessimism, habitual complainingcynicismhostility, and catastrophizing (assuming the worst outcome in every situation). 


It also shows up in the way people communicate: the relentless complainer, the person who can't give a compliment without a criticism attached, the doom-scroller who then recaps the day's tragedies at the dinner table.


Research shows that these patterns are not just personality quirks. They have measurable, concrete effects on the body — and on the people around you.

 

The Brain on Negativity: Wired for Worry, Worn Down by It

The Negativity Bias

The human brain evolved with what researchers call a 'negativity bias' — we pay more attention to threats and bad news than to neutral or positive events. This made good evolutionary sense on the savanna; the lion in the tall grass demanded more attention than the pleasant breeze. But in the modern world, where our 'lions' are angry emails, cable news, and difficult relationships, this hardwired threat-scanning becomes a liability.


When we are exposed to constant negativity, the brain's threat-detection circuitry — centered in the amygdala — gets overworked. Studies using neuroimaging have shown that chronic negative thinking is associated with structural changes in the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for rational decision-making, emotional regulation, and perspective-taking (Ochsner & Gross, 2005). In plain terms: chronic negativity literally reshapes your brain toward anxiety and away from calm, clear thinking.


Cortisol and the Stress Response

Every time the brain registers a threat — real or perceived — the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis kicks into gear and releases cortisol, the body's primary stress hormone. Cortisol is useful in the short term: it sharpens focus, raises blood sugar, and primes the body for action.


But when the stressor is not a lion, but rather a relentlessly negative work environment or a household where complaints and criticism dominate the air, cortisol stays elevated. And chronically elevated cortisol is, to put it bluntly, toxic. McEwen (2008) described this accumulation of wear and tear on the body as 'allostatic load,' and it is associated with virtually every major chronic illness there is.

 

The Cardiovascular System: Your Heart Pays the Price

The link between chronic negativity and heart disease is one of the most well-documented in psychosomatic medicineHostility — a key component of negative attitudes toward others — has been repeatedly identified as an independent risk factor for coronary artery disease, even after controlling for smoking, diet, and other lifestyle factors (Miller et al., 1996).


The mechanism is not mysterious. Chronic stress and negative emotion keep blood pressure elevated, promote inflammation, and contribute to arterial damage. People who habitually ruminate on negative events show greater cardiovascular reactivity — their hearts work harder and recover more slowly than people who are not chronic ruminators (Brosschot et al., 2006).


And it is not just your own negativity that matters. Being on the receiving end of hostile, critical, or contemptuous communication — especially in close relationships — is also cardiotoxic. Gottman's research on marital communication (1994) identified contempt as the single best predictor of divorce, but it also predicts poorer physical health outcomes for both partners over time.

 

The Immune System: Negativity Under the Microscope

Psychoneuroimmunology is the field that examines the connection between psychological states and immune function, and it has produced some genuinely striking findings. Chronic negative affect — pessimismdepressionhostility — is consistently associated with reduced immune competence and increased susceptibility to illness (Segerstrom & Miller, 2004).


Kiecolt-Glaser and colleagues have shown in multiple studies that negative interpersonal stress — particularly conflict in close relationships — is associated with slower wound healing, reduced vaccine effectiveness, and elevated markers of systemic inflammation such as interleukin-6 and TNF-alpha (Kiecolt-Glaser et al., 2005). These inflammatory markers, when chronically elevated, are linked to heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and Alzheimer's disease.


What this means practically is that chronic exposure to negativity — whether you are generating it or absorbing it from your environment — compromises your body's ability to fight off illness and recover from injury.

 

Mental Health: The Feedback Loop That Traps People

One of the most insidious things about constant negativity is that it reinforces itself. 


Negative thinking patterns, when habitual, shape perception in ways that make negative interpretations feel true and normal. Beck's cognitive model of depression (Beck et al., 1979) describes how automatic negative thoughts — 'I always fail,' 'Nothing ever works out,' 'People can't be trusted' — operate as mental filters that screen out disconfirming evidence and lock people into depressive cycles.


Nolen-Hoeksema's extensive work on rumination (2000) found that people who respond to distress by repeatedly and passively focusing on their problems — rather than engaging in problem-solving or distraction — have significantly longer and more severe episodes of depression. Rumination is essentially mental negativity on a loop, and it has real clinical consequences.


