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Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Psychological Wealth Ed Diener Smiley Distinguished Professor of Psycholo

Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Psychological Wealth Ed Diener Smiley Distinguished Professor of Psychology University of Illinois 4 th European Conference on Positive Psychology July 1- 4, 2008 Rijeka, Croatia. “The most authoritative and informative book

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Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Psychological Wealth Ed Diener Smiley Distinguished Professor of Psycholo

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  1. Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Psychological Wealth Ed Diener Smiley Distinguished Professor of Psychology University of Illinois 4th European Conference on Positive Psychology July 1- 4, 2008 Rijeka, Croatia

  2. “The most authoritative and informative book about happiness ever ^ written”

  3. Unique Aspects of the Book: • We present the research on the benefits of happiness – to health, work, and relationships • We also show the need for “negative emotions,” and that you don’t necessarily need to be happier • We show the danger of averages when applied to individuals, like for religion or marriage • We present self-scoring measures for 7 variables • We expose myths such as the “Set-point” • We have a lot of fun stories

  4. Part l: Understanding true wealth • Psychological Wealth: The Balanced Portfolio • Two Principles of Psychological Wealth • Part 2: Happy people function better • Health and Happiness • Happiness and Social Relationships – You Can’t Do Without Them • Happiness at Work: It Pays to be Happy • Part 3: Causes of happiness and genuine wealth • Can Money Buy Happiness? • Religion, Spirituality, and Happiness • The Happiest Places on Earth: Culture and Well-Being • Nature and Nurture – Is There a Happiness Set-Point, and Can You Change It? • Our Crystal Balls: Happiness Forecasting • Taking AIM: Attention, Interpretation, and Memory • Part 4: Putting it all together • Yes, You Can Be Too Happy • Living Happily Ever After • Measuring Your Psychological Wealth

  5. Pie Chart of True Wealth

  6. Understanding true wealth • Two Principles of Happiness • Part 2: Happy people function better • Part 3: Causes of happiness and genuine wealth • Part 4: Putting it all together

  7. 1. Happiness is a Process, Not a Place • Ongoing new challenges • How one “travels” • Winning an award • Climbing Mt. Denali

  8. 2. Happiness Is Desirable

  9. Flaubert’s Error To be stupid, selfish, and have good health are three requirements for happiness, though if stupidity is lacking, all is lost. Gustave Flaubert

  10. Dalai Lama “Stupid Happiness”

  11. Why Beneficial Happiness? • Broaden and build (Fredrickson) • Creativity (Isen) • Challenges look easier when happy (Proffitt)

  12. Benefits of SWBLyubomirsky, King, & Diener Social relationships Work and income Health & longevity Societal benefits • Causal direction? • Longitudinal, lab experiments, quasi-experiments

  13. Social Benefits Happy people more likely to have: Self-confidence, leadership Warmth, sociability More friends

  14. Work Success A. Higher supervisor ratings B. Organizational citizenship Example: Helping others on the job C. Higher income

  15. College Entry Cheerfulness, and Income 19 yearslater Diener, Nickerson, Lucas, & Sandvik (2002)

  16. Health & Longevity The Nun Study Dr. Snowdon with Sisters Agnes and Gertrude

  17. Longevity inThe Nun Study Survival Rate at Age:8593 Most Cheerful Quartile 79% 52% Least Cheerful 54% 18% Danner, Snowdon, & Friesen

  18. Smoking (pack/day) Exercise Light drinking

  19. Smoking (pack/day) Exercise Light drinking Heavy drinking Hey, Doc, what about:

  20. Smoking (pack/day) Exercise Light drinking Heavy drinking Hey, Doc, what about: Becoming a Nun?

  21. Smoking (pack/day) Exercise Light drinking Heavy drinking Hey, Doc, what about: How happy are you? Very Happy vs. Less Happy + 10.7 years

  22. Why happy are healthier? • Stronger immune systems • Better cardiovascular health • Health behaviors (e.g., seatbelts) • Fewer lifestyle diseases (e.g. alcoholism) • Younger genes (telomeres)

