People tend to confuse mood and affect and I see it happening in the responses to the this thread, as well as the phrasing of Witterquick's opening post.
One can feel down and still project a near-perfectly controlled positive affect.
Nobody is in a good mood all the time, but it is possible to have a completely controlled affect for the vast, vast majority of the time. Obviously it depends somewhat on your disposition, outlook, experience, willpower, etc... but the bottom line is that affect control (in the absence of genuine psychiatric morbidity or other over-riding factor like intoxication) is something learnable and which improves with practice.
I'd say that I'm about a 9.5-10 in affect control*, partly through disposition but also very heavily reinforced through my training.
* when I choose to, that is - obviously I don't want to have to exert full control all the time because some people deserve (in a good way) to know what I'm really feeling.
One can feel down and still project a near-perfectly controlled positive affect.
Nobody is in a good mood all the time, but it is possible to have a completely controlled affect for the vast, vast majority of the time. Obviously it depends somewhat on your disposition, outlook, experience, willpower, etc... but the bottom line is that affect control (in the absence of genuine psychiatric morbidity or other over-riding factor like intoxication) is something learnable and which improves with practice.
I'd say that I'm about a 9.5-10 in affect control*, partly through disposition but also very heavily reinforced through my training.
* when I choose to, that is - obviously I don't want to have to exert full control all the time because some people deserve (in a good way) to know what I'm really feeling.