Beyond depression, chronic negativity is closely associated with generalized anxiety disorder, social withdrawal, interpersonal conflict, and a reduced sense of meaning and purpose. People steeped in negativity often report feeling stuck, exhausted, and disconnected from others — which then feeds more negativity in a self-sealing loop.

 

The Social Contagion of Negativity

Here is something that should give us all pause: negativity is contagious. Not metaphorically — neurologically. Research on emotional contagion by Hatfield, Cacioppo, and Rapson (1993) demonstrated that humans automatically and unconsciously mimic the emotional expressions and physiological states of those around them. We literally feel what others around us feel, at a bodily level.


Fowler and Christakis (2008) extended this finding into social networks, showing that happiness, depression, and even health behaviors spread through communities like social viruses, reaching three degrees of separation. The chronically negative person in your office, your family, or your social circle is not just making your afternoon unpleasant. They are affecting your stress levels, your mood, and potentially your health — and you are doing the same to others.


This has particular implications in the digital age, where social media feeds curated around outrage, grievance, and negativity expose millions of people to a constant emotional contagion they may not even recognize.

 

Sleep, Fatigue, and Cognitive Decline

Chronic stress from negative environments and negative thought patterns is a major driver of sleep disturbance. Elevated cortisol interferes with the architecture of sleep — reducing slow-wave sleep and REM sleep, both of which are essential for memory consolidation, emotional regulation, and physical repair (Leproult & Van Cauter, 2010).


Sleep deprivation in turn amplifies negativity, creating yet another feedback loop: 


  • negative mood disrupts sleep; 
  • disrupted sleep amplifies negative mood; 
  • amplified negative mood worsens physical health; 
  • worsened health further undermines mood and sleep. 


Over time, this cycle contributes to cognitive decline, reduced creativity and problem-solving capacity, and diminished resilience.


Research has also begun to link chronic psychological stress — including the kind produced by ongoing negative communication and relationships — with accelerated telomere shortening, a biological marker of cellular aging (Epel et al., 2004). In plain terms: chronic negativity appears to age you faster at the cellular level.

 

Longevity: The Long Game

Perhaps the most striking finding is the connection between negative attitudes and longevity. Levy and colleagues (2002) found that people with more positive self-perceptions of aging lived an average of 7.5 years longer than those with negative perceptions — a larger effect than that associated with low blood pressure, low cholesterol, no smoking, healthy body weight, or regular exercise.


The famous Nun Study, conducted by Snowdon (2001), examined autobiographical essays written by young women entering religious life in the 1930s and correlated their emotional positivity or negativity with longevity decades later. Nuns whose early writing contained more positive emotional content lived significantly longer and showed lower rates of Alzheimer's disease.


These are not fringe findings. They align with a substantial body of evidence connecting psychological well-being to health outcomes and suggest that cultivating a more positive orientation — not toxic positivity, but genuine engagement with good things — is one of the more powerful health interventions available.

 

What Can Be Done About It?

The good news is that none of this is fixed. The brain is plastic, habits of thought can change, and communication patterns can be deliberately reshaped. Here are some evidence-based strategies that have shown real benefit:


• Cognitive-behavioral techniques: Identifying and challenging automatic negative thoughts — the core of CBT — has strong evidence for reducing depression and anxiety and reshaping habitual negativity (Beck et al., 1979).

• Mindfulness practice: Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) has been shown to reduce rumination, lower cortisol, improve immune function, and decrease symptoms of anxiety and depression (Kabat-Zinn, 1990; Grossman et al., 2004).

• Gratitude practice: Regular, intentional reflection on positive experiences counteracts the negativity bias and has measurable effects on mood and well-being (Emmons & McCullough, 2003).

• Social environment management: Reducing exposure to chronically negative people and environments — what psychologists sometimes call 'toxic relationships' — is not selfish; it is protective. Boundaries are a health behavior.

• Communication habits: Learning to express concerns without habitual complaint, to listen without defensiveness, and to offer feedback constructively reduces interpersonal stress for everyone in the room.