  23. Societal Benefits of Happiness • Volunteering • Pro-peace attitudes • Cooperative attitudes

  24. Part 3: Influences on Happiness • Supportive social relationships • Temperament & adaptation • Money • Society & culture • Cognition: Positive attitudes

  25. 1. Strong Social Relationships Every single one of the happiest people we studied have good social relationships

  26. GIVING social support: People who help others live longer and are happier!

  27. 2. Temperament & Adaptation“Identical” (Monozygotic) Twins

  28. Ed’s Daughters: Clinical Psychologist and Developmental Psychologist

  29. Inborn Temperament • Identical twins reared apart are much more similar in happiness than fraternal twins reared together • Heritability – 20 to 50 percent of individual differences in happiness

  30. Adaptation • Temperament has substantial effect in long-run because people adapt to their conditions to some degree They react strongly, but then adapt back to their baseline

  31. Daily moods of a 20-year old

  32. Unemployment

  33. Slow Adaptation to Widowhood

  34. But what of Brickman et al.? • Lottery winners • Paraplegics

  35. Life Satisfaction and 100 Percent Disability (Lucas)

  36. Conclusion The “Set-point” is really more like a “Set-range” Temperament is important, but circumstances matter too

  37. 3. Money Despite popular myths, money is correlated with happiness, although not always strongly

  38. But Warnings About Money! • Toxicity of materialism • Don’t sacrifice too much of other components of wealth, such as relationships • Declining marginal utility

  39. Even the poor can be happy • Maasai • Inuit • Amish • Slums of Calcutta A. If basic needs met, for food etc. • If not desiring more • Have other rewards such as relationships

  40. 4. Society Influences Happiness The individualism bias in positive psychology – happiness is within you only But what of positive institutions?

  41. Denmark 8.0 Finland 7.7 Switzerland 7.5 Netherlands 7.5 Spain 7.2 Ireland 7.1 Togo 3.2 Cambodia 3.6 Sierra Leone 3.6 Georgia 3.7 Zimbabwe 3.8 West Bank 4.7 Life Evaluation LadderIdeal to Worst (10 to 0)

  42. Culture Influences Levels of Well-beingPleasant Emotions—Enjoyment etc. HighLow Honduras Pakistan Panama Bangladesh Costa Rica Palestine Puerto Rico Tajikistan

  43. 5. “Cognition:”Positive Mental Outlook • The habit of seeing the glass half-full • Seeing opportunities, not threats • Generally trusting and liking oneself and others

  44. Cognition: AIM Model • Attention • Interpretation • Memory

  45. Cognition: AIM Model • Attention • Seeing beauty and good in the world • Interpretation • Interpreting many things as positive • Memory • Savoring rather than ruminating COGNITIVE HABITS PEOPLE GET INTO!

  46. “Spirituality”: Experiencing Broadening Positive Emotions – which make life larger than just our own self-interests: Gratitude Love Awe Transcendance

  47. Part l: Understanding true wealth • Part 2: Happy people function better • Part 3: Causes of happiness and genuine wealth • Part 4: Putting it all together • Yes, You Can Be Too Happy • Living Happily Ever After • Measuring Your Psychological Wealth

  48. Being too happy? • No negative emotions • They can be appropriate • They sometimes help functioning • Searching for constant euphoria & ecstasy • Expectations too high • In some instances “8’s” do better than “10’s”

  49. National Accounts of Well-BeingRobert Kennedy, 1968 • Too much and for too long, we seemed to have surrendered personal excellence and community values in the mere accumulation of material things. Our Gross Nation Product . . . counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and ambulances to clear our highways of carnage…. Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of marriages, the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country, it measures everything in short, except that which makes life worthwhile.

  50. National Accounts of SWB Measuring well-being for policy Information beyond wealth GDP, employment, etc. These will help the positive behavioral sciences!

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