• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Healing Tao USA logo title 480x83

Medical and Spiritual Qigong (Chi Kung)

  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Winn – Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Tao Instructor!
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Primordial Tai Chi: HOW does it Grow Self-Love?
    • Oct. 2023 Newsletter
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Healing Tao USA logo as Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • ••• China Dream Trip: August 2026 DATES •••
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager – Buy Products
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart
  • Search
  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Winn – Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Tao Instructor!
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Primordial Tai Chi: HOW does it Grow Self-Love?
    • Oct. 2023 Newsletter
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Healing Tao USA logo as Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • ••• China Dream Trip: August 2026 DATES •••
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager – Buy Products
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart
  • Search

The Upside of Your Dark Side (book excerpt)

by

Home › Forum Online Discussion › Practice › The Upside of Your Dark Side (book excerpt)

  • This topic has 2 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 5 months ago by RichieRich.
Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • November 28, 2014 at 8:23 pm #43343
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    Note: What embracing your dark side is ultimately about is achieving completion. I have been sharing my interpretation of Taoist notion of achieving Highest Destiny for sometime. The short summary: life is not about achieving happiness, it’s about achieving completion of your WHOLE self. I’m happy to see this spreading to mainstream psychology. -Michael

    Kashdan, Todd; Biswas-Diener, Robert (2014-09-25). The Upside of Your Dark Side: Why Being Your Whole Self–Not Just Your “Good” Self–Drives Success and Fulfillment (pp. vii-viii). Penguin Group US. Kindle Edition.

    PERHAPS THE MOST difficult test commonly used for recruiting elite special forces soldiers has nothing to do with marksmanship or proficiency in hand-to-hand combat. It’s a simple jog down a remote road. Young men are instructed to don full gear and report to the starting point early in the morning, often sleep deprived and hungry. What makes this particular run unusually challenging is that none of the candidates are told the length of the course . Is it three hundred yards? Three miles? Thirty miles?

    The stakes are high as the recruits begin their jog into the unknown. Some sprint forward in hopes of being first if the run is short. Others pace themselves, carefully conserving energy in the thought that the run could turn out to be a marathon. Some keep to themselves, trusting in their resolve and determination. Others jog together as a group, shouting words of encouragement. Running with sixty-pound packs is tiring, but the physical exertion is less demanding than the mental strain. The pressure of not knowing the distance to the finish line pushes many to the breaking point.

    Ambiguous tasks are a good place to observe how personality traits bubble to the surface. Although few of us are elite soldiers, we’ve all experienced the kind of psychological distress these trainees encounter on their training run: managing unclear expectations, struggling with self-motivation, and balancing the use of social support with private reflection. These issues are endemic not only to the workplace, but also to relationships, health, and every aspect of life in which we seek to thrive and succeed.

    Not surprisingly , the leading predictor of success in elite military training programs is the same quality that distinguishes those best equipped to resolve marital conflict, to achieve favorable deal terms in business negotiations, and to bestow the gifts of good parenting on their children: the ability to tolerate psychological discomfort.

    This is what psychologists refer to as distress tolerance, a quality found in people who can handle the emotional equivalent of camping (no shampoo, flush toilets, or walls to keep out creepy crawlers), who don’t shy away from anger, guilt, or boredom just because they feel bad. Instead, they withstand the discomfort of those feelings and— when appropriate— even draw from this darker palette of emotions.

    You might be asking, why would I want to do that? Pain hurts. I’d rather be happy. If this question occurs to you, we’re nodding our heads in full agreement. We want you to be happy too. Distress tolerance is important not just because it makes you a better camper or soldier, but also because it allows you to become stronger, wiser, mentally agile, and, most important, happier in a more resilient, and therefore durable, way. After more than a decade of working with patients, clients, students, small companies, and organizations as large as the military and the Fortune 100, we, the authors, are putting forward a new way to pursue what is desirable in life; it’s not happiness, exactly, although it does have the side effect of making us happier. We call this state wholeness.

    There will always be experts— especially in psychology— who argue that one particular way of being (happy, hardy, optimistic) is a cure-all. In this book, we take a different approach. Instead of suggesting that one state is best, we suggest that they all are. We believe— and new research supports—the idea that every emotion is useful.

    Even the ones we think of as negative, including the painful ones. Anger is a good example. Research shows that only rarely does anger turn into the kind of overwhelming rage that leads to violence. Instead, it tends to bubble up when you perceive an encroachment on your rights as a person. Anger stirs you to defend yourself and those you care about, and to maintain healthy boundaries.

    Similarly, embarrassment is sometimes an early warning sign of humiliation. More often it’s a signal that we’ve made a small mistake and that a small correction is required. Even guilt is not as awful as you might guess. It’s a signal that you’re violating your own moral code and therefore need to adjust either your actions or your code.

    All psychological states have some adaptive advantage. Rather than steering you toward a single feeling state, then, we urge you to consider the usefulness of many— especially the ones we turn away from— and to develop the ability to navigate every one. For some people, seeing the bright side of life is an uphill battle; for others, feeling sad is an unusual event. We don’t suggest an extra helping of happiness or a dash of negativity; we suggest both. It is by appropriately flipping back and forth between these two states that you can achieve a balanced, stabilizing sense of wholeness.