• Digital hygiene: Curating social media feeds to reduce exposure to outrage-driven content and negativity is a small but meaningful step with documented mood benefits.

 

Conclusion: The Body Keeps the Score — and the Tone

The old idea that attitude is separate from health — that how you think and speak is just a matter of personality while your body is a physical machine that runs on food and exercise — does not hold up to scrutiny. 


The evidence is clear and consistent: chronic negativity, whether it comes from within or from the environment around us, is a genuine health hazard.


  • It raises our stress hormones, 
  • suppresses our immune function, 
  • damages our cardiovascular system, 
  • disrupts our sleep, 
  • ages our cells, 
  • shortens our lives, and 
  • spreads to those around us. 
  • It also traps us in self-reinforcing loops that are hard to escape without deliberate effort.


None of this means we should plaster on a fake smile or pretend life is all sunshine. It means that what we say, how we say it, and the attitude we habitually carry through the world have real consequences — for us and for everyone we interact with. Taking that seriously is not a soft self-help notion. It is a matter of public health.

 

Bibliography

Beck, A. T., Rush, A. J., Shaw, B. F., & Emery, G. (1979). Cognitive therapy of depression. Guilford Press.

Brosschot, J. F., Gerin, W., & Thayer, J. F. (2006). The perseverative cognition hypothesis: A review of worry, prolonged stress-related physiological activation, and health. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 60(2), 113–124.

Emmons, R. A., & McCullough, M. E. (2003). Counting blessings versus burdens: An experimental investigation of gratitude and subjective well-being in daily life. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 84(2), 377–389.

Epel, E. S., Blackburn, E. H., Lin, J., Dhabhar, F. S., Adler, N. E., Morrow, J. D., & Cawthon, R. M. (2004). Accelerated telomere shortening in response to life stress. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 101(49), 17312–17315.

Fowler, J. H., & Christakis, N. A. (2008). Dynamic spread of happiness in a large social network: Longitudinal analysis over 20 years in the Framingham Heart Study. BMJ, 337, a2338.

Gottman, J. M. (1994). Why marriages succeed or fail. Simon & Schuster.

Grossman, P., Niemann, L., Schmidt, S., & Walach, H. (2004). Mindfulness-based stress reduction and health benefits: A meta-analysis. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 57(1), 35–43.

Hatfield, E., Cacioppo, J. T., & Rapson, R. L. (1993). Emotional contagion. Cambridge University Press.

Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full catastrophe living: Using the wisdom of your body and mind to face stress, pain, and illness. Delacorte Press.

Kiecolt-Glaser, J. K., Loving, T. J., Stowell, J. R., Malarkey, W. B., Lemeshow, S., Dickinson, S. L., & Glaser, R. (2005). Hostile marital interactions, proinflammatory cytokine production, and wound healing. Archives of General Psychiatry, 62(12), 1377–1384.

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© CEJames & Akira Ichinose — All rights reserved


______________

Negative Affectivity: 

A Tendency Toward Distressing Emotional States


Dark clouds settle in

The mind rehearses its grief —

Rain that never falls


Tension without cause

The body holds what the heart

Cannot put in words


by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


DISCLAIMER

The content presented here is for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or a certified self-defense methodology. Laws governing the use of force vary by jurisdiction. Readers should consult a qualified attorney and seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection.

 

What Is Negative Affectivity?

Negative affectivity (NA) is a broad personality dimension that describes a person’s general tendency to experience the world through a lens of distress. Think of it as a kind of emotional thermostat that’s set too low by default — where the baseline mood is more likely to drift toward anxiety, sadness, irritability, or a vague sense of unease rather than contentment or calm.


The concept was formally introduced by David Watson and Lee Anna Clark in the 1980s, emerging from decades of research into mood, temperament, and personality. Their landmark 1984 paper distinguished negative affectivity from positive affectivity, laying the groundwork for what would become one of the most researched constructs in personality and clinical psychology.


People high in negative affectivity don’t necessarily have more bad things happen to them. What’s different is how they perceive and respond to their circumstances. They tend to 


  • notice potential threats more readily
  • dwell on negative experiences longer, and 
  • describe their emotional lives with more distress-laden language — 


even when objective conditions are relatively neutral.


