The
Secrets of Happiness
Provided by Psychology
Today
| Forget
about money. Don't fret about youth. Acting happy is likely
to make you happy.
There
are happy people. Researchers at the National Institute
on Aging found that well-being is strongly influenced by
enduring characteristics of the individual. In a 10-year
study, they found that, regardless of whether their marital
status, job, or residence had changed, people with a happy
disposition in 1973 were still happy in 1983. There's good
news in these findings: Given the right disposition, in
the face of difficulty, people can still find renewed happiness.
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What
makes for a happy disposition? Who are these people who stay basically
up despite life's downs? There are four important traits of happy
people:
I:
Self-esteem: Happy People Like Themselves
During
the 1980s, no topic in psychology was more researched than the
self. Many reports showed the dividends of high self-esteem--in
some University of Michigan studies of well-being in America,
the best predictor of general life satisfaction was not satisfaction
with family life, friendships, or income, but satisfaction with
self. People who like and accept themselves feel good about life
in general.
This
will come as no surprise to anyone attuned to the pop psychology
of our age. Self-help books exhort us to respect ourselves, to
dwell on our good points, to be positive. Cut the self-pity. Stop
the negative talk. To discover love, first love yourself. We've
heard the message: In a 1989 Gallup poll, 85 percent of Americans
rated "having a good self-image or self-respect" as
very important; 0 percent rated it unimportant.
Actually,
most of us have a good reputation with ourselves. In studies of
self-esteem, even low-scoring people respond in the mid-range
of scores. (A "low" self-esteem person responds to statements
such as "I have good ideas" with a qualifying adjective
such as "somewhat" or "sometimes.")
Moreover,
one of the most provocative yet firmly established conclusions
of social psychology concerns the potency of "self-serving
bias." People accept more responsibility for good deeds than
for bad, for successes than for failures. The question "What
have I done to deserve this?" is one we ask of our troubles,
not our successes--those we assume we deserve.
On
nearly any subjective or socially desirable dimension, most people
actually see themselves as better than average. We also remember
and justify our past actions in self-enhancing ways, are quicker
to believe more flattering descriptions of ourselves than unflattering
ones, and overestimate the extent to which others support our
opinions and share our foibles. For most of us, these "positive
illusions" protect against anxiety and depression. All of
us at some time do feel inferior--especially when comparing ourselves
with those who are a step or two higher on the ladder of status,
looks, or income. The deeper and more frequently we have such
feelings, the more unhappy we are. Therefore, we function better
with modest self-enhancing illusions.
A
healthy self-esteem, then, is both positive and realistic. Because
it is based on the genuine achievement of realistic ideals, and
on feeling accepted for what one is, such self-esteem provides
a strong foundation for enduring joy.
II:
Optimism: Happy People Are Hope-Filled
Those
who agree that "with enough faith, you can do almost anything"
and that "when I undertake something new, I expect to succeed"
may be a bit bubble-headed. But, for seeing the glass of life
as half-full rather than half-empty, they are usually happier.
Optimists
are also healthier. Several studies reveal that a pessimistic
style of explaining bad events--saying, "It's my fault, it's
going to last, and it's going to undermine everything"--makes
us more vulnerable to illness. Harvard graduates who were most
pessimistic when interviewed in 1946 were least healthy when restudied
in 1980. Virginia Tech students who reacted to bad events pessimistically
suffered more colds, sore throats, and flu a year later. In general,
optimistic people are less bothered by various illnesses and recover
better from cancer and surgery.
Optimists
also enjoy greater success. Rather than see setbacks as signs
of their incompetence, they view them as flukes or as suggesting
the need for a new approach. A person who confronts life with
an attitude that often says "Yes!" to people and possibilities
lives with far more joy and venturesomeness than do habitual naysayers.
Yet
in affirming the great truth about optimism, let us also remember
a complementary truth about the perils of unrealism. Unrealistic
optimists may fail to take sensible precautions. And consider
the shame and dejection that accompanies shattered expectations.
If you believe the inspirational messages of positive thinkers,
then whose fault is it if you don't march upward from highs to
higher highs? What do we conclude when our marriages turn out
to be less than we romanticized, when we are less successful than
we dreamed?
At
such times, we have only ourselves to blame. When the dream collapses,
the biggest dreamers often fall the hardest. Limitless optimism
breeds endless frustrations.
The
recipe for well-being, then, requires neither positive nor negative
thinking alone, but a mix of ample optimism to provide hope, a
dash of pessimism to prevent complacency, and enough realism to
discriminate those things we can control from those we cannot.
III:
Extroversion: Happy People Are Outgoing
In
study after study, extroverts--social, outgoing people--report
greater happiness and satisfaction with life. The explanation
seems partly temperamental. "Extroverts are simply more cheerful
and high-spirited," report National Institute of Aging researchers
Paul Costa and Robert McCrae. Self-assured people who walk into
a room full of strangers and warmly introduce themselves may also
be more accepting of themselves. Liking themselves, they are confident
that others will like them, too.
Such
attitudes tend also to be self-fulfilling, leading extroverts
to experience more positive events. When University of Illinois
researchers Ed Diener and Keith Magnus studied students at the
undergraduate level and then again four years later as alumni,
they found that life had treated extroverts more kindly. Compared
to introverts, extroverts were more likely to have gotten married,
found good jobs, and made new, close friends.
Extroverted
people are more involved with others. They have a larger circle
of friends and they more often engage in rewarding social activities.
They experience more affection and enjoy greater social support--an
important wellspring of well-being.
