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Tips from Happy People

Are you happy? It's a simple question, but with numerous variables underlying it. What makes someone
happy? Is there more than one route to happiness and more than one way to measure it?

If you're an economist or a social scientist, you may conduct scientific surveys that try to gauge levels of
contentment or satisfaction. If you're a religious leader, you may wonder if someone feels spiritually
fulfilled, connected to a community and in touch with his or her chosen deity. Being married often boosts
happiness, as does a genetic basis for a sunnier disposition. Older women become less happy than their
male counterparts, who report increased levels of happiness as they age [source: Holt].
In the end, happiness may come down to what you're looking for in life and how you define this nebulous
term. In different societies throughout history, happiness has been equated with sheer luck or the
certitude of religious belief. Others have thought that happiness means being a good person or being able
to live a life of pleasure and leisure.

Just as definitions of happiness change, so too does our ability to handle adversity. Numerous tales exist
of people undergoing tremendous hardships -- cancer, losing a job, a bad breakup -- and finding
themselves in the end as happy as or happier than ever. Despite the difficulty in pinning down what
happiness is and how to achieve it, we're going to take a stab at it in this article, in which we offer 10 key
tips. We'll start with a few that might seem more obvious and then move on to some unusual
recommendations for boosting happiness.

10. Live in a Happy Country

Stockbyte/Getty Images
Sure living in a happy country can't hurt, but education also may make you more positive.
Many different studies have examined happiness in various countries. These studies generally rely on
extensive surveys of inhabitants and their stated level of happiness. One, the Happy Planet Index,
considers happiness in tandem with a country's environmental impact and carbon footprint.
The Day Reconstruction Method asks subjects to rank activities they performed on an "enjoyment scale"
[source:Stehr]. The survey aims to be more accurate than previous ones by soliciting opinions about
people's daily lives immediately following the events in question, rather than taking a holistic, long-term
view of their overall contentment. The U.N. Human Development Index uses a mixture of data about
gross domestic product (GDP), education and health to produce a measure of a country's success.
Unfortunately, broad studies on societal happiness are notoriously fraught with problems. From the
phrasing of questions to the weather on the day that a survey is performed (respondents are generally
more upbeat on days that are literally sunnier), numerous variables can be difficult to account for.

Even within a relatively happy country, like the United States, you can have a high level of "happiness
inequality" among different social groups. However, a study published in July 2008 showed that, at least
in the United States, the happiness inequality gap among people surveyed had decreased over the last
few decades but that happiness inequality was increasing based on education level. More educated
subjects reported higher levels of happiness than those who were less educated, which coincided with a
growing income disparity in the country. But the happiness inequality between men and women and
among different races had also lessened, the study found [source: Wolfers].

9. Solve Problems
Keep Happy People Around
Studies have shown that happiness is
contagious. When someone's friends or
neighbors experience happiness or good fortune,
those positive feelings are often imparted to the
people around them. Happy people also cluster
together in social groups.
Gretchen Rubin, who runs happiness-project.com and is writing a book about happiness, lists as one of
her "twelve commandments" the mantra "Identify the problem." It may seem like a basic idea, but often
our frustrations can be traced to problems we haven't fully grappled with. Identifying a problem can often
lead to a clear solution, perhaps one so mind-numbingly obvious that you'll wonder why you hadn't
addressed the situation earlier.

Understanding a problem also allows people to keep things in perspective, to understand whether
something is really worth getting upset about. It prevents giving in to self-pity and instead represents a
more proactive approach that allows for finding a solution and moving on to other concerns. And if you're
feeling overwhelmed with concerns, singling out a problem and addressing it can lessen stress and make
once daunting challenges seem surmountable.

8. Simplify Your Life

Hulton Archive/Getty Images


We doubt Simon and Garfunkel are big on multitasking. This was the duo who sang, "Slow down, you move too fast.
You got to make the morning last."
There's a tendency, especially in the United States, to try to do as much as possible. We multitask incessantly, as
evidenced by the BlackBerry and iPhone crazes.
But a good day can also mean making a trade-off between doing many things and a few meaningful ones. Think
about what's important and what you can do away with. You may be able to get rid of some possessions, or you may
be able to eliminate certain stressors.
Another term for simplifying your life may be -- and this idea arises in several tips in this article -- mindfulness.
Mindfulness -- slowing down, appreciating and observing what is around you -- is a form of simplification. It allows
you not to worry so much about the future and to remain more involved in the present. It encourages not
overscheduling yourself, completing tasks at an appropriate pace and spacing out tasks so that you can better reflect
and decrease stress in your life. Following these ideas, it's possible to recognize what concerns are truly important
and what have instead been impressed upon us as important but may not be.
One happiness-oriented Web site recommends focusing on doing one thing at a time. For example, if you decide to
watch a classic film and spend the first hour of the film writing some e-mails to your colleagues, by the end you may
have gotten several things done, but did you fully commit yourself to either? Is it possible to enjoy and understand
and even feel a connection with the movie if your attention was divided for much of the time?
7. Exercise

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You don’t have to train like famed U.S. runner Steve Prefontaine to get a boost from exercise, but
you may want to mix up your workout.
The mind-body connection is often cited as an integral component of happiness. Keeping the body fit
through exercise has measurable effects on the mind, too. People who exercise generally have lower
levels of anxiety and depression. But studies have also shown that the same genetic factors that motivate
people to exercise might also make them less predisposed to being depressed, eliminating a causal
connection.

