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Authentic Happiness

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Title: Authentic Happiness


1
Authentic Happiness
2
Nun Study
  • 180 Nuns
  • 90 of the most cheerful quarter lived to 85 at
    least
  • Only 34 of the least cheerful quarter did
  • 54 of the most cheerful quarter was alive at 94
  • Only 11 of the least cheerful quarter did

3
Duchenne smiles
  • genuine smiles vs. fake smiles
  • Sorted based on senior class photos
  • Contacted at 27, 43, 52 years of age
  • Duchenne smile women were more likely to
  • Be married, stay married, experiences more
    personal well-being
  • Attractiveness was measured as well- no link was
    found

4
Hedonism
  • How you feel at the moment
  • Momentary pleasure
  • Colonoscopy experiment (Kahneman)
  • Group 1 regular colonoscopy where the scope
    moves throughout
  • Group 2 extra minute tagged on to the end where
    the scope is stationary
  • Group 2 had more overall discomfort (an extra
    minute with the scope inserted), but the
    stationary scope is not as bad as a moving scope
  • Group 2 reported the experience as better and
    were much more likely to undergo the procedure
    again

5
The Harry truman effect
  • Tonic vs Phasic activity
  • Tonic activity introversion, IQ, depression,
    anger- measured without regards to an actual
    activity
  • Phasic activity when presented with a challenge
  • Can tonic measures predict outcomes to phasic
    situations?
  • Sometimes, but not always
  • High IQ people fail and low-IQ people succeed
    there are no perfect predictors
  • After being fairly undistinguished, Truman took
    over after FDR and is thought of as one of the
    greatest presidents (according to Seligman)

6
Evolutionarily speaking
  • Negative traits have an important place and have
    been passed down
  • The strongest and possibly most aggressive will
    survive
  • For many years, positive traits were ignored here
    and believed to be extra
  • Some even assumed that the nice guy loses

7
Barbara Fredrickson
  • In the late 90s and early 2000s she proposed
    that positive traits do have an important place
    in survival
  • Those with positive traits are more likely to
    have support systems and love and other aspects
    of life that make you more likely to succeed and
    get through the bad times
  • People that dont have these in place are more
    likely to have disorders

8
Experiment
  • When primed with happier or positive
    thoughts/statements, people are faster at coming
    to proper conclusions
  • Simply sorting words into categories
  • Doctors diagnosing diseases

9
Depressive Realism
  • Alloy and Abramson
  • Validated the happy but dumb idea a bit
  • Two groups
  • Group 1 Gave control over the green light
  • Group 2 Given no control over whether the green
    light was on or off
  • Groups were asked how much control they had
  • Depressed subjects were very accurate in both
    groups
  • Nondepressed subjects were accurate when they had
    control, but assumed that they had control (35
    control) even when they had none

10
Happy vs Depressed people
  • 80 of American men think they are in the top ½
    of social skills
  • 85 of Americans think they are above average for
    intelligence
  • Most people think they are above average at work
    and as a driver

11
Happy people
  • Remember more good events than actually happened
  • Forget more bad events
  • Lopsided in their beliefs about successes and
    failures
  • If it was a success, they were responsible and
    they are good at everything
  • If it was a failure, you did it to them and it
    was just this one little thing

12
There is a debate though
  • Happy people
  • When given information, are more likely to make
    important real life decisions well
  • Aspinwall
  • Gave health information to people
  • Optimists were more likely to remember the
    dangers of coffee drinking and sun bathing a week
    later than pessimists were
  • They are possibly more able to deal with them and
    combat them, so they will not just ignore them as
    pessimists might

13
Mood can work for you depending on the task at
hand
  • Things that require critical thinking are
    benefitted by having a more pessimistic/realistic
    mindset
  • Taking GREs, SATs, doing taxes, deciding whom to
    fire, dealing with failed romances, making
    crucial decisions in competitive sports or
    college
  • Things that require creative, generous, and
    tolerant thinking are benefitted by having a more
    optimistic mindset
  • Marketing, finding ways to increase love,
    pondering a new career field, deciding whether to
    marry someone, hobbies and noncompetitive sports,
    creative writing

14
A study
  • 2282 Mexican Americans age 65 or older
  • Controlled for age, income, education, weight,
    smoking, drinking, and disease
  • Happy people were half as likely to die or become
    disabled

