PSYCHOLOGY

Happiness: Enough Already

The push for ever-greater well-being is facing a backlash, fueled by research on the value of sadness.

Photos (from left): Getty Images, ibiblio.org, Library of Congress, Getty Images, Corbis, AFP-Getty Images
Grief Is Good: (left to right) Aristotle saw melancholy as muse. Bright stars who suffered dark moods: Van Gogh, Lincoln, Dickinson, Allen and Morrissey.
 
 
 

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The plural of anecdote is not data, as scientists will tell you, but consider these snapshots of the emerging happiness debate anyway: Lately, Jerome Wakefield's students have been coming up to him after they break up with a boyfriend or girlfriend, and not because they want him to recommend a therapist. Wakefield, a professor at New York University, coauthored the 2007 book "The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Transformed Normal Sorrow Into Depressive Disorder," which argues that feeling down after your heart is broken—even so down that you meet the criteria for clinical depression— is normal and even salutary. But students tell him that their parents are pressuring them to seek counseling and other medical intervention—"some Zoloft, dear?"—for their sadness, and the kids want no part of it. "Can you talk to them for me?" they ask Wakefield. Rather than "listening to Prozac," they want to listen to their hearts, not have them chemically silenced.

University of Illinois psychologist Ed Diener, who has studied happiness for a quarter century, was in Scotland recently, explaining to members of Parliament and business leaders the value of augmenting traditional measures of a country's wealth with a national index of happiness. Such an index would measure policies known to increase people's sense of well-being, such as democratic freedoms, access to health care and the rule of law. The Scots were all in favor of such things, but not because they make people happier. "They said too much happiness might not be such a good thing," says Diener. "They like being dour, and didn't appreciate being told they should be happier." (For one man's struggle with the pressure to pursue happiness, click here.)

Eric Wilson tried to get with the program. Urged on by friends, he bought books on how to become happier. He made every effort to smooth out his habitual scowl and wear a sunny smile, since a happy expression can lead to genuinely happy feelings. Wilson, a professor of English at Wake Forest University, took up jogging, reputed to boost the brain's supply of joyful neurochemicals, watched uplifting Frank Capra and Doris Day flicks and began sprinkling his conversations with "great!" and "wonderful!", the better to exercise his capacity for enthusiasm. When none of these made him happy, Wilson not only jumped off the happiness bandwagon—he also embraced his melancholy side and decided to blast a happiness movement that "leads to half-lives, to bland existences," as he argues in "Against Happiness," a book now reaching stores. Americans' fixation on happiness, he writes, fosters "a craven disregard for the value of sadness" and "its integral place in the great rhythm of the cosmos."

It's always tricky to identify a turning point, at least in real time. Only in retrospect can you accurately pinpoint when a financial market peaked or hit bottom, for instance, or the moment when the craze for pricey coffee drinks crested. But look carefully, and what you are seeing now may be the end of the drive for ever-greater heights of happiness. Fed by hundreds of self-help books, including the current "The How of Happiness: A Scientific Approach to Getting the Life You Want," magazine articles and an industry of life coaches and motivational speakers, the happiness movement took off in the 1990s with two legitimate developments: discoveries about the brain activity underlying well-being, and the emergence of "positive psychology," whose proponents urged fellow researchers to study happiness as seriously as they did pathological states such as depression. But when the science of happiness collided with pop culture and the marketplace, it morphed into something even its creators hardly recognized. There emerged "a crowd of people out there who want you to be happier," write Ed Diener and his son, Robert Biswas-Diener, in their book, "Rethinking Happiness," due for publication later this year. Somewhere out there a pharmaceutical company "is working on a new drug to make you happier," they warn. "There are even people who would like to give you special ozone enemas to make you happier." Although some 85 percent of Americans say they're pretty happy, the happiness industry sends the insistent message that moderate levels of well-being aren't enough: not only can we all be happier, but we practically have a duty to be so. What was once considered normal sadness is something to be smothered, even shunned.

