News Archive
Management QOL in the News - December 25, 2023
6 Simple Strategies for Glowing Skin and a Happy Mind
By Iris Goldsztajn
Daily gratitude has been one of the most popular and well-documented wellness practices of the past few years. Stars such as Oprah Winfrey, Kerry Washington, and Michelle Obama all practice gratitude regularly; the hashtag #gratitude has four billion views on TikTok; and there’s study after study that shows how giving thanks for the good things in your life can enhance your health and happiness.
Sounds good, right? But what if you feel like there’s no time for you to incorporate yet another practice into your routine? If you’re someone who’s really consistent with your daily beauty routine, we have good news for you: You can actually add gratitude to your beauty routine with the magic of “habit stacking,” AKA fitting healthy habits into your day by coupling them with things you already do habitually. Even better? Because gratitude has so many mental health benefits, it’s also bound to trickle down into your skin health. By helping you reduce stress, practicing daily gratitude as part of your beauty routine can leave you feeling and looking glowy as ever.
Read full article here.
Three Ways to Lessen Financial Stress and Create Work-Life Balance in 2024
By Kelli Kiemle
Is work-life balance attainable, or is it an unrealistic goal to set?
According to the Forbes Health-Ipsos Monthly Health Tracker, 90% of employed respondents noted that “work-life balance is an important aspect of their job.”
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - December 24, 2023
The 15 Best Places to Live in the US
By Amelia Mularz
Each year U.S. News & World Report releases a list of the Best Places to Live in the US. These top-rated cities always include a few big players, like Boston and San Francisco, as well as some surprises, like Green Bay, Wisconsin, landing the #1 spot. To determine the best cities, U.S. News considers a multitude of factors, including quality of life, the local job market, value for your money, and the place’s desirability. And while we agree that all these factors are important in determining where to live in America, we’d also throw access to art and design into the mix. That’s why we used the U.S. News list as a jumping off point—zeroing in on the top 75 and picking the 15 best places to live for design lovers.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - December 23, 2023
CBS News poll looks at where Americans find happiness
By Anthony Salvanto
All year long, Americans have described for us the problems they see — and there is indeed a lot of tough news out there.
But with the holiday season here, we thought we'd also give them a chance to say what's going well in their lives and what they're grateful for. And for many people, there's plenty of gratitude and happiness.
We say we generally feel happy.
Well, most of us feel this way, anyway — at least fairly happy, if not very happy.
Reported happiness is related to how people think things are going with their family, their children, their health and to an extent — particularly for younger people — with their jobs and careers.
Those who think things are going well with their family lives are far more likely to report general happiness.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - December 18, 2023
Harvard happiness expert: The No. 1 thing to avoid to achieve a 'real sense of satisfaction'
By Renée Onque
It's easy to think that true happiness and satisfaction can only be achieved by accomplishing major goals, but that's far from the truth, according to Arthur C. Brooks, a social scientist and professor at Harvard University who teaches a free course about happiness.
"A lot of people think that once they learn their skills, once they're set in life that everything will be okay, but that's a fallacy that we call in my business, 'The Arrival Fallacy,'" Brooks said during the CNBC Work Summit 2023 this month.
The premise of the arrival fallacy is that once you accomplish a certain thing, you'll automatically be happier and more satisfied with your life, Brooks said.
Some examples of the accomplishments that people think will get them the satisfaction they're looking for, according to Brooks, include:
- Securing a high-paying job or financial stability
- Getting married
- Buying the house they've always wanted
- Losing a certain amount of weight
Regardless of what that destination is for you, Brooks said you should avoid the arrival fallacy and embrace change in order to really be happy.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - December 11, 2023
New Study Reveals The Personality Traits Associated With Dementia Risk
By Jillian Wilson
New research found a link between a negative affect and dementia risk.
Could your personality affect your memory?
A recent meta-analysis published in Alzheimer’s and Dementia, the journal of the Alzheimer’s Association, found a connection between certain personality traits and the risk of dementia. The data was made up of eight smaller studies, totaling 44,531 people age 49 to 81. Of the group, 1,703 people developed dementia. Participants took part in personality assessments and underwent brain examinations after they died.
