Positive Psychology ≠ Positive Psychotherapy
By 2026, 'positive psychology' has become common parlance through social media, self-help books, and corporate workshops. Yet few people accurately know what 'Positive Psychotherapy (PPT)' is. Many confuse it with 'thinking positive,' 'gratitude journals,' or 'affirmations.'
PPT is a manualized 14-session clinical therapy developed by Martin Seligman (UPenn; the figure who launched positive psychology in his 1998 APA presidential address) and Tayyab Rashid (University of Toronto). Like CBT, it has fixed sessions, fixed homework, and measurable outcomes — a structured psychotherapy.
The accurate phrasing isn't 'think positive' but 'systematically identify and use your strengths, relationships, and meaning.'
Theoretical Foundation: PERMA + VIA
PPT rests on two Seligman frameworks.
PERMA (Seligman 2011 Flourish) decomposes well-being into five elements:
- Positive emotion
- Engagement (Csikszentmihalyi's flow; this site #269)
- Relationships
- Meaning
- Accomplishment
VIA Classification of Strengths (Peterson & Seligman 2004 Character Strengths and Virtues; this site #304) renders 6 universal virtues and 24 character strengths measurable. PPT sessions 2–3 have clients identify their top-5 'signature strengths' via the VIA inventory and use them as resources orthogonal to depressive symptoms.
Core idea: psychopathology results not only from negative symptoms but also from absent positive resources — so treatment should work both sides.
14-Session Structure (Rashid & Seligman 2018)
Rashid & Seligman 2018 Positive Psychotherapy: Clinician Manual (Oxford University Press) is the standard manual.
- Positive Introduction: a one-page life story showcasing your strengths
- VIA Strengths Assessment: identify top-5 signature strengths
- Using Signature Strengths: use them in a new way for one week
- Good vs Bad Memories: recognizing negativity bias
- Forgiveness: unsent grievance letter
- Gratitude: gratitude letter and in-person delivery (this site #270) 7–8. Satisficing vs Maximizing
- Hope and Optimism: 'one door closes, another opens'
- Posttraumatic Growth (this site #286)
- Slowness and Savoring (this site #325)
- Positive Relationships: Active Constructive Responding (ACR)
- Altruism: 'gift of time'
- Meaning and Purpose: writing your 'positive legacy'
Five Representative Sessions
| Session | Goal | Core task | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3. Using signature strengths | Translate top-5 VIA into action | Use strengths in a new way for one week | Seligman et al. 2005 Am Psychol — depression decreased at 6 months |
| 5. Forgiveness | Reduce grievance burden | REACH steps or unsent grievance letter | Worthington 2014; Wade 2014 meta — small-to-medium effect |
| 6. Gratitude letter | Activate relational resources | Write and read aloud to recipient | Seligman et al. 2005 — single intervention sustained 1-month effects |
| 11. Savoring | Expand daily positive affect | 5-min savor + photo/journal once daily | Bryant & Veroff 2007; this site #325 |
| 10. Posttraumatic growth | Integrate suffering into meaning | Map hardest event to '5 growth domains' | Tedeschi & Calhoun 1996; this site #286 |
Evidence — Read Honestly
Seminal RCT (Seligman, Rashid & Parks 2006, American Psychologist): in mildly-to-moderately depressed students, PPT outperformed treatment-as-usual on depression and well-being. Small sample, needed replication.
Chaves et al. 2017 (J Clin Psychol) meta-analysis — 5 RCTs for depression. PPT beat waitlist, but showed no consistent superiority over CBT. Effects 'promising but heterogeneous.'
Schrank et al. 2016 — adding PPT to treatment for psychosis improved well-being — suggestive as adjunct.
Sin & Lyubomirsky 2009 meta-analysis (51 studies, n=4,266) — covers all 'positive psychology interventions (PPI),' not PPT alone: well-being d=0.29, depression d=0.31. 'Small but real.' These numbers shouldn't be misread as PPT-specific.
Critics (e.g., White et al. 2019) note 'novelty effects may inflate early findings,' 'no proven superiority over CBT,' and 'publication bias risk.' Rashid 2015 attempted manual and therapist-training standardization.
Boundaries — What It Isn't
- Not standalone for severe depression / suicidality — the manual itself indicates mild-to-moderate or adjunctive use.
- Not 'toxic positivity' — sessions 5 (Forgiveness) and 10 (PTG) say 'integrate the pain,' not 'deny it.'
- 'PERMA apps' aren't PPT — most commercial well-being apps lack manuals, trained therapists, and clinical assessment, with thin efficacy evidence.
- Not a quick mood booster — 14 sessions + weekly homework; effort comparable to CBT.
Korea: Adoption and Status
In Korea, Professor Kwon Suk-man (Seoul National University) introduced PPT academically. Kwon 2008 Positive Psychology (Hakjisa) presented PERMA and VIA to general readers; Kwon 2014 Positive Psychotherapy became the practitioner-facing Korean text. Hakjisa released the Korean translation of Rashid & Seligman 2018.
Limited adoption appears in adolescent and school counseling (e.g., Lee Ji-young 2016). However, Korean standard care for depression remains CBT and pharmacotherapy as first-line; PPT operates more in counseling centers, school counseling, and well-being workshops than in psychiatric clinics.
If seeking PPT, verify ① licensed clinical psychologist credentials, and ② Rashid-manual workshop training. 'Positive psychology coaching' (unlicensed) is not clinical PPT.
Conclusion — Another Tool, Not a Panacea
PPT's value is not 'better than CBT' but 'while standard treatment removes symptoms, PPT systematically addresses strengths, relationships, and meaning.' Sin & Lyubomirsky's d=0.29–0.31 is small but real, with minimal side effects — a useful adjunct.
The advice 'just be positive' and the 14-session manualized therapy share words, not substance. People who know the difference are the ones who get real help.