The Emotional Profile of High-NA Individuals

If you’ve ever known someone who seems to carry a persistent cloud with them — always anticipating problems, quick to feel hurt or slighted, and rarely fully at ease — you’ve likely encountered someone with elevated negative affectivity. The emotional signature of high NA includes a cluster of frequently occurring states: 


  • anxiety, 
  • worry, 
  • hostility, 
  • self-criticism, 
  • sadness, and 
  • guilt.


Watson and Clark described NA as a “general dimension of subjective distress” that encompasses the tendency to experience a wide range of negative mood states across time and situations. This is an important point — it’s not that high-NA people are clinically depressed or anxious in a diagnosable sense, though they are at elevated risk for both. Rather, their day-to-day emotional range simply skews negative.


Research consistently shows that individuals high in NA are also more likely to report physical complaints — headachesfatiguedigestive issues — even when medical exams reveal no clear organic cause. This somatic dimension points to how deeply negative affectivity is woven into the body’s stress response systems, not just the cognitive appraisal process.


Negative Affectivity and Neuroticism

In the broader architecture of personality psychology, negative affectivity is closely related to — some would say nearly synonymous with — the Big Five trait of neuroticism. Neuroticism is one of the most robust and replicated personality dimensions across cultures and assessment tools, and its core content is almost entirely about proneness to negative emotional experience.


The distinction, if there is one, is partly conceptual. Negative affectivity tends to be discussed in terms of mood states — the actual felt experience of distress — while neuroticism is discussed more broadly as a personality trait that includes emotional instability, vulnerability to stress, and a reactive nervous system. In practice, the two constructs correlate so highly that many researchers treat them as interchangeable for most purposes.


Hans Eysenck’s earlier work on neuroticism also anticipated much of what Watson and Clark formalized. Eysenck tied neuroticism to an overactive limbic system — a biological substrate for emotional reactivity — which has found ongoing support in neuroimaging studies showing that high-neuroticism individuals display heightened amygdala responses to emotionally negative stimuli.


Origins, Stability, and Change

Where does negative affectivity come from? The short answer is: it’s complicated, but biology has a strong vote. Twin studies consistently show that roughly 40–60% of the variance in neuroticism and negative affectivity is attributable to genetic factors. This doesn’t mean people are locked in — environmental experience, particularly in childhood, shapes how these tendencies develop and express themselves over time.


Early attachment experiences appear to matter considerably. Children raised in unpredictable or emotionally invalidating environments — 


  • where caregivers were inconsistent, 
  • dismissive, or 
  • themselves high in distress — 


are more likely to develop heightened negative affectivity. The nervous system learns what to expect, and if the early environment teaches that threat is common and safety is unreliable, that template tends to persist.


That said, negative affectivity is not a life sentence. Research on personality change, including the landmark work of Brent Roberts and colleagues, suggests that traits like neuroticism do shift meaningfully across the lifespan — often in a positive direction as people age, particularly during young adulthood and middle age. Psychotherapy, particularly cognitive-behavioral approaches, has also demonstrated reliable reductions in NA over time.


The Health Consequences of High Negative Affectivity

One of the most consequential aspects of negative affectivity research is its relationship to health outcomes, both psychological and physical. On the psychological side, high NA is one of the strongest predictors of anxiety disordersdepressive episodes, and the general category of what researchers call “internalizing” problems — conditions where distress is primarily directed inward rather than acted out behaviorally.


The physical health picture is equally compelling. Chronic negative affect is associated with elevated cortisol levels, dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, increased inflammatory markers, and compromised immune function. Over time, these physiological patterns contribute to elevated risk for cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and even earlier mortality.


There is also a well-documented complication in clinical settings: people high in NA tend to report more symptoms and seek medical care more frequently, but their symptom reports do not always map cleanly onto objective pathology. This is not because they are malingering — the distress is real — but because NA amplifies the perception of bodily sensations and increases the likelihood of interpreting ambiguous symptoms as threatening. This creates genuine challenges for both diagnosis and treatment.


Negative Affectivity in Work and Relationships

In organizational psychology, negative affectivity has attracted significant attention because of its downstream effects on job satisfaction, performance appraisals, and workplace behavior. Individuals high in NA tend to report lower job satisfaction, even controlling for objective working conditions. They are more likely to perceive interpersonal conflict, feel underappreciated, and describe their work environments as demanding or unfair.