Boosting happiness through exercise doesn't require a diehard devotion to fitness. Embarking on a less
ambitious fitness regimen can help to keep your goals realistic while also producing tangible results. (No
need to feel guilty about not reaching your exercise goals, which would only contribute to unhappiness.)

Exercising lowers the body's levels of cortisol, a hormone associated with stress. Depending on your
stress level, you may need to alter your workout accordingly. If you're more stressed, it might take a
longer, more rigorous workout to burn off cortisol and walk away feeling relaxed and refreshed.
You may have heard of endorphins. Exercise causes the pituitary gland to release these powerful,
mood-boosting chemicals. As with cortisol, the release of endorphins from exercise varies depending on
the person and situation. Intense aerobic activities, such as running, are more likely to release endorphins
than light weight lifting. Experts also recommend varying workout routines and activities. Like bacteria that
become resistant to antibiotics, the body builds up a resistance to the strenuous activities you put it
through. Listen to music while working out, try a new activity, play a new sport, and above all, work hard,
and that endorphin-produced "high" should come, along with many health benefits.
6. Accept Emotions, Positive or Negative
Denis Doyle/Getty Images
Go ahead and accept the frustration that comes from missing a free kick, David Beckham. Your
teammates should go ahead and accept their frustration, too.
Accepting emotions of all types, including frustration, sadness and disappointment, helps to create a more
realistic worldview. By accepting these feelings as normal, it's easier to respond to them constructively. It
also allows you to keep your expectations in check and to gain perspective about life.

Pay more attention to your feelings and how the outside world affects them. Do basic needs, like hunger,
override your desire to be happy? Making a small improvement in your happiness may be as simple as
being sure that you eat regularly and have snacks available.

It's also important to acknowledge the feelings of others. Maybe you're feeling good, but someone's sour
mood is bringing you down. Recognizing these feelings as legitimate, or at the very least as a reality
worth dealing with, can help to prevent you from becoming frustrated. Often someone who's upset just
wants a companionable listener to turn to, and the result may be that you both are happier and more
contented, having found understanding in one another.

Acknowledging feelings and emotions doesn't mean you should always act on them. Most of us are
familiar with the advice to count to 10 or take a minute to cool down when angry. Similarly, trying to
refashion negative emotions as positive ones can lead to real changes in mood. There's a kind of self-
actualizing in play here: Tell yourself that you are patient and understanding, and eventually you will be.
Embracing this kind of more optimistic viewpoint allows you to more easily let go of anger and to be more
resilient in the face of adversity [source: Rubin].
5. Spend Time in Nature

Nature Withdrawal
The absence of biophilia may be found in a
theory called nature-deficit disorder, first
proposed in a book by Richard Louv, who says
that a lack of physical contact with nature harms
children. Louv argues that sensationalist stories
and technology have pushed children away from
nature.
His book, "Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our
Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder," also
maintains that children who are exposed to
nature, particularly from a young age, do better
than their peers. They're less stressed and learn
to think creatively. Playing in nature allows them
to be active and may represent an important tool
in fighting childhood obesity.

Many people would claim to have an instinctive attraction to nature and a desire to preserve it. We want
to protect the rain forests, clean up pollution, and if possible, live by the sea or a nice park. And despite
much of the world's population living in urban areas, we interact with nature in many ways, whether in a
mediated way through having domesticated animals as pets, or by going camping or fishing.

The concept of biophilia, a term coined by biologist E.O. Wilson, states that evolution has bred us to
appreciate and do well in nature. The scientific literature backs him up, as studies have found that people
who are exposed to nature become ill less frequently. (Similarly, hospital patients recover more quickly if
placed by a window with a pleasant view [source: Bloom].) Pets and spending time in nature are both
tremendous stress relievers. Having a cat or dog can also help people to alleviate loneliness or feel in
touch with nature, even when confined in a city.

4. Buy Happiness -- If That's Possible

Influx Productions/Getty Images


Money may not buy you love, but it might improve your happiness. If it doesn't, feel free to send
some to us, and we'll let you know how it goes.
The Easterlin Paradox states that richer people are usually happier than the poor. But as a whole, richer
societies don't show much more happiness than poor ones, and a country's improved economic standing
does not improve happiness.
The Easterlin Paradox grew out of studies by economist Richard Easterlin in the early 1970s. Easterlin
found that a certain level of increased income boosted happiness among the poor -- but only to a certain
degree. After that, the amount of money people made compared to their peers, or relative income,
became more important in determining happiness than their individual income. In other words, people
wanted what others had.
But at least one more recent study, which draws on numerous public opinion polls conducted all over the
world, shows that people in richer countries do appear happier than those in poor ones. And isolated
within a country, income level does seem to correlate with happiness. For example, a far larger portion of
Americans earning $250,000 or more per year were happier than those making less than $30,000.

