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Sunday, January 11, 2009
Jackie Gingrich Cushman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Pollyanna or Typhoid Mary
by Jackie Gingrich Cushman
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Poll
Will Sarah Palin make a run at the GOP Nomination in 2012?


This time of year, colds and viruses spread rapidly from one person to another.  Anti-bacterial gel is a mainstay in the battle to stop the spread of germs and viruses.  Bottles of this stuff can be found in gyms, school, hospitals, cars, workplaces and mothers’ purses.  Those most concerned about the transmission of germs can be seen running around with bottles of Lysol spraying everything that does not move.

Often we view the spread of items as bad, but just consider the impact that could be had if, instead of spreading colds, we could spread happiness? 

According to the Gallup-Heathways Well-Being index released Jan. 8, 42 percent of Americans “experienced a lot of happiness and enjoyment without a lot of stress and worry,” while 13 percent of Americans said “they experienced daily worry and stress far outweighing their happiness and enjoyment.”  We are a group that could use a bit more happiness.

These statistics naturally lead to the questions: what are the causes of happiness and how can we make changes in our own lives to increase our own happiness and, potentially, the happiness of others?

Happiness is an elusive emotion, experienced at the individual level and caused by various factors.  Some might find happiness in reading a good book, while others might experience happiness in putting together Legos to create a Star Wars ship.  What influences well-being? According to a November 17, 2008 Gallup report, relationships and financial security affect our feelings of being well.

Gallup asked individuals to report feelings of financial security and interpersonal security.   Those who reported security in both areas also reported the highest scores of well-being.  Those who reported being financially secure but not interpersonally secure scored higher in well-being than did those who reported being interpersonally secure but not financially secure.  This might lead us to conclude that financial security affects us more than personal relationships do.  However, when subjects were asked about recent experiences that would indicate well-being (smiling and laughing the day before), they said that secure interpersonal relationships were more important and more influential. 

The report noted, “money alone may buy life satisfaction, but it does not seem to buy daily happiness.”  That, according to Gallup, means “people's overall assessment of life satisfaction, or ‘evaluative’ well-being, is strongly linked to income. In contrast, ‘experienced’ well-being, which has to do with emotions rather than overall evaluations, is more strongly linked to interpersonal variables -- such as the number of hours each day people spend socializing.”

In fact, the amount of time spent socializing each day directly affects reports of happiness, with six to seven hours considered optimal. Continued...

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About The Author
Jackie Cushman is a freelance writer who lives in Atlanta, Georgia. Her column also runs later in the week in the Northside Neighbor.
 
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Why look at the psychological evidence?
Check out http://www.non-normie.com. As the daughter of a family counselor with a degree in psychology, I agree with Mr. Thomas' observation that people who go into the field of psychology do so because they are seeking a cure for their own non-normieness. Much as I loved my mother, I can see that she did, in fact, do just that.

The Gallup Poll may or may not be worth anything, but frankly, the field of psychology is full of people who, while they may be highly educated, are still crazy.

As for me, I would never call myself a normie, only a recovering non-normie. There was only one real normie in history, and he made it possible for us to make a start on learning how to recover from non-normieness.

However, those are just my thoughts on an article that actually has a very good point.

Happieness is...
A Journey, NOT a destination.

Happieness is the bi-product of working toward a goal.

When you depend on external forces to accomoplish your goals you can never find happieness.

When you live in a condition wherein you are prohibited from pursuing a positive goal in your life, you can never find happieness.

Happieness is found within, and cannot be spread like a virus because the most limiting factor in happieness is belief.

Freedom and Liberty will produce happieness, but there are always those who will confuse pleasure with happieness and pursue pleasure rather than happieness. That is not to say there is no happieness in pleasure (it is just a rare comodity there) but you are far more likely to enjoy life's pleasures when you are engaged in a genuine pursuit of happieness.

just my thoughts

jd
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