Researchers compared dementia diagnoses with the “big five” personality traits, which are agreeableness, openness, extroversion, conscientiousness and neuroticism. They also compared diagnoses in people who had either a positive affect (a personality that leans more toward positive traits like joy, enthusiasm and confidence) and negative affect (someone who tends to have more emotions like anger, nervousness and fear).
People who had high levels of neuroticism and those with negative affect “had a higher risk of developing dementia over the long term,” said Dr. Joel Salinas, a clinical assistant professor of neurology at NYU Langone Health and the chief medical officer of Isaac Health, who was not affiliated with the study.
“And then those who had low levels of conscientiousness, extroversion and that positive affect ... [were] tied to an increase of risk as well,” Salinas added.
Conversely, researchers found that people with a positive affect or personality traits including extroversion and conscientiousness had a lower risk of developing the disease. Those who are extroverted have a more robust social life and get energy from being around others; someone who is conscientious is considered responsible, organized and goal-oriented.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - November 29, 2023
Can money buy happiness? 60% of Americans say yes — and the price tag is $1.2 million
By Jessica Dickler
At a time when many households feel financially strained, some say you can put a price on happiness. And that number is $1.2 million.
According to Empower's Financial Happiness report, 60% of Americans said money can buy happiness and achieving a certain net worth is key to contentment.
With record high credit card debt, a declining personal savings rate and more than half of adults living paycheck to paycheck, Americans now say they would need to earn $284,167 a year to be happy, the Empower report found.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - November 15, 2023
Women are outliving men by nearly six years—and COVID and drug overdoses are a major cause, according to a new report
By Lori Youmshajekian
Women have outlived men for more than a century in the U.S. Demographers have largely attributed this well-known statistical gap to differences in behaviors in areas such as smoking and drinking habits, risk of injury and drug use. Overall U.S. life expectancy had been slowly improving for decades, but data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show some of this progress has recently been overturned—especially among men.
In 2010 women were projected to live 4.8 years longer than men. By 2021 this gap widened to 5.8 years, the largest disparity since 1996. During the 20th century, heart disease was the main cause of death that created the difference in life expectancy among women and men. But now COVID fatalities and a growing number of drug overdoses among men are to blame, according to a new analysis of CDC data published in JAMA Internal Medicine. (The report designated gender based on binary gender data that were recorded in death certificates.)
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - November 8, 2023
Ways to Extend Your Healthy Years, Not Just Your Life
By Lydia Denworth
Over the past century the average life expectancy in developed countries has increased by 30 years, from roughly age 50 to 80. Vaccines, sanitation, antibiotics, and other advances allow many more people to survive infectious diseases that used to kill them during childhood. (In the U.S., though, the span dropped by nearly three years during the COVID pandemic, a testament to the power of infections to shorten lives.)
Longer life spans overall have been a public health success. But they have also created a new and important gap: healthspans, usually defined as the period of life free of chronic disease or disability, do not always match longevity.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - October 21, 2023
If you use any of these 6 phrases every day, you're 'genuinely happier' than most: Happiness experts
By Leslie Richardson and Neil Pasricha
Happiness is a choice, but that doesn't mean it's easy. When we're stuck in a constant loop of fear and negativity, it can be tough to cultivate a positive mindset.
As leaders at the Institute for Global Happiness, we're constantly thinking about the small, intentional things we can all do to make our communities more positive, content and resilient.
Often, it starts with how we speak to others, and to ourselves. If you use any of these six phrases every day, you're genuinely happier than most:
- "I get to..."
- "What was your rose?"
- "Tell me more…"
- "... yet."
- "Will this matter a year from now?"
- "I will focus on…...
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - October 7, 2023
The No. 1 key to a happier, longer life—'that younger people don't' know, according to the oldest and 'wisest' Americans
By Shane Parrish
I once interviewed Karl Pillemer, the Cornell sociologist and author of "30 Lessons for Living: Tired and True Advice from the Wisest Americans." He'd seen numerous studies showing that people in their 70s, 80s, and beyond were far happier than younger people.
He was intrigued: "I keep meeting older people — many of whom had lost loved ones, been through tremendous difficulties, and had serious health problems — but who nevertheless were deeply fulfilled and enjoying life. I found myself asking: 'What's that all about?'"