15
Happiness may
  • Increase productivity
  • Lead to better evaluations at work

16
Positive emotions can undo negative ones
  • Fredrickson
  • Showed students a clip where a man is dangling
    from the edge of a building and close to falling
  • Heart rates increase
  • Showed students one of four clips next
  • Waves to induce contentment
  • Puppies to induce amusement
  • Sticks to induce no emotions
  • Cry to induce sadness
  • Puppy and waves bring the heart rates back down
    while cry makes them go even higher

17
Moebius syndrome
  • Facial paralysis the leaves victims unable to
    smile
  • Unable to show positive emotions with their face
  • Have difficulty with friendships
  • A rich social life is found in most people that
    rate themselves as very happy

18
Broad theme
  • Positive feelings are there to allow the
    body/mind to grow into something better

19
Happiness Formula
  • H S C V
  • H enduring level of happiness
  • S set range
  • C circumstances of your life
  • V factors under voluntary control

20
Enduring level of happiness
  • Different than momentary happiness
  • Has a genetic component
  • Twin studies
  • Certain aspects are changeable

21
Set range
  • Roughly ½ of your happiness score is accounted
    for by the score your parents would have gotten
  • People that win the lottery see an increase in
    happiness for a short period of time
  • Happiness levels revert to where they were
    pre-lottery
  • 22 lottery winners reverted to their baseline
    levels of happiness over time- ended up no more
    happy than 22 matched controls

22
The bright side of a set range
  • When things go bad, you typically will rebound
    back to your normal range
  • People with extreme quadriplegia consider their
    life to average or above-average (84)

23
The hedonic treadmill
  • You rapidly adapt to good things after a short
    period of time- then you need more
  • Those that have less are typically just as happy
    as those that have more
  • Major events, wealth, raises, attractiveness,
    health NONE of these really have a large effect
    on happiness over time- all of these lead to more
    resources

24
Circumstances of your life
  • Money
  • At the whole country level
  • Overall national purchasing power and life
    satisfaction go in the same direction
  • Once the GNP exceeds 8000 per person, the
    correlation disappears
  • Many exceptions to the rules for countries
  • Brazil, China, Argentina more satisfied than
    their wealths predict
  • Former Soviet countries and Japan are less
    satisfied than their wealths predict

25
Purchasing power within a country
  • Has more than doubled over the last half-century
    in the USA, France, and Japan, but satisfaction
    has not changed at all
  • In very poor countries, the rich are happier than
    the poor
  • In wealthier nations, where most have a basic
    safety net, increases in wealth have little to no
    change on satisfaction
  • Most importantly may not be buying power, but the
    type of government and the level of freedom

26
The Forbes 100
  • The 100 richest in the world are only slightly
    happier than the average American

27
Circumstances continued
  • Marriage
  • Robustly related to happiness
  • 40 of married people were very happy
  • Only 24 of unmarried people
  • Among those in not very happy marriages,
    happiness is lowest though

28
Social Life?
  • In one study, every person in the top 10 of
    happiness (except one) was in a romantic
    relationship
  • Very happy people lead a more rich and fulfilling
    social life than average or unhappy people
  • Spend the least time alone
  • The most time socializing
  • Rated highest on good relationships by themselves
    and by their friends

29
Negative Emotion?
  • Is being happy simply avoiding the negative
    emotions in life?
  • Positive emotions and negative emotions have a
    very small negative correlation
  • Gender differences
  • Women experience twice the depression as men
  • Also experience more positive emotion (frequency
    and intensity)

30
Other factors
  • Age?
  • No real change in satisfaction with age
  • Increases very slightly with age
  • Fewer extreme emotions with age though
  • Health?
  • barely related to well-being
  • What matters more is subjective perception of how
    healthy we are
  • Others have it worse
  • Severe health problems (5 health problems) will
    bring unhappiness though- moderate problems dont

31
Religion?
  • Religious americans are less likely to abuse
    drugs, committ crimes, divorce, and kill
    themselves
  • Also are physically healthier and live longer
  • Can deal with problems more easily
  • Disabled children, depression, divorce,
    unemployment, illness, death
  • Are moderately more happy than nonreligious people

32
Why does religion lead to more happiness?
  • Used to be thought that it was just an increase
    in social support
  • Possibly the belief of hope and a meaning of
    lifef could be important as well

33
Others
  • Education
  • Only among those with low incomes
  • Climate
  • Not at all- misperception that californians are
    always happier in the sunlight and on the beach
  • Race
  • Hispanics and african-americans have less
    depression than caucasians
  • Gender
  • No difference among averages- women are just more
    extreme
  • None of these has any real effect on happiness

