Nine Scientists Share
Their Favorite Happiness Practices
For the International Day of Happiness, here's some inspiration to
help you feel more connected, grateful, and satisfied with your life.
How can we create a happier world?
That question is on many people’s minds
today, as we celebrate the sixth annual International Day of Happiness. This event grew
out of a United Nations resolutionaffirming happiness as a fundamental human goal—and
suggesting that we should approach economic growth in a way that promotes
well-being for everyone.
Social systems and institutions have a role
to play in our happiness, and that’s evident in this year’s World Happiness Report.
Researchers ranked countries by their average happiness levels and found, for
example, that GDP, life expectancy, freedom, and corruption make a difference.
In the ranking, Finland, Norway, and Denmark came out on top. The United States
dropped four spots to number 18.
That’s the big picture. But happiness is also
a very individual pursuit—and there are attitudes and habits we can cultivate
in daily life that will enhance our personal well-being.
For some inspiration, we decided to ask the
experts—the researchers who are actually studying well-being—about their
favorite happiness practices. Many of their nominations align with this year’s
International Day of Happiness theme around relationships, kindness, and
helping each other. You’ll also discover research-based happiness practices on
our website Greater Good in Action.
Jane Dutton, professor of business
administration and psychology at the University of Michigan:
My favorite research-based happiness practice
is to be alert to high-quality connections (HQCs) that I have with other people
during the course of the day. I know that it is a high-quality connection when I sense
vitality and aliveness in the interaction, even if it is a stranger. My
practice is to notice, savor, elaborate, and remember these HQCs, which are
like vitamins that strengthen me from within.
Laurie Santos, professor of psychology and cognitive science at
Yale University:
Loving-kindness meditation. I find this type of meditation a lot
easier than other, more breath-based meditations, and I’m always surprised at
how centered it makes me feel. I also love to see the downstream effects this
practice has in my interactions with others and my patience with my own
foibles, too.
Judson Brewer, associate professor at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School:
Loving-kindness! It took me years to bumble my way into noticing
how sweet this practice is. During my psychiatry residency training, I
literally learned on the go: While biking to work, I started playing with
offering kindness to drivers that honked at me, and found that when I got to
the hospital I was peaceful and happy instead of angry at “those drivers.”
Life-changing practice.
Kristin Layous, assistant professor of psychology at California
State University, East Bay:
Practicing gratitude. Gratitude letters can be so moving, but I
also just think that taking note of what’s good in your life is quite powerful
(like counting blessings). I don’t keep a journal of my blessings, but just
sometimes when my mind wanders or seems to be skewing negative, I try to
re-focus to the very real good things in my life, and it helps me not to dwell
on the bad.
Elizabeth Dunn, professor of psychology at the University of
British Columbia:
Exercise. Even though I’m really busy, I block off an hour every
day to run, swim, bike, or do yoga. As well as reading the relevant research,
I’ve monitored my own mood and discovered that this practice makes a huge
difference for my happiness.
Hedy Kober, associate professor of psychiatry and psychology at
Yale University:
Meditation, gratitude, physical exercise. Together, they keep me
flexible and strong. They keep my mind clear, my heart open, and my body able.
Michael Norton, professor of business administration at Harvard Business School:
Chris Hsee’s research on overearningshows that we become so obsessed with accumulating
that we forget about enjoying. It’s often on my mind, as I think about what is
worth accumulating in life—and what is not.
Tim Kasser, professor of psychology at Knox College:
Research shows that people who pursue intrinsic goals for personal
growth, affiliation, and community feeling report higher well-being than those
focused on extrinsic goals for money, image, and status. This is why I spend a
lot of my time playing the piano and working in the garden, chatting with my
wife and kids, and volunteering, and why I spend as little time as possible
shopping or worrying about what other people think about my appearance or
status.
Gregory Fricchione, associate chief of psychiatry at Massachusetts
General Hospital:
It’s all about feeling grateful for being connected to my family
and community. It is what I choose to meditate on. That feeling we sense from
the intense moments of attachment we are blessed with defines best for me what
in religion we call the Holy Spirit. Josiah Royce wrote that this Holy Spirit
is what binds us in the Beloved
KIRA M. NEWMAN
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/nine_scientists_share_their_favorite_happiness_practices?utm_source=Greater+Good+Science+Center&utm_campaign=0d9807b300-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_GG_Newsletter_Mar+21+2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_5ae73e326e-0d9807b300-51482775
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