It occurred to him that maybe they see and understand things that younger people don't. But to Pillemer's surprise, no one had conducted a study on what practical advice older people had for the next generations.
That set him off a seven-year quest.
Their No. 1 lesson for a longer, happier life: Time is finite, don't spend it regretting things
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - October 5, 2023
Nothing Defines America’s Social Divide Like a College Education
By Yascha Mounk
Inequality is one of the great constants. But what sets those at the top of society apart from those at the bottom has varied greatly. In some times and places, it was race; in others, “noble” birth. In some, physical strength; in others, manual dexterity. In America today, most of these factors still matter. The country is racially unequal. Some people inherit great wealth; others become celebrities through sporting prowess.
But much of America’s transformation in recent decades—including many of the country’s problems—can be ascribed to the ascendancy of a different marker of distinction: education. Whether or not you have graduated from college is especially important. This single social marker now determines much more than it did in the past what sort of economic opportunities you are likely to have and even how likely you are to get married.
Educational status doesn’t only influence how Americans live, though. As a new set of papers from the economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton shows, educational status has now overtaken other metrics, including race, in predicting one of the most important socioeconomic outcomes you can imagine: how long you get to live.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - October 1, 2023
Psychology expert shares the 2,000-year-old Korean mindset that can help you live a 'happier life'
By Dr. Jihee Cho
"Jeong" is a concept that has been an integral part of Korean culture and society for over 2,000 years. It translates to deep feelings of attachment, and it can happen between anyone and anything, including objects and places.
Based on the mindset that we all have a collective social responsibility, jeong primarily evolves through shared experiences. When you develop feelings of jeong for someone, you want to protect and help them.
We all crave love and connection. But when we are so caught up in the strict relational boundaries of the daily grind, we can fail to notice opportunities for jeong to take place.
As a Korean psychologist, I often introduce my patients to jeong to help them create a stronger sense of community. Practicing it daily can lead to a happier life.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 30, 2023
This is the happiest job in the world, according to new research: 'You get to see the fruits of your labor'
By Morgan Smith
You won't find the happiest workers in the world toiling away at desks or crunching numbers — chances are, they're working outside.
Construction workers have the highest levels of self-reported happiness of any major industry category, according to a new analysis by BambooHR.
The HR software platform analyzed data from more than 57,000 employees at over 1,600 companies across the globe between January 2020 and June 2023.
While employee happiness overall has fluctuated over the past three years, construction workers' happiness scores have remained consistently high, largely thanks to rising wages and plentiful job opportunities, the report notes.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 29, 2023
Psychotherapist shares the No. 1 rule highly successful people follow to be happier at work: 'It's non-negotiable'
By Morgan Smith
You can't always find happiness in the confines of a 9 to 5 job — but if you can find meaning in what you do, or at least learn to tolerate it, the benefits are endless.
According to Wharton psychologist Adam Grant, employees who understand their work has a meaningful, positive impact on others are not just happier than those who don't; they're more productive, too.
Research shows that raises and promotions are more common among people who find their work meaningful. What's more, the studies found, these workers tend to be more resilient, motivated and harder working than their peers.
In other words, your happiness at work is a key factor in your success.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 22, 2023
Americans say this is the No. 1 most important factor to live a fulfilling life—it's not making a lot of money
By Kamaron McNair
Having a job you like may not just make the day-to-day easier, it also seems to improve your overall life satisfaction.
Americans say having a career you enjoy is the most important factor to living a fulfilled life, according to a new study from Pew Research. Over 70% of respondents say having a job or career they enjoy is an extremely important factor to living a fulfilling life. Just 24% of people said having a lot of money is equally important.
Here's the percentage of Americans who say each element is extremely or very important to living a fulfilling life, according to Pew Research:
- Having a job or career they enjoy: 71%
- Having close friends: 61%
- Having children: 26%
- Having a lot of money: 24%
- Being married: 23%
Still, money may make it easier for you to obtain the things that ultimately bring you fulfillment, and 49% of Americans agree having a lot of money is "somewhat important" to living a fulfilled life.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 21, 2023
The No. 1 employer for happy and fulfilled workers is a truck stop and convenience store chain
By Jennifer Liu
The company where workers feel most happy, fulfilled and stress-free can be seen from any given highway coast to coast.
