Having looked at history and done theory on happiness in recent blogs, here’s a Top 10 from Dr Mike Pratt to pin to your wall:
- Progress towards meaningful goals using ‘signature strengths’ contributes significantly to happiness.
- Happy people take time to do things that give them pleasure.
- Quality time with friends and family is top of the happiness list.
- Doing altruistic things for others creates enduring happiness.
- Expressing gratitude enhances your own well-being and that of the recipient.
- People quickly adapt to material advances.
- Beyond satisfaction of needs, more money does not make people significantly happier.
- Positive experiences tend to provide more enduring happiness than tangible purchases (social benefits).
- We get little enduring pleasure from short cuts.
- Regular exercise increases happiness.
A conversation and buzz around happiness is innately optimistic, healthy, and I think the more inquiry the better. Here’s a recent take from the New York Times “Talk Deeply, Be Happy?” by Roni Caryn Rabin about the work of University of Arizona psychologist Matthias Mehl which starts with the question: “Would you be happier if you spent more time discussing the state of the world and the meaning of life – and less time talking about the weather?”
If you missed Happiness Part One, you can find it here, or Parts Two and Three here.
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Kevin Roberts is the CEO worldwide of The Lovemarks Company, Saatchi & Saatchi. For more information on Kevin, please go to www.saatchikevin.com. To see this blog at its original source, please go to www.krconnect.blogspot.com.
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