34
Voluntary factors under control
  • Satisfaction with the past, present, or future
  • Separated pieces

35
Starting with the past
  • Main idea
  • Emotions drive thoughts and thoughts drive
    emotions
  • Depressed people (emotion) focus in on and have
    sadder memories (thoughts)
  • Thinking about loss (thought) causes sadness
    (emotion)
  • If thoughts can change emotions, change the
    thoughts and you can change the emotions (ie. be
    happier)

36
Past Psychological views on the past
  • Many theories in psych stemmed from the idea that
    your past determined your future
  • Darwin
  • Freud
  • Researchers have been unable to find effects of
    childhood events on adult development
  • Parental death, divorce, physical illness,
    beatings, neglect, sexual abuse
  • Some support came, but not nearly as much as was
    expected

37
Current research
  • Finding more and more effects of genes on current
    behaviors than nurture on current behaviors
  • Childhood events are no where near deterministic
    on adult behaviors/development

38
Emotional hydraulics
  • Emotions are like a balloon
  • If you do not allow yourself to express an
    emotion, it will come out at some other point,
    usually a less desirable one
  • James-Lange theory of emotion is counter to this
  • For sadness and anger, expressing it makes more
    come
  • This is why psychoanalysis failed- people were
    told to focus on all of the bad stuff that
    screwed them up- they got more depressed instead
    of less
  • When asked to bottle up anger, blood pressure
    decreases
  • When asked to express their anger, blood pressure
    increases

39
Gratitude
  • 3 groups
  • Keep a journal of things they were grateful for
  • Keep a journal of things that were hassles
  • Keep a journal of live events
  • Gratitude group had increases in joy, happiness,
    and life satisfaction
  • By remembering, focusing on, and releasing
    positive emotions, they are increased

40
Forgiving
  • The removal of negative emotions from the past
  • Recommends the REACH technique
  • Recall the hurt
  • Empathize why the person hurt you
  • Altruistic gift of forgiveness (think of when
    someone forgave you and they didnt have to)
  • Commit yourself to forgive publicly
  • Hold onto the forgiveness
  • When assigned to two groups (one that forgived
    with these steps and a control group)
  • Less anger, less stress, more optimism, better
    health, more forgiveness

41
What about the future?
  • Same from learned optimism
  • Permanence
  • How permanent are the things that happen
  • Pervasiveness
  • How much of your life is like what just happened
    to you?
  • ABCDE model for increasing optimism and hope

42
The present
  • Pleasures
  • Ecstasy, thrills, orgasm, delight, mirth,
    exuberance, comfort
  • Gratifications
  • Lose self-consciousness
  • Enjoying great conversation, rock climbing,
    reading a good book, dancing, making a slam dunk

43
Pleasures
  • Reliable to predict that they bring delight
  • Short lived
  • habituation
  • Each subsequent pleasure that is the same is
    never as good as the first
  • Neurons respond to things that are new
  • Habituation is hard wired into us
  • Spread your pleasures out as much as possible to
    counter habituation
  • Take a mouthful of ice cream for 30 seconds
  • If you still want another mouthful after 30
    seconds, then do it, but wait with it for another
    30 youll stop fairly soon
  • Spread out how often you listen to certain cds to
    make them always sounding fresh
  • Do something nice for someone else, but do a
    different nice thing each time- or else they grow
    used to it

44
Savoring
  • The awareness of pleasure and of the deliberate
    conscious attention to the experience of pleasure
  • Five techniques for savoring
  • Sharing with others
  • Memory building (grab mementos)
  • Self-congratulation
  • Sharpening perceptions
  • Absorption
  • Four types of savoring
  • Basking in praise, thanksgiving, marveling in the
    moment, indulging the senses

45
Gratifications
  • Typically dont have a discreet emotion that
    accompanies it the way pleasures do
  • It is more about the total absorption, the
    suspension of consciousness, and the flow
  • Emotions are completely absent

46
Eudaimonia
  • Living the good life
  • Distinct from pleasures
  • Accompany gratifications

47
Critical components of flow
  • Task is challenging and requires skill and
    concentration
  • There are clear goals and immediate feedback
  • There is deep, effortless involvement
  • There is a sense of control, but the sense of
    self vanishes
  • Time stops

48
Facts about flow
  • Some experience it frequently
  • Others rarely
  • Low flow teenagers
  • Mall kids, watch TV a lot
  • High flow teenagers
  • Hobbies, sports, homework
  • High flow kids do better on self esteem,
    engagement, well-being
  • These are more likely to make it to college, have
    more successes in life, more social ties
  • Except that they would rather be doing the low
    flow activities