Love's Travel Stops & Country Stores, the truck stop and convenience store chain, was rated the No. 1 company for employee well-being, according to a new report from Indeed.
Love's was recognized as part of the job search site's inaugural Better Work Awards, where it gathered anonymous employee reviews from July 2022 to July 2023 to determine the businesses that stand out for worker well-being. Indeed based the awards on employee ratings focused on four aspects related to worker well-being: happiness, purpose, satisfaction and stress.
Read full article here.
Utah is the happiest state in America—California and Florida didn't make the top 3
By Celia Fernandez
If moving to Finland, the happiest country in the world, isn't an option, you might want to consider some locations right here in the U.S.
WalletHub recently released its annual ranking of the happiest states in America. To determine where Americans are the happiest, the personal finance website compared the 50 states across three key dimensions:
- Emotional and physical well-being
- Work environment
- Community and environment
Utah is the happiest state in America
Utah ranks as the No. 1 happiest state in the U.S. with an overall score of 69.79 out of 100.
Though it came in 16th place for emotional and physical well-being, Utah took the top spots both for work environment and community and environment.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 17, 2023
This Is What Harms Married People's Happiness The Most, Therapists Say
By Kelsey Borresen
Your relationship with your spouse is one of the most important bonds in your life. It can provide you with deep love and connection, someone to share experiences with, and opportunities to help you grow into a better version of yourself.
But sometimes other forces — like bad habits and unhealthy beliefs — get in the way of that. We asked therapists to name some of the biggest threats to married people’s happiness.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 16, 2023
These cities are home to the happiest Americans
By Anja Solum and SmartAsset via Stacker
(Smart Asset) – Research shows that in some cases, money does lead to happiness. In fact, a 2021 University of Pennsylvania study found a correlation between happiness and income growth, even past an annual income of $80,000. This is in contrast to previous research that found happiness stagnated after an individual earned $75,000. However, not all places can offer the same level of happiness, as some cities offer more economic opportunities and a better quality of life than others.
To uncover the happiest places in America, SmartAsset analyzed the 200 largest cities, 164 of which had available data. This analysis looked at 13 different metrics across three categories: personal finance, well-being and quality of life. For details on our data sources and how SmartAsset put all the information together to create final rankings, read the Data and Methodology section below.
Key Findings
- California cities dominate the top 10. While cities like Sunnyvale and Fremont offer the No. 1 and No. 3 highest earnings for individuals, these Western cities score highest in the quality of life category. Specifically, top 10 California cities had lower percentages of people living in poverty, higher marriage rates and lower violent crime rates.
- Birmingham is the least happy city. This Alabama city ranks in the bottom five across metrics such as personal bankruptcy filings per capita, life expectancy and the percentage of residents living in poverty. Newark, New Jersey and Memphis, Tennessee follow as the second- and third-least happy cities.
- Top 10 cities have high marriage rates. Residents who’ve said “I do” make up the majority of the population in all but one city: Arlington, Virginia, where the marriage rate is 44.0%. Frisco, Texas, which ranks No. 5 overall, has the highest marriage rate study-wide (62.6%).
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 15, 2023
Don’t Let Love Take Over Your Life
By Faith Hill
If you have a romantic partner, maybe you’ve noticed that you two spend an awful lot of time together—and that you haven’t seen other people quite as much as you’d like. Or if you’re single (and many of your friends aren’t), you might have gotten the eerie feeling that I sometimes do: that you’re in a deserted town, as if you woke one morning to find the houses all empty, the stores boarded up. Where’d everyone go?
Either way, that feeling might not just be in your head. Kaisa Kuurne, a sociologist at the University of Helsinki, told me she was “a little bit shocked” when she started mapping Finnish adults’ relationships for a 2012 study, investigating whom subjects felt close to and how they interacted day to day. Subjects who lived with a romantic partner seemed to have receded into their coupledom. When Kuurne asked them to rate, on a scale of one to seven, how close various relationships felt, they’d frequently give the highest mark to only their partner and their children, if they had them; when subjects illustrated their social networks, they’d commonly put those other connections—friends, co-workers, siblings—on the outskirts of their map. People outside the household, for the most part, weren’t “woven into that everyday life,” Kuurne told me.
