Happiness Is …
Who knew there was an International Day of Happiness? Goodness knows we need one right now, and it’s a helpful reminder but why only ONE day? Why not make it a lifelong habit?
We often hear others – or indeed ourselves saying, ‘I just want my child, mother, brother, best friend, to be happy’, but for many, happiness is elusive or ephemeral, especially in these uncertain times.
So, what is happiness?
Psychologist Daniel Kahneman has defined happiness as, “what I experience here and now“.
Sonja Lyubomirsky has described happiness as, “the experience of joy, contentment, or positive well-being, combined with a sense that one’s life is good, meaningful, and worthwhile
And, according to Ken Dodd, happiness is, “the greatest gift that I possess”.
The quotes about happiness are varied and plentiful and there have been many academic studies hoping to capture the elixir of happiness too. One study though, from Harvard University, stands out in that it has been running for nearly 80 years.
The Harvard Study of Adult Development tracked the lives of 724 men (women weren’t included in the original study as the College was all male in 1938), asking about their work, their home lives, and their health. Here’s what the study director, Robert Waldinger, and colleagues found out about what really keeps people happy and healthy:
1. Social connections are good for us, and loneliness kills. People who are more socially connected to family, friends and community are happier, they’re physically healthier, and they live longer than people who are less connected. People who are more isolated, tend to be less happy and their health declines earlier.
2. Its quality relationships that count. It’s not a numbers game, or whether or not you’re in a committed relationship, but the quality of those relationships that really counts. Staying in high-conflict marriages are potentially worse than getting divorced, and living with good, warm relationships is protective.
3. Good relationships also protect our brains. The study also showed that being in a securely attached relationship to another person in your 80s is protective. People who are in relationships where they feel they can count on the other person in times of need, tend to have memories that stay sharper and longer.
‘The good life is built with good relationships’ – Robert J. Waldinger
Other experts, such as Professor Lyubomirsky, have tried to nail the exact percentages of how happiness is derived, but they now acknowledge that all of the following factors exert major influences on happiness:
There has also been lots of discussion about to what extent we can influence our own happiness. Whatever the exact amount, many researchers agree that most of us have significant ability to change our experience of happiness. As well as nurturing close relationships, Sonia Lyubormirsky offers many happiness enhancing strategies including:
At Complete, we have a new emotional awareness app (iPhone / Android), that, among other things, helps people discover what brings them positive energy. This is directly linked to happiness in that positive energy allows happiness to be more easily experienced. It’s called the E-Bank or energy bank and is very simple and intuitive to use.
Alternatively, you can try the analogue version:
This single exercise will boost your happiness levels immediately and can be literally life changing.
Let us know about your E-bank experience and share what boosts your happiness. After all, it may be International Day of Happiness, but happiness should never be just one day.