In challenging this discovery, some critics point to changes in how these questions are asked and also
bring up that while people in some developing countries have become happier as income has improved,
in other countries, happiness has not increased along with income [source:Leonhardt].
On the whole, wealth does seem to boost your chances for happiness, as does living in a wealthy country
that can provide the services and security that often accompany affluence. But as this article shows,
many other factors besides money, many of them subjective, determine personal happiness.

3. Meditate
Words of a Saint
"There can be no joy in living without joy in work."
--St. Thomas Aquinas
Some studies show that meditation improves happiness [source: Max]. Consequently, activities like
meditation, yoga and practicing mindfulness may boost your level of happiness and satisfaction.
Meditation may allow you to put your problems in perspective, or the clarity achieved by the process,
combined with a sense of mindfulness, may allow you to better appreciate things in the world around you
that you've taken for granted.
People who have meditated regularly as part of scientific studies have also reported lower incidences of
illness and feeling more connected to the people around them [source: Max]. Brain scans of meditators
also show that areas of the brain associated with stress show less activity after meditation [source: Alleri].
In ancient times, true happiness was seen as something exceedingly rare and transcendent -- equivalent
to being in touch with heavenly spirits [source: Holt]. Meditation is often associated with transcendence,
with a progression beyond often trivial earthly concerns and moving into a more rarified space of higher
understanding and contentment.

2. Study Positive Psychology


Positive psychology is a rapidly growing field that examines what makes people happy. As a discipline,
psychology has traditionally focused on negative emotions and what can go wrong in the brain. Positive
psychology looks at positive emotions and methods of fulfillment, like hope, gratitude, pleasure, spirituality
and charity [source: Max].
Besides shifting the focus to these other, oft-neglected emotions, positive psychology examines concerns
like the difference between feeling good about yourself for a moment or a day and creating enduring
happiness. This balance between ephemeral satisfaction and prolonged happiness can be difficult to
strike, and courses in positive psychology may ask students to look deeply into their own lives and
examine how they work to achieve happiness.
Dozens of universities now offer classes on positive psychology, many of them very popular, such as one
at George Mason University called The Science of Well-Being. Harvard's basic positive psychology class
is the most popular class at the university [source: Smith]. In these classes, students look at what
produces happier emotions and feelings of satisfaction. They often conduct personal experiments in
which they volunteer -- a selfless act that's supposed to lead to longer-lasting happiness -- or give in to
impulses that produce more short-term feelings of happiness. But positive psychology has been criticized
by some educators and academics as being too lacking in hard science, too prescriptive and seemingly
almost like a religion. Some also claim that professors in the field don't spend enough time considering
individual differences among people and different modes of achieving happiness [source: Max].
1. Don't Be Happy
Are Creativity and Sadness Linked?
Wake Forest University professor Eric G. Wilson,
worries that while serious depression is a
problem worthy of treatment, "mild to moderate
sadness," or melancholia, is too often responded
to with medication [source:NPR]. Wilson thinks
that embracing some sadness can boost creative
thinking and allow for more complex relationships
with the rest of the world.
Striving solely for happiness is, in Wilson's view,
to ignore a fundamental aspect of the human
condition. He also points to the great history of
artists, dreamers, thinkers and innovators who
derived inspiration from being melancholy.
Melancholia then, Wilson writes, represents a
more realistic middle ground between sheer bliss
and depression, a place where new insights can
be derived and creative thinking performed
[source: NPR].
There are actually some compelling ideas against happiness. Naysayers aren't against happiness; rather,
they point out some of the effects of happiness that may negatively affect people besides the person who
claims to be happy.

What are the downsides of happiness? For one thing, happier people are more prone to prejudicial
behavior [source: Holt]. One possible explanation is that a contented, lackadaisical or happy attitude
allows people to easily turn to stereotypes or other caricatures when making judgments. Happy people
also can have excessively high self-regard -- to the point where they think that their thoughts or actions
can control events clearly beyond their control. Similarly, concerns have been voiced that happy people
may be easier to manipulate, particularly by unscrupulous political leaders. But happier people show
higher levels of political involvement. Happy people generally live longer, but one study found that
"cheerful and optimistic" U.S. children actually did not live as long as others, so draw your own
conclusions [source: Holt].
There are other reasons not to reach for happiness at all costs. A blind pursuit of happiness may neglect
some complicated effects associated with socioeconomic improvement. People who improve their station
in life often report being less happy because with money and personal freedom come a variety of
unintended choices and desires. More opportunities are open to the wealthier person, but so potentially
are feelings of inferiority and a desire for more, more, more.

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