Relationship trends can vary across cultures, but Kuurne told me that the pattern she noticed isn’t limited to Helsinki. Researchers in the U.S. have made similar observations. Katie Genadek, an economist who studies Census Bureau data, told me that the amount of time the average couple spends together has actually slightly increased since 1965.
Finding love is a beautiful, lucky thing. And some research suggests that shared time, at least up to a certain point, can make partners happier (though the strength of that link is up for debate). But there is only so much time in a day, and the minutes you spend alone with your partner are minutes not spent deepening connections with friends and relatives or building new bonds, not spent relishing the pleasures of solitude or enjoying whatever interests are uniquely yours. If you build a life with your relationship at the center, everything else gets pushed to the perimeter. There’s a way to maintain what I think of as “love-life balance,” to preserve your identity and autonomy while nurturing a caring partnership. Losing that balance can be damaging for a person, for a relationship, and for society.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 14, 2023
This Is the Happiest State in the U.S., According to a New Survey
By Stacey Leasca
How happy are you, really? If you live in Utah, apparently, you’re the happiest.
WalletHub released its annual "Happiest States in America" report, showcasing which states have the “highest satisfaction with life.”
“Even though people across the U.S. are facing difficult times, the state in which you live may have an impact on how happy you are,” WalletHub wrote in its report. “WalletHub drew upon the findings of ‘happiness’ research to determine which environmental factors are linked to a person’s overall well-being and satisfaction with life. Previous studies have found that good economic, emotional, physical, and social health are all key to a well-balanced and fulfilled life.”
To find the happiness level of each state and determine its rankings, the website measured all 50 states across 30 metrics, including depression rates, productivity, income growth, unemployment rates, sports participation rates, work environments, and even down to a state’s sleep rate.
After compiling the data, WalletHub revealed that Utah came out as the happiest state of all, specifically noting the state also has the highest volunteer rate, 40.7 percent, which “is 2.6 times higher than in Florida,” the state with the lowest volunteer rate. (The data suggests that helping others can really make you happier in the process.) Utah also clocked in with the lowest separation and divorce rate in the nation.
Read full article here.
Humans Have Crossed 6 of 9 ‘Planetary Boundaries’
By Meghan Bartels
Human activity is turning Earth into a world that may no longer adequately support the societies we’ve built, scientists warn in a new study charting whether and by how much we have surpassed nine “planetary boundaries.”
The analysis builds on a 2009 paper that first outlined nine planetary constraints that keep Earth’s environment similar to that of the world humans lived in during the preindustrial portion of the Holocene epoch. This period lasted for about the past 10,000 years, until the industrial revolution began and humans started burning large amounts of fossil fuels and sending heat-trapping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. In the new research, published on Wednesday in Science Advances, researchers raise the alarm about what the potential consequences of this departure from humans’ baseline might be.
Read full article here.
A Psychologist Explains The ‘Wealth-Love Paradox’
By Mark Travers
From providing a sense of security to buying the best vacations in the world, there’s no denying that money brings with it certain luxuries. A study published in Social Indicators Research revealed that financial status explains roughly 10% of the variance in individuals’ satisfaction with life, which is significant.
This goes beyond mere income, and emphasizes the importance of a holistic view of one’s economic position. However, while money can indeed enhance feelings of security and fulfill certain psychological needs, it doesn’t necessarily guarantee emotional connection or romantic compatibility.
Many affluent people often say that it is hard for them to find love and companionship. They say things like:
- “Balancing my business with romantic relationships often leaves me wondering if true love is out of reach.”
- “Sometimes I feel that my lifestyle isolates me, making it hard to find someone who appreciates my genuine qualities.”
- “With frequent travels and events, I'm left pondering if people are drawn to me or the world around me.”
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - September 2, 2023
Why are married people happier than the rest of us?
By Olga Khazan
In the year 2000, having narrowly escaped the Y2K computer glitch, Americans should have been poised to party. The bendy riff of the Santana–Rob Thomas joint “Smooth” wailed from Top 40 stations everywhere. Survivor beckoned us to watch people eat grubs for a chance at $1 million. Brad and Jen got married, and the gladiator Maximus Decimus Meridius asked acerbically, “Are you not entertained?”
