HAPPINESS
RELATIONSHIP SPECIAL Want to Be Happy? Make Your Relationships Exceptional
How do you think a friend would rate the
quality of your relationship with her? How would she describe you -- as
cheerful, compassionate, irritable, self-critical? Does that description match
your self-image? How much does her perception of you matter to your happiness?
Those are questions we explored with students
of the online Science of Happiness course. Students nominated "peers"
-- people they interact with most days -- to (anonymously) answer questions
about them and quality of their relationships. Students didn't see the other
person's answers; we didn't want to make friends insecure! The real purpose? To
discover how relationships affect feelings of happiness.
We got responses from just over 2,500 peers,
especially spouses (33 percent), friends (26 percent), and romantic partners
(16 percent), with a smaller proportion of family members and a sprinkling of
coworkers. Forty-five percent had known the student for more than 15 years, and
23 percent had been acquainted for one to five years.
The results are now in -- and they confirm
decades of research showing that if you want to be happier, then you should
focus on the quality of your relationships.
For the most part, others see us as we see
ourselves
First, results show that friends see the
students pretty close to how they see themselves, which gives us confidence in
the data. It may be true that people craft their public personas to appear more
socially desirable, but these data suggest that we tend to more honest and
authentic in our daily relationships. It would be troubling if students saw
themselves as harmonious but romantic partners and best friends saw them as
hostile.
Peers rated students on 32 characteristics,
organized into thematically-matched pairs (e.g., dissatisfied/complaining,
optimistic/hopeful). We ran what's called a factor analysis to see if certain
characteristics tended to show up together, and we discovered three different
patterns, which we called personas:
Positive: These
folks were high in positive characteristics (happy/cheerful, content/satisfied,
optimistic/hopeful) and low in negative characteristics
(dissatisfied/complaining, anxious/stressed, self-critical/hopeless.)
Pro-social: These
students were different from those with positive personas, in that they focused
on the well-being of others or of groups, by being compassionate/nurturing,
cooperative/harmonious, or forgiving/generous.
Anti-social: This persona tended to be irritable/agitated, hostile/argumentative, or
distracted/absent-minded. Anti-social students are, according to peers,
consistently negative or just not as interested in nurturing other people's
happiness -- relative to other people in the course, anyway.
When we compared these scores to surveys that
students filled out about themselves before the course began, we found that
outer persona and inner lives do tend to match up. When friends said students
were doing well, students were more likely to consider themselves happy. On a
darker note, results also suggest that being anti-social -- more irritable,
argumentative, and disinterested -- does not go unnoticed. Friends tune into
anti-social behavior and describe us this way. What's more, being seen as
anti-social correlates with less self-reported happiness.
Positive and pro-social peer ratings of
students predicted greater self-reported happiness scores. Peer anti-social ratings
predicted lower self-reported happiness.
Focusing on others makes relationships
exceptional
Results also show that the more kind,
compassionate, cooperative, and forgiving friends said students were -- in
short, the more pro-social -- the better they rated the quality of the
relationships on a scale of 1-7, from poor (1) to exceptional (7). Positive
people also had better relationships, even if they tended to be more
self-focused than those who were rated as more pro-social.
Indeed, the greater a student's positive and
pro-social scores from their peer, the more likely their peer was to rate that
relationship with our top score -- an "exceptional" seven.
Conversely, the more anti-social the student's peer rating was, the further
that peer's relationship-quality rating drifted towards a four, or merely good.
(Because very few peers rated their relationships as anything less than good,
we excluded 1-3 scores from the analysis.)
What elevates a relationship from
"excellent" to "exceptional"? Being more pro-social seemed
to make the difference. Being positive is good. But being pro-social pushed
relationship quality to the next level. And as we'll see, relationship quality
is what pushed up the student's happiness
scores.
scores.
Students with greater peer scores for
positive and pro-social characteristics were more likely to have peers who
rated their relationship as exceptional; this effect is strongest for
pro-social. Students with greater anti-social scores were less likely to have
peers who rated their relationships as exceptional.
Exceptional relationships make us happier
It's a basic tenet of happiness science:
Supportive relationships are critical to well-being. Social relationships, to
paraphrase Ed Diener's formative 2002 study of "Very Happy
People," do not guarantee happiness, but happiness
does not occur without them.
In our analysis, we looked at how the quality
of relationships, as judged by peers, related to students' own scores on
measures of well-being. Very systematically, the data reveal increasing
benefits to well-being in harmony with better-quality relationships, even for
what might seem to be subtle differences between descriptors like
"excellent" and "exceptional." Wherever we looked, students
who were in exceptional relationships were faring better.
Introverts can have exceptional
relationships, too
"Sure, this is all fine and good,"
say many students, "but what about introverts?" By definition,
they're not as socially outgoing as other people; they're not motivated to be
the center of attention. Does that mean out-going extroverts, who have an
easier time approaching and engaging with other people, are just going to have
better relationships?
Not necessarily. We explored whether
extraverts were more likely to be in exceptional relationships, and the answer
is no. Extraversion was not linked to higher or lower relationship ratings;
introverts are just as good at exceptional relationships as extraverts. And
because it's the exceptional relationships that make us happy, this suggests
that introverts can find fulfillment through them.
We can all make our relationships exceptional
Of course, introversion is not the same as
being anti-social. What about the relatively anti-social people -- is there any
hope for them?
Our online course, The Science of Happiness,
provides the scientific basis for recognizing innate pro-social capacities like
empathy, kindness, compassion and gratitude -- and the course supports
real-life cultivation of pro-social skills through weekly research-tested
happiness practices. This is a path available to everyone, no matter where
they've started.
Ultimately, our analysis suggests, being more
pro-social -- engaged in meaningful, authentic relationships, showing kindness
and generosity in the world and being part of a supportive community -- is the
most promising route to sustainably increasing our well-being. As GGSC
fellow Brett
Ford's research suggests, this kind of approach to
pursuing happiness may work better than striving for continuous pleasure,
success, and power approach to happiness.
But first, you have to actually try the
practices. We have found that people who complete
The Science of Happiness show immediate
and sustained boosts in well-being.
Some may think we're stuck at where we land
on a happiness scale, but our brains change over time with repeated
experiences, both internal and external. In short, the three personas we've
identified do not represent fixed or absolute qualities. Even if you suspect
you are on the anti-social end of the spectrum, the opportunity remains to
discover and strengthen your relationships -- and, therefore, your happiness.
Greater Good Science Center
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/greater-good-science-center/want-to-be-happy-make-your-relationships-exceptional_b_8536478.html?ir=Healthy%20Living?ncid=newsltushpmg00000003
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