Humans logo

When ‘Good Vibes Only’ Becomes Toxic

"How forced positivity can silence real emotions—and why we need to feel everything to truly heal."

By FAIZAN AFRIDIPublished 8 months ago 3 min read

I used to think “Good vibes only” was a mantra for a better life.

It sounded harmless—encouraging even. Who doesn’t want to focus on the positive? Who wouldn’t want to fill their day with optimism, laughter, and light?

But over time, I learned the truth:

That sometimes, behind “Good vibes only,” there’s a quiet kind of violence happening—against our own emotions.

The Pressure to Stay Positive

We live in a world obsessed with positivity. Social media feeds are filled with pastel quotes telling us to “smile more,” “be grateful,” and “focus on the good.” It’s marketed as motivation, but often, it turns into a mask—a way to avoid discomfort, sadness, or even honesty.

At first, I bought into it. I repeated the affirmations. I brushed off bad days by saying, “It’s fine, everything happens for a reason.” When I was anxious, I told myself, “At least I’m not as bad off as others.” When I felt grief or frustration, I swallowed it with a smile.

But the truth is, I wasn’t healing—I was hiding.

The Cost of Forced Positivity

It took me a while to realize that constantly forcing myself to “stay positive” was making me feel worse, not better. Whenever I felt sadness creeping in, I would shut it down. I’d push away anger, fear, and pain like they were weeds ruining the garden of my life.

But emotions don’t disappear just because we ignore them. They fester. They turn into anxiety, burnout, resentment. I didn’t need more “good vibes.” I needed space to be human.

Here’s the truth no one wants to admit:

Sometimes the most healing thing you can do is sit in the mess, feel the grief, admit the pain.

By avoiding the “bad” feelings, I was avoiding the very parts of myself that needed the most attention.

The Moment It Hit Me

One day, a friend confided in me that they were going through a deep depression. They had tried everything—therapy, medication, mindfulness—but still felt stuck. When they opened up, I didn’t know how to respond. I caught myself saying, “Just try to stay positive. This will pass.”

The look on their face crushed me. I realized in that moment that I wasn’t really listening. I was just offering the same empty phrases I gave myself—because I was uncomfortable with their pain.

That’s when it hit me:

Toxic positivity isn’t just about ignoring your feelings. It’s about denying others the right to feel theirs, too.

Feeling Everything Is Not Weakness

We’re told emotions like anger, sadness, grief, and fear are “negative.” But they’re not. They’re part of being alive. They’re signals. They’re messengers.

Grief tells us what we’ve lost mattered.

Anger shows us our boundaries were crossed.

Sadness invites us to slow down and care for ourselves.

Fear helps us prepare or protect what we love.

By labeling these as “bad vibes,” we shame ourselves into silence. We turn away from the very parts of ourselves that need the most kindness.

What I’ve learned is this:

You can be hopeful and hurting.

You can be grateful and grieving.

You can be healing and still feel broken sometimes.

The Balance Between Hope and Honesty

Now, when people talk about positivity, I look for nuance. I still believe in gratitude. I still believe in hope. But I no longer believe in suppressing emotion in the name of “staying positive.”

Healing doesn’t mean being happy all the time.

It means learning to be honest with yourself, even when the truth hurts.

It means holding space for your joy and your pain.

When we allow ourselves to feel everything—not just the shiny parts—we actually give ourselves a chance to grow. Because real strength isn’t pretending to be okay. It’s allowing yourself to not be okay—and still choosing to move forward.

What We Actually Need

We don’t need more slogans. We need more space.

We need people who sit with us in silence instead of trying to fix us with a quote.

We need honesty, vulnerability, connection—not curated perfection.

So the next time someone tells you “Good vibes only,” remember this:

You are allowed to feel sad.

You are allowed to be angry.

You are allowed to be a full, complicated human being.

You don’t owe anyone constant sunshine.

Final Thought

The world doesn’t need more forced positivity. It needs more realness.

Let your laughter be real. Let your tears be real. Let your heart break open and heal in its own time.

Because you don’t have to fake light to be worthy of love.

You already are.

advicediyfact or fictionsocial mediafeature

About the Creator

FAIZAN AFRIDI

I’m a writer who believes that no subject is too small, too big, or too complex to explore. From storytelling to poetry, emotions to everyday thoughts, I write about everything that touches life.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments (1)

Sign in to comment
  • Jason Collins8 months ago

    I get what you're saying about the pressure to stay positive. I used to do the same, brushing off my own feelings. But like you found out, it doesn't work. Have you ever had a moment where you finally let yourself feel those "bad" emotions? How did it change things for you? For me, it was when I lost my job. Instead of forcing a positive attitude, I let myself be angry and sad. It was hard, but it helped me deal with the situation better in the long run. We need to be more honest with ourselves about our feelings. What do you think is the best way to start being more open to our emotions without getting overwhelmed? Maybe it's taking small steps, like writing down how we feel or talking to a trusted friend.

Find us on social media

Miscellaneous links

  • Explore
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Support

© 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.