But we weren’t. In fact, after chugging along steadily for decades, American happiness began to decline that year, modestly but definitively. A chart of American happiness ratings looks like this: a flat, basically happy line that starts in the 1970s, followed by a plunge into meh right around the new millennium.
The chart comes from a recent paper by Sam Peltzman, an emeritus economics professor at the University of Chicago. For the study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, Peltzman looked at the General Social Survey, which since 1972 has asked thousands of Americans, “Taken all together, how would you say things are these days—would you say that you are very happy, pretty happy, or not too happy?” If you imagine this large sample as 100 people, historically about 50 of those people say they’re “pretty happy,” and that’s still true. But in the 1970s, about 35 people would say they’re “very happy,” and 15 would say “not too happy.” That began to shift around 2000, and now about 32 people say they’re “very happy” and 18 say they’re “not too happy.”
To quote a Destiny’s Child song of that vintage, why the sudden change?
After slicing the demographic data every which way—income, education level, race, location, age, and gender—Peltzman found that this happiness dip is mainly attributable to one thing: Married people are happier, and Americans aren’t getting married as much. In 1980, 6 percent of 40-year-olds had never been married, but today, it’s 25 percent. “The recent decline in the married share of adults can explain (statistically) most of the recent decline in overall happiness,” he writes.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - August 15, 2023
4 daily habits of truly happy people
By Ammar Kalia
Our minds are more resilient than we know. According to a growing body of research, first popularised by psychologists Daniel Gilbert and Tim Wilson in the early 2000s, the brain has a remarkable capacity to make the best of bad events: when we encounter negative situations we subconsciously activate what is known as our psychological immune system.
A self-protective mechanism analogous to the body’s own immune system, the psychological immune system is a series of processes that our brain initiates to help us make sense of the adverse environment we might be in, assign meaning to what is happening, and ultimately find positives for the future. If we fail to land a job we had wanted, for instance, our brain might reason that the interviewer was rude and biased, therefore it wasn’t the role for us. Or, we will speak to a friend and gain a new perspective on the benefits of our existing job.
Gilbert and Wilson’s research has found that we often overestimate how unhappy we will be after negative events, since our psychological immune system helps to shelter us from the effects of difficult circumstances. “We underestimate how quickly our feelings are going to change in part because we underestimate our ability to change them,” Gilbert once told the Monitor on Psychology magazine. “This can lead us to make decisions that don’t maximise our potential for satisfaction.”
Since we are so skilled at construing what happens to us in a positive light, our lack of faith in our own resilience leads us to incorrectly expect that negative emotions will always last longer than our less-intense feelings. If we can strengthen our psychological immune system, there might be ways that we can better rely on ourselves in times of difficulty, as well as feel more comfortable in taking risks.
“The psychological immune system is an incredible buffer against the inevitable stresses of life,” author and resilience expert Anne Grady says. “It doesn’t prevent bad things from happening to us, but if we can learn to develop it, we can put our brain back in control and monitor our responses.”
To prepare for when you next find yourself in a tough situation, we asked experts about the daily practices and tips that people can implement to ensure their psychological immune system is functioning at its best.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - August 13, 2023
4 daily habits of truly happy people
By Kristine Gill
The happiest country in the world is Finland, according to the 2023 World Happiness Report. But short of moving across the ocean, experts agree there are ways to improve your own happiness regardless of where you live.
“Happiness is a habit,” says Talia Soen, CEO and Founder of Happy Things, a platform that helps you build those habits with daily activities.
Soen claims happiness has not always come easily for her. Her oldest brother has a much higher baselines of happiness, and as she reflected on that difference she decided to start an app as a way of improving her life based on the science behind happiness.
“A lot of people think of happiness as something unrealistic or out there and difficult to grasp,” she says. “We’re trying to break it down into something really teachable and approachable.”
Many experts agree, there are steps you can take to achieve happiness independent of life circumstances. Here’s a look at the habits they say happy people tend to engage in.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - August 11, 2023
Aristotle’s 10 Rules for a Good Life
By Arthur C. Brooks
Many people say they are looking for happiness. They spend a lot of time and resources searching for the secrets of well-being, like old-time miners prospecting for gold. But for some sages throughout history, this is the wrong approach. Happiness isn’t something to be found; it’s something to attract.