49
Seligmans theory
  • Striving for the immediate easy pleasure leads to
    depression
  • Reduces flow opportunities
  • Over the last 50 years, more is done for people,
    making life easier and thus less flow is
    experienced, and depression levels have
    sky-rocketed
  • Along with this, a focus on how we feel at the
    moment, (supported by many therapists as a good
    thing) may get people to harp on these feelings
  • Flow is accompanied by the absence of feeling

50
Character Strengths
  • Many believed that character/personality was
    simply formed by your environment
  • If you are raised in a bad enough environment,
    even the good people will eventually turn to
    violence and lawlessness
  • If this is the case, what is the point of
    discussing character when all it is would be a
    reaction to your environment

51
Six main virtues
  • Wisdom and knowledge
  • Courage
  • Love and humanity
  • Justice
  • Temperance
  • Spirituality and transcendence

52
Wisdom and knowledge
  • Curiosity
  • Love of learning
  • Critical thinking/open-mindedness
  • originality/practical intelligence
  • Social/emotional intelligence
  • Perspective

53
Two others
  • Courage
  • Valor and bravery
  • Perseverance
  • Integrity
  • Humanity and Love
  • Loving and allowing oneself to be loved
  • Kindness and generosity

54
Justice
  • Duty, teamwork, loyalty
  • Fairness and equity
  • Leadership

55
Temperance
  • Self-control
  • Prudence/discretion
  • Humility and modesty

56
Transcendence
  • Appreciation of beaty and excellence
  • Gratitude
  • Hope/optimism
  • Spirituality/faith
  • Forgiveness and mercy
  • Playfulness and humor
  • Zest/passion

57
Seligmans thoughts
  • The more you use your signature strengths every
    day, the happier you will be because you will
    engage in flow more often and thus more
    gratifications

58
Finding happiness at work
  • Money isnt everything
  • Lawyers are the highest paid profession
  • Highest depression rate (3.6x more than other
    jobs on average)
  • High turnover rate
  • Those that view their job as a calling are much
    happier at work than those that view their work
    as a job
  • Works in any job

59
Examples
  • Janitors
  • If they see their job as helping enhance the work
    of the doctors, helping them save lives- they are
    happier
  • Haircutters
  • Make their job intimate and interpersonal
  • Nurses
  • Focus on the details of the patients charts and
    help the family
  • Kitchen workers
  • More like culinary artists than cooks

60
Properties of a calling
  • Uses your signature strengths (according the
    Seligman)
  • Contributes to a greater good
  • Allows you to experience flow

61
Experience of flow
  • More likely to happen at work
  • Active activities produce flow approx. 39 of the
    time and produce apathy 17
  • Passive activities (watching TV) produce flow 14
    of the time and produce apathy 37
  • Average state of an American watching TV is
    mildly depressed

62
Why are lawyers in particular so unhappy?
  • Pessimistic quality of the job
  • Pessimists do worse in almost every aspect of
    life, but do better in law school
  • Able to think of all of the possible bad things
    that can happen in a case and defend against them
  • High stress environment
  • Low level of decision latitude
  • Very few choices for an low level associate
  • Nurses and secretaries also fall on this list

63
Levels of depression
  • Married people lowest
  • Never married people 2nd
  • People divorced once
  • People cohabiting
  • People divorced twice highest

64
John Bowlby
  • Claimed that a parent-child bond was
    irreplaceable
  • Examined orphans in the wake of WW2
  • These kids were found to be affectionless,
    lacking feelings, with only superficial
    relationships, angry, and anti-social
  • Led the way for Mary Ainsworths strange situation

65
Are securely attached people better in romance?
  • So long as one of the partners is secure, that is
    way better than otherwise
  • Of course, two securely attached people is best
  • Securely attached people deal with adversity in
    relationships much better too
  • Avoidant people tend to try and forget anything
    happened (not ideal)
  • Anxious people focus on themselves
  • Secure people reach out the their support system

66
Romantic illusions
  • Asked married couples to rate themselves, their
    partners and an ideal partner on strengths and
    faults
  • Asks friends of them couple to fill them out
    about the couple as well
  • Look at the discrepancy between how they rate
    their partners and how others view them
  • The bigger the discrepancy (in a positive
    direction) the happier and more stable the
    relationship
  • Partners try to live up to these illusions
  • Also easily dismiss problems because they believe
    so positively about their mate

67
Seligmans claim
  • Two pessimists married dont not usually last
  • Any other combination will work though
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