Tag Archives: happiness

A Few Thoughts on Happiness

I recently attended the first World Congress on Positive Psychology, so, of course, happiness is on my mind. I check the dictionary. The first definition, “the quality or state of being happy”, seems pretty lame to me. The second is a bit better. “Good fortune; pleasure; contentment; joy,” gives me something to think about.

Are we only happy when fortune smiles on us? Studies show that lottery winners actually are slightly happy than the general population, but not by a great degree. Happiness turns out to be much more complex. It’s not a single thing and it has to do with our adaptation to what’s going on in our lives. As you might expect, happiness is also not meant to be a permanent state. Euphoria can get you locked up. As in all things, moderation is a wise choice.

Ed Diener, in a presentation at the Congress, defined happiness as subjective well-being. This explains miserable rich people and others finding great contentment in reduced circumstances. Diener broke happiness into two major areas: life satisfaction and positive engagement.

This made such good sense to me! Life satisfaction – income, basic needs being met, conveniences – is important, true, but not everything. Absence of these things is probably more important than their presence. This is why more money can give us greater life satisfaction, but doesn’t actually create positive feelings.

Positive feelings, it turns out, come from positive engagement. Public trust, learning, flow, and social support – all factors in positive engagement – activate a whole different part of our brain.

Diener suggested another major distinction. He differentiated wanting and liking. Wanting is centered in the thinking part of our brain while liking is centered in feeling – in the pleasure centers. So, for a materialist, happiness might be having what we want, while for a positive psychologist, it’s liking what you have.

How can you be happier? Learn to WANT what you will LIKE. When you want something, make a list of what it will bring into your life. Make an informed decision by comparing that list (choice components) to a list of what you like (enjoyment list) and look for overlap. If there’s little or none, maybe you don’t really want this.

Why might you want to be happy? Happy people live about five years longer, earn more, are more creative, and have more family and friends. If there’s a tiger in your path, it’s no time to be happy. Otherwise, as the song says, “Don’t worry – be happy!”

Life-Work Cafe is Back!

Need a great place to stop by and chat about your career?  Bring your own fresh-brewed and pull up a chair in the Life-Work Cafe every Monday night at 7:00 PM Eastern. This is a virtual Cafe for real-life discussions about work and about life. If you want some advice on finding your next job, moving up, changing careers – this is the place to be. If you’re thinking about moving out of the workforce or into an entrepreneurship – pull up a chair. If there’s something in your workplace or in your work life that you’d like to change – we’re here.

Join Dr. Susan R Meyer and occasional guest hosts for an hour of lively conversation and some clear next steps. Send me a note at dr.susan@life-workcoach for call-in details.

How Is Your Day Going?

funny pictures of cats with captions

Ambrose was having a bad day And he didn’t care who knew it.

Picture by: Taronga Zoo. Caption by: scarlettsmomcat via Our LOL Builder

http://icanhascheezburger.com/

How’s your day going? And what are you doing about it? Looks like Ambrose can get by with sulking, but perhaps this isn’t the most successful route for most of us.

Positive Psychology has been on my mind lately. How important is happiness? How important is a positive attitude? Can we choose to be happy?

Yes, we can chose happiness. We can reframe situations and select a more positive viewpoint. We can make choices based on what will make us happy. Ed Deiner, at a recent conference said that it is more important to like what we have than to get what we want. We seem to want things all the time. Sometimes, when we get them, they don’t seem to make us very happy. Deiner suggests making a list of overall factors that make us happy, then make choices based on that list.

Happy people have more friends, live longer, and are more productive. Don’t be an Ambrose.

Tired of Complaining? Try Reframing!

It seems that more and more people are spending more and more time complaining. And yes, some things are not going all that well. But some things are pretty terrific. This clip was posted on YouTube recently and serves as a great reminder of taking a balanced viewpoint: Everything’s Amazing – Nobody’s Happy. 

You’ll have to pop on over to YouTube to watch it – it can’t be embedded elsewhere – so I’ll ask my parting question in case you wander off into the wonderland of videos: What do you appreciate RIGHT NOW?