    Simply put, people who are able to use the whole range of their natural psychological gifts— those folks who are comfortable with being both positive and negative, and can therefore draw from the full range of human emotions— are the healthiest and, often, the most successful.

    It turns out that the uncertainty, frustration, and occasional dash of guilt that stem from broken hearts, missed basketball shots at the buzzer, and botched interviews are the seeds of growth in knowledge and maturity. These often unwanted, negative experiences end up shaping some of the most memorable and inspiring experiences of our lives. By learning to embrace and use negative emotions as well as positive ones, we position ourselves for success.

    But even as we tilled the fields of positive psychology, both of us were also increasingly put off by the gung-ho happiology (my emphasis) we often witnessed . Over the past fifteen years, positive psychology has been transformed from a reminder that “positive experiences are important” to a kind of smiling fascism.
    If positivity and optimism account for 80 percent of success, then tapping into a whole range of experiences offers that remaining 20% edge.

    We’ll never free ourselves to soar in that infinite potential if we’re busy trying to avoid the darker parts of our selves, the aspects we fail to appreciate. What we’re offering you here is an anti-happiness book that, paradoxically, opens you up to a far greater degree of joy than you could ever experience with a more direct approach. In fact, the latest studies show that there is no direct path to happiness. We are not opposed to happiness, positivity, kindness, or mindfulness. In fact, we embrace them.

    We also wish to ask you, the reader, one further question: are you ready for more? Will you join us in taking happiness to the next level? To go there you’ll need access to everything in the human psychological knapsack, which means unpacking and integrating previously ignored and under appreciated parts of who you are.

    In the pages that follow, you will learn how to become more emotionally, socially, and mentally agile. By accepting the challenge of drawing on the dark side when it’s most helpful, you bring wholeness within reach, perhaps for the first time.

    November 29, 2014 at 11:25 pm #43344
    russelln
    Participant

    The completion approach – essential. Another book – Shiva sutras – being discussed – same issues. Video link – starts part way through. Version of inner smile, non dual acceptance. Amusing slant on it, perhaps.

    http://youtu.be/jhDOKZW2Vsg?t=5m12s

    December 5, 2014 at 2:36 pm #43346
    RichieRich
    Participant

    This book looks very interesting.

    The short summary: life is not about achieving happiness, it’s about achieving completion of your WHOLE self.

    It strikes me that the book may be about means rather than ends. As the authors say

    What we’re offering you here is an anti-happiness book that, paradoxically, opens you up to a far greater degree of joy than you could ever experience with a more direct approach. In fact, the latest studies show that there is no direct path to happiness. We are not opposed to happiness, positivity, kindness, or mindfulness. In fact, we embrace them.

    And elsewhere they say

    Myth 4. This is an anti-happiness book.

    Nothing could be further from the truth. This is a pro-happiness book. In fact, you might think of it as our version of Happiness 2.0. We were not the first to arrive at some of these concepts. Indeed Carl Jung and others addressed the potential benefits of negative aspects of psychology. But we present an up-to-date synthesis of modern research. We point out some of the newest trends in happiness research including some of the costs of positive affect. Although my father published on this decades ago, it has seen an uptick in attention by a wide range of very responsible academics in the last decade. We do not leave the reader there, however. We also discuss positive aspects of happiness. We discuss both meaning and pleasure (and their relation to one another), as well as familiarity and novelty (and their relation to one another). It is our hope that this will help deepen the exciting conversation about happiness, not dismiss it.

  • Author
    Posts
Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Log In

Primary Sidebar

Signup for FREE eBook – $20 value

Inner Smile free eBook with Signup to Newsletter

Way of the Inner Smile
130 page eBook

+ Qi Flows Naturally news

+ Loving the Tao of Now blog

Enter Email Only - Privacy Protected

Qigong Benefits – Michael Winn

Michael Winn Qi Products:

Best Buy Packages »
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1 & 2
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 3 & 4
  3. Fusion of Five Elements 1, 2, 3
  4. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  5. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  6. Inner Sexual Alchemy Kan & Li
  7. Sun-Moon Alchemy Kan & Li
  8. Inner Smile Gift
Individual Products
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 2
  3. Qigong Fundamentals 3
  4. Qigong Fundamentals 4
  5. Fusion of Five Elements 1
  6. Fusion of Five Elements 2 & 3
  7. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  8. Tao Dream Practice
  9. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  10. Deep Healing Qigong
  11. Internal Alchemy (Kan & Li Series)
Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA

Michael Winn, Pres.
Healing Tao USA

Use Michael Winn's Qi Gong products for one whole year — I guarantee you'll be 100% delighted and satisfied with the great Qi results. Return my product in good condition for immediate refund.

Guarantee Details

OUR PROMISE: Every Michael Winn Qi gong & meditation product will empower you to be more relaxed, smiling, joyful, and flowing in harmony with the Life Force.

yin-yang

Each Qigong video, book, or audio course will assist your authentic Self to fulfill worldly needs and relations; feel the profound sexual pleasure of being a radiant, healthy body; express your unique virtues; complete your soul destiny; realize peace – experience eternal life flowing in this human body Now.

© 2025 Healing Tao USA · Log in · built by mojomonger