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Personal Development

The danger of learned helplessness and how to overcome it

“The greatest danger is not that we fail, but that we stop believing our efforts make a difference.” Marianne Williamson.

Photographer: Darina Belonogova

Learned helplessness is a psychological trap where people feel powerless, or helpless to change their situation after facing repeated failures, or uncontrollable challenges. It’s a belief that culminates from life’s continuous blows and setbacks. It’s insidious and very dangerous. The problem with learned helplessness is that we become overly critical of life outcomes, even when the variables are not within our control. We internalize our failures, and it blinds us to other possibilities. It kills ambition and growth.

Learned helplessness is predicated on the assumption that failure is always inevitable, irrespective of the efforts. It’s the acceptance that all actions are futile.  Passively accepting one’s fate due to past setbacks. It’s a very defeating and unproductive way to live. Studies show learned helplessness disrupts brain areas tied to decision-making and memory, making it harder to stay motivated, or think clearly.

How does learned helplessness develop?

Learned helplessness often starts with repeated exposure to situations where effort doesn’t pay off. Psychologically, it’s like a broken feedback loop: if actions don’t lead to rewards, people give up. For example, employees ignored despite hard work may stop striving for promotions. The brain reinforces this by focusing on failures, ignoring successes, a bias that distorts reality. Over time, people develop a “fixed mindset,” believing their abilities, or circumstances can’t change.

The environment plays a huge role. Constant bad news, unpredictable systems (like algorithm-driven job platforms), or overly critical teachers can make helplessness feel normal. Biologically, stress from these situations overactivates the body’s stress response, clouding judgment and sapping energy. Evolutionarily, giving up might have saved energy in hopeless scenarios, but in today’s complex world, it often traps us in cycles of inaction.

How to overcome learned helplessness

Breaking free from learned helplessness requires effort but is entirely possible. Here are practical, evidence-based strategies to reclaim control:

Reframe your thinking

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) offers a powerful tool called the ABCDE model: Adversity, Belief, Consequence, Disputation, Energization. When something bad happens (Adversity), notice your automatic thoughts (Belief) and how they make you feel (Consequence). Challenge those thoughts (Disputation) with evidence. For instance, if you think, “I failed this project because I’m incompetent,” list times you succeeded, or factors beyond your control, like limited resources. This sparks new energy (Energization) to keep going. Research shows CBT can reduce helplessness symptoms significantly.

Build small wins

Start with tasks you can control and succeed at, like completing a short reading, or solving a simple problem. These “mastery experiences,” as psychologist Albert Bandura called them, boost confidence. For example, a student struggling in math could practice basic problems daily, gradually increasing difficulty. Each success rewires the brain to expect progress.

Focus on what you control: Inspired by Stoic philosophy, focus on your actions and attitude, not outcomes. If you’re job hunting, you can’t control hiring decisions, but you can control how many applications you send or how well you prepare for interviews. This shift reduces frustration and builds resilience.

Practice mindfulness

Techniques like meditation help you observe negative thoughts without believing them. Apps, or programs like mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) teach you to stay present, reducing the grip of helpless feelings. Studies show mindfulness strengthens brain areas tied to decision-making.

Learn from others

Surround yourself with people who overcome challenges. Watching peers succeed (whether colleagues tackling tough projects, or friends navigating setbacks) shows change is possible. This “vicarious mastery” inspires action.

Question the narrative

Intellectually, challenge the idea that things are hopeless. Read about people who defied odds, like scientists who persisted despite skepticism. Set “process goals,” like spending 30 minutes daily on a skill, rather than fixating on big outcomes like “publish a book.” This keeps you moving forward.

 

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