This finding has real methodological significance. When researchers rely on self-reported data about both stress and health or satisfaction outcomes, high-NA participants may inflate correlations simply by reporting more distress across all domains. This is sometimes called the “negative affectivity bias” in survey research, and it’s a known confound in occupational stress studies.


In close relationships, high NA can create patterns that are genuinely difficult for all parties. People with elevated negative affectivity are more likely to 


  • perceive rejection in ambiguous situations, 
  • more likely to engage in reassurance-seeking behavior, and 
  • more likely to experience conflict as highly threatening. 


Partners often find themselves walking on eggshells, which over time can erode intimacy and trust in ways that confirm the high-NA person’s underlying fears.


How Negative Affectivity Is Measured

The most widely used tool for measuring negative affectivity is the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS), developed by Watson, Clark, and Tellegen in 1988. The PANAS consists of a list of mood descriptors — words like “nervous,” “distressed,” “scared,” “uphappy” — and asks respondents to rate how much they generally feel this way on a five-point scale. The negative affect subscale has shown excellent internal consistency and validity across diverse populations.


Neuroticism scales embedded in comprehensive personality inventories like the NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R) and the Big Five Inventory (BFI) also capture the construct effectively. These measures include facets that map closely onto the NA dimension, including anxiety, angry hostility, depression, self-consciousness, impulsivity, and vulnerability.


Practical Implications: Stress, Threat Perception, and Self-Defense Judgment

For individuals engaged in self-defense training or operating in high-stress environments, understanding negative affectivity is more than an academic exercise. High-NA individuals may be prone to threat over-detection — perceiving danger in ambiguous social situations, misreading neutral faces as hostile, or escalating their emotional response before a situation has genuinely warranted it.


This matters because clear-headed situational assessment is foundational to sound self-defense decision-making. When negative affectivity drives perception, the OODA loop — observe, orient, decide, act — can be corrupted at the orientation stage. The high-NA practitioner may be processing threat through a distorted filter, increasing both false positives (responding to non-threats) and false negatives (being paralyzed by excessive fear when action is warranted).


Mindfulness-based training, which has empirical support for reducing both NA and its downstream cognitive distortions, represents one avenue for the serious practitioner. Developing awareness of one’s own emotional baseline — recognizing that the gut feeling of threat may sometimes be a projection of chronic distress rather than an accurate read of the environment — is a skill that can be cultivated with deliberate practice.


Managing and Reducing Negative Affectivity

While negative affectivity has a significant biological component, it is malleable — and this matters greatly for people who recognize these patterns in themselves. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) has the strongest empirical base for reducing trait-level neuroticism and NA. CBT works partly by interrupting the habitual patterns of catastrophizing, rumination, and threat-focused attentionthat sustain high NA over time.


Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) have also shown effectiveness, particularly for people whose negative affectivity is entwined with recurrent depression or anxiety. Both approaches share an emphasis on changing one’s relationship to negative thoughts and feelings rather than trying to eliminate them — a shift that reduces the secondary suffering that comes from fighting against one’s own emotional experience.


Beyond formal psychotherapy, robust physical exercise has consistent evidence for reducing NA and improving mood regulation. Sleep quality, social connectedness, and meaning-making activities also moderate the expression of negative affectivity over time. None of these are quick fixes — but together they suggest that the architecture of chronic distress can be systematically renovated through sustained behavioral and psychological effort.


Closing Thoughts

Negative affectivity is not a character flaw or a sign of weakness — it is a personality dimension with deep biological roots, real consequences for health and functioning, and meaningful pathways for change. Understanding it is the first step toward relating to it differently: not as a fixed verdict on one’s inner life, but as a tendency that can be observed, named, and over time, reshaped.


For the researcher, the clinician, the self-defense practitioner, or simply the thoughtful person trying to understand why their emotional world feels so heavy so much of the time, the literature on negative affectivity offers both an honest map of the terrain and genuine grounds for optimism. The clouds, as the first haiku suggests, are real — but the rain they threaten does not always fall.


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