IV:
Personal Control: Happy People Believe They Choose Their Destinies
Summarizing
the University of Michigan's nationwide surveys, researcher Angus
Campbell commented that "having a strong sense of controlling
one's life is a more dependable predictor of positive feelings
of well-being than any of the objective conditions of life we
have considered." And the 15 percent of Americans who feel
in control of their lives and feel satisfied with themselves have
"extraordinarily positive feelings of happiness."
Consider
your own sense of personal control. Would you agree with the statement
that "I don't have enough control over the direction my life
is taking" or that "What happens to me is my own doing"?
That "The world is run by a few powerful people" or
that "The average person can influence government decisions"?
Those whose responses to such statements reveal an "internal
locus of control" typically achieve more in school, cope
better with stress, and live more happily.
Increasing
people's control can noticeably improve their health and morale
as well. One study by Yale psychologist Judith Rodin encouraged
nursing-home patients to exert more control--to make choices about
their environment and to influence policy. As a result, 93 percent
became more alert, active, and happy. Similar results have been
observed after allowing prisoners to move chairs and control the
lights and TV, and after enabling workers to participate in decision
making.
Happy,
too, are those who gain the sense of control that comes with effective
management of one's time. Unoccupied time, especially for out-of-work
people who aren't able to plan and fill their time, is unsatisfying.
Sleeping late, hanging out, and watching TV leave an empty feeling.
For happy people, time is "filled and planned; they are punctual
and efficient," says Oxford University psychologist Michael
Argyle. "For unhappy people, time is unfilled, open, and
uncommitted; they postpone things and are inefficient."
Establishing
pre-set deadlines for oneself--and then meeting them--can lead
to the delicious, confident feeling of personal control.
Finally:
How To Be Happy
It's
easily enough said that happiness comes with having positive self-esteem,
feeling in control of our lives, and having optimistic, outgoing
dispositions, but how can we strengthen such traits? If we wish
we were happier, can we somehow become more positive, inner-directed,
confident, and extroverted? Just how malleable are we?
Well-meaning
advice to "be more outgoing" or to "have a more
cheerful outlook" can burden us with the responsibility to
choose our basic temperament. More than such advice-givers realize,
we bring our basic dispositions with us into the world.
More
and more studies show that our basic personality traits endure,
especially after childhood. While developmental psychologists
are sometimes surprised by how often troubled, unhappy children
mature into competent, successful adults, there is nonetheless
an underlying consistency to personality. After the end of the
teen years, traits such as outgoingness, emotional stability,
openness, agreeableness, and conscientiousness seem to persist
throughout adulthood.
But
it's also true that we have the power to affect our own destinies,
for we are the creators as well as the creatures of our social
worlds. We may be the products of our past, but we are also the
architects of our future. Personality isn't programmed like eye
color. The predispositions we bring with us into the world leave
room for nurture's influence, and our own efforts as well. What
we do today shapes our world and ourselves tomorrow.
If
social psychologists have proven anything during the last 30 years,
they have proven that the actions we take leave a residue inside
us. Every time we act, we amplify the underlying idea or tendency
behind it. Most people presume the reverse: that our traits and
attitudes affect our behavior. While this is true to a certain
extent (though less so than commonly supposed), it is also true
that our traits and attitudes follow our behavior. We are as likely
to act ourselves into a new way of thinking as to think ourselves
into a new way of acting.
There
is a practical moral here for us all. Do we wish to change ourselves
in some important way? Perhaps boost our self-esteem? Become more
optimistic and socially assertive? Well, a potent strategy is
to get up and start doing that very thing. Don't worry that you
don't feel like it. Fake it. Pretend self-esteem. Feign optimism.
Simulate outgoingness.
In
experiments, people have been asked to write essays or present
themselves to an interviewer in either self-enhancing or selfdeprecating
ways. Those who act as if they are exceptionally intelligent,
caring, and sensitive people later express higher self-esteem
when privately describing themselves to a different researcher.
This saying-becomes-believing effect is harnessed by therapy techniques
(such as behavior therapy, rational-emotive therapy, and cognitive
therapy), each of which prods the clients into practicing more
positive talk and behavior.
Yes,
telling people to act or talk positively sounds like telling people
to be phony. But, as usually happens when we step into some new
role--perhaps our first days "playing" parent, salesperson,
or teacher--an amazing thing happens: The phoniness gradually
subsides. We notice that our uncomfortable sense of being a parent,
for instance, no longer feels forced. The new role--and the new
behaviors and accompanying attitudes--have begun to fit us as
comfortably as an old pair of blue jeans.
The
moral: Going through the motions can trigger the emotions. Surely
you've noticed. You're in a testy mood, but when the phone rings
you feign cheer while talking to a friend. Strangely, after hanging
up, you no longer feel so grumpy. Such is the value of social
occasions--they impel us to behave as if we were happy, which
in fact helps free us from our unhappiness.
Granted,
we can't expect ourselves to become more upbeat and socially confident
overnight. But rather than limply resign ourselves to our current
traits and emotions, we can stretch ourselves, step by step. Rather
than waiting until we feel like making those calls or reaching
out to that person, we can begin. If we are too anxious, modest,
or indifferent, we can pretend, trusting that before long the
pretense will diminish as our actions ignite a spark inside--the
spark that will lead to happiness.
About
the Author
Parts
of this article were excerpted from The Pursuit of Happiness:
Who Is Happy--and Why, by David G. Myers, Ph.D., copyright C)
1992 by William Morrow and Company Inc.
By:
David G. Myers
Originally published by Psychology
Today:Jul
92