Depressing isnt it? Well, there is one bit of good news: Research from around the world suggests that most people are happy, not unhappy. "Its one of the things were absolutely sure about," says Michigan psychologist Richard Lucas.
Maybe its the uncertain economic climate, or maybe its the unstable political situation around the world. But joy seems to be a hot topic right now. For instance, in March 2004, both Self and Oprah Winfreys O, have articles on how to be happier. Self-help books on the subject are multiplying out of control. And scientific journals nowadays are loaded with studies on happiness.
"Its amazing how long happiness has been a problem but how only recently science has turned its attention to it," says Daniel Gilbert, a Harvard professor of psychology. "Its only been in the last 10 years that what was a hobby of a few has become a central focus in psychology." And new studies on happiness are yielding surprising conclusions on what and what doesnt lift ones mood and what effects happiness has on your health.
Researchers are increasingly learning that the way we view our lives, including our medical conditions, absolutely affects how well we manage them and how we feel. More than ever, the science of happiness is revealing the influence of mind over body. Of course, that doesnt mean if youre a born pessimist that you should turn this page. Scientists are discovering everyone even the naturally glum can boost their happiness. So, read on.
Dan Baker, Ph.D., director of the Life Enhancement Program in Tucson, Arizona, calls happiness "a way of life; an overriding outlook composed of qualities such as optimism, courage, love and fulfillment. Its not just tiptoeing through the tulips of la-la land, and its not something that changes every time your situation changes. It is nothing less than cherishing every day."
Researchers have shaped this definition not only by canvassing what seems to comprise happiness across time and cultures but also from the surprising results of studies that undermine clichés about happiness. When one now-famous 1978 University of Massachusetts study compared the happiness levels of lottery winners and accident victims, researchers found that after a year the paralyzed subjects were happier and more optimistic than the lottery winners, in part because they were better able to appreciate small pleasures and victories. And a University of Georgia Centenarian Study published in 1992 found that its 100-year-old-plus subjects had several traits in common, including a feisty can-do attitude and contentment with their lives. Says Baker, "They saw life as a series of events, and each event contained a possible lesson. They understood that the more painful events contained the more profound lessons."
On the other hand, researchers at Stanford University found that positive emotions help create a balance between the sympathetic nervous system (which alerts the body in times of danger and stress, increasing adrenaline, raising heart rate and blood pressure and speeding breathing) and parasympathetic nervous system (which slows body functions down, say after a big meal or during sleep) an important balance in controlling blood pressure and reducing the risk of heart disease. And for those with fibromyalgia, such stasis may be especially important: a study in Israel has suggested that their sympathetic nervous system tend to be in overdrive. In other words, people with fibromyalgia lack a healthy balance between these two systems.
For instance, for people with arthritis, the ability to see the big picture could be the difference between a day focused on pain limitations and a day understanding that next week will be better. That small difference in outlook may be the boost someone needs to get out of the house, head to the gym, volunteer at a charitable organization, or resume work just the things that can divert attention away from pain and depression. In short, broader thinking ultimately changes behavior. Christopher Peterson, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, believes that the way in which happiness changes behavior affects our health even more than the biological changes positive emotions evoke. "Optimistic people do such things as exercise and eating sensibly that promote health because they believe they can do something about their well-being," he says.
One of Petersons studies spanning 35 years suggests as much. In it, men who explain bad events in their life pessimistically - that is, "this is never going to change"; "this has ruined my life"; "its my fault," had poorer health in mid-life than those who saw their life stories more optimistically. One explanation of the difference, says Peterson, is that the pessimistic simply became more passive about their health care. They had trouble believing that what they did mattered.
So, where can you pick up some of this health-inducing happiness? Unfortunately, its not as simple as wearing a smiley face, says Peterson. For one thing, researchers have repeatedly observed that most of us have what is called "a happiness set-point," a natural contentment level to which we return despite occasional bouts of misery or ecstacy. For the naturally happy, this is great news. But for those who tend toward gloom, it seems, well, a pessimistic reading. And according to happiness expert, like Seligman, we possess all the potential to reach the upper limits of what we are naturally given. Heres how:
Get active. If you stay in the house and focus on your pain, you wouldnt be able to do anything. Sometimes you just have to get out of your comfort zone.
Act happy, suggests David G. Myers, Ph.D., professor of psychology at Hope College in Michigan. Says Myers, "Going through the motions can trigger the emotions."
"Its mind over matter," he adds.
Practice appreciation. Says Baker, "Three times a day, focus on what you have and what is good about your life. Doing so will make it easier for you to shape a different perspective on your life."
Banish blame. "As long as you blame yourself or others, as long as you see yourself as a victim, you give up all power to fix a problem and make yourself happy," says Jacob Teitelbaum, M.D., Director of the Annapolis Research Center for Effective Fibromyalgia Therapy, in Maryland. "Whenever you catch yourself blaming, drop the thought and think another. Its a matter of changing habits."
Hang out with happy people, suggests Peterson. "Pessimism is contagious and so is optimism."
The message is clear: Dont worry. Be happy!