The backlash against the happiness rat race comes just when scientists are releasing the most-extensive-ever study comparing moderate and extreme levels of happiness, and finding that being happier is not always better. In surveys of 118,519 people from 96 countries, scientists examined how various levels of subjective well-being matched up with income, education, political participation, volunteer activities and close relationships. They also analyzed how different levels of happiness, as reported by college students, correlated with various outcomes. Even allowing for imprecision in people's self-reported sense of well-being, the results were unambiguous. The highest levels of happiness go along with the most stable, longest and most contented relationships. That is, even a little discontent with your partner can nudge you to look around for someone better, until you are at best a serial monogamist and at worst never in a loving, stable relationship. "But if you have positive illusions about your partner, which goes along with the highest levels of happiness, you're more likely to commit to an intimate relationship," says Diener.

In contrast, "once a moderate level of happiness is achieved, further increases can sometimes be detrimental" to income, career success, education and political participation, Diener and colleagues write in the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science. On a scale from 1 to 10, where 10 is extremely happy, 8s were more successful than 9s and 10s, getting more education and earning more. That probably reflects the fact that people who are somewhat discontent, but not so depressed as to be paralyzed, are more motivated to improve both their own lot (thus driving themselves to acquire more education and seek ever-more-challenging jobs) and the lot of their community (causing them to participate more in civic and political life). In contrast, people at the top of the jolliness charts feel no such urgency. "If you're totally satisfied with your life and with how things are going in the world," says Diener, "you don't feel very motivated to work for change. Be wary when people tell you you should be happier."

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  • Posted By: dcezar @ 06/12/2009 9:01:57 PM

    http://www.newswI have to make up a case here. While happiness must not be a ending in itself, likely money, it is highly desirable and even vital to human being. A certain level of happiness, must be said. If you, sadness defendant, give yourself the work to review the books out there you'll find that you are generalizing. I've lost my father four year ago, since there I met hell. I was wondering if I was condemned to spend the rest of my life as a dull boy, without any joy or meaning, that is what I felt. With that I lost relationships (because people don't wanna live with sad others), money (in binge action), jobs (I felt so discontent that I was extremely non-productive) and gain lots of fat (I would go binge eating to try to feel some relief). So I discovered the studies behind Positive Psychology and it literally give me the tools to build strength and a holly new perception of the world and of the problems, including the wrong way I was dealing with grief. My father died from severe major depression. I had it following his death. From this point of view I can assure: to understand depression you MUST firs have the experience to live near to someone who has and after you must experience it yourself. This way you can understand what depression really is. I used to think my father was weak and things like that, and I thank that way until he died. So, just now, I know what to be really depressive feel like. I've read: Authentic Happiness, Learned Optimism (both from M. Seligman), Women who Think So Much (from Nolen-Hoeksema) and Flow (from Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi). Further I read lots of master and doctorate thesis I found on the internet, things regarding learned helplessness, flow, rumination (specially a piece from Nolen-Hoeksema with Barbara Fredrickson called "Rethinking Rumination"). Neither of this literature suggested me to be a 90 or 100% happy person. I found so much suggestions to use pessimism, or realism, wherever necessary. Even there are suggestions on how to evaluate each situation so oneself can decide. I also suggest the reading of Daniel Gilbert's as a counter-balance and food for tough. I'm 30, from Brazil, almost lost my life to sadness and I'm here to assure: Happiness, with moderation and responsibility, have the power to change one's life!

  • Posted By: MichaelX @ 03/06/2009 11:59:17 AM

    Hey, Slacker Gen XYZ, get off yourself, you aint such a much. In fact, you are the sole responsible reason for todays malady's. You're a whiney, little-minded jerk. Oh, woe,,,,alas and alack. You don't need therapy, you need to get a spine.

  • Posted By: chester1234 @ 05/28/2008 8:54:05 PM

    I have found that focusing too much on happiness can actually cause us to be less happy, because we spend less time in self-evaluation and more time actually living. Here is an article that sums this up:
    http://spiritualinquiry.com/articles/the-dangers-of-a-happiness-obsession/

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