Perhaps the most famous proponent of the second path was the Greek philosopher Aristotle. He defined happiness as eudaemonia, which means “good spirit.” To us moderns, this might sound vaporous, like the superficial happy feelings that so many people (incorrectly, in my view) chase. Instead, the philosopher meant that happiness was a divine state that would visit each of us as it pleased. Our only responsibility was to open the door to it. And we do so by living well.
To live well, we should practice specific virtues and make them into habits. As Aristotle wrote in his Nicomachean Ethics, “If it is better to be happy as a result of one’s own exertions than by the gift of fortune, it is reasonable to suppose that this is how happiness is won.” Here are 10 of the virtues he recommends—which, as modern research shows, do generally attract the good spirit.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - August 8, 2023
4 Ways to Embrace the Happiness Boost That Comes with Age
By Louisa Kamps
Growing older gets a bum rap. In our youth-obsessed culture, landing on the AARP mailing list can feel like the beginning of the end. But science consistently shows that the opposite is true. After quantifying data on well-being from hundreds of thousands of people in 145 countries, Dartmouth College economist David Blanchflower, PhD, reported in 2021 that most people, regardless of educational, marital, or employment status, experience high levels of happiness when they’re young adults, followed by declining happiness that bottoms out in their late 40s, then, beyond that, steadily increasing happiness.
Read full article here.
Dopamine plays an unexpected role in movement and Parkinson's disease
By Chrissy Sexton
Researchers at Northwestern University have uncovered a brand new understanding of dopamine, a crucial neurotransmitter traditionally associated with rewards.
The new study, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, reveals that dopamine’s role in the brain’s function is far more complex than previously thought.
Dopamine has been widely understood to be responsible for transmitting reward signals within the brain. This chemical is at the core of our feelings of pleasure and satisfaction that come from an enjoyable activity, and its dysfunction is involved in disorders such as addiction.
However, the Northwestern University team has identified three genetic subtypes of dopamine neurons in the midbrain region of a mouse model. What they found was contrary to the long-standing assumption that dopamine neurons solely respond to rewards or reward-predicting cues.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - August 3, 2023
I took Harvard's free 6-week course on happiness—here's what I learned
By Renée Onque
After six weeks of reading articles, watching videos and contributing to class discussion boards, I've officially completed Harvard University's "Managing Happiness" course, led by social scientist and Harvard professor Arthur Brooks.
The online class is completely free for audit only, and anyone can take it up until March 27, 2024. The course is self-paced, but after six weeks, you lose access to its materials and your progress.
Now that I've finished the course, my biggest takeaway is that I feel a lot more in control of my own happiness. I left with an understanding that the things beyond my control can, and will, affect my happiness, but my reactions to these outcomes are more important.
When I first started the Harvard course about happiness, I had several questions that I hoped to have answered. Here are some insights that I've gained.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - July 25, 2023
The 1 Technique Therapists Use To Feel Happier Every Day
By Sarah-Louise Kelly
So for many of us, especially those of us deeply entrenched in the worlds of mental health awareness and wellness, the idea of a trigger isn’t unfamiliar.
In case you were unsure, though, Psych Central says that triggers are ‘sensory reminders that cause painful memories or symptoms to resurface.’
These can be reminders of a traumatic event, somebody that hurt you, an anniversary, the feelings you felt during a difficult time or the breakup of a relationship. They’re, at best, unpleasant, and at worst, quite traumatising in themselves, especially for people with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
People try to support each other through triggers by providing trigger warnings for potentially harmful content on social media, in literature and even on TV in an effort to avoid the person being triggered and dealing with the aftermath of that. Trigger warnings are a useful tool for self-care and protection.
Now, social media users and mental health professionals are discussing what they’re calling the ‘opposite’ of triggers – glimmers.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - July 19, 2023
The 1 Thing That Child Therapists Say Harms Kids' Happiness The Most
Marie Holmes
Children and adolescents in the U.S. today reap the benefits of decades of medical and psychological research. We are able to diagnose and effectively treat mental health conditions to a degree that wasn’t possible only a generation ago, with a wider arsenal of pharmacological options and increasingly targeted and sophisticated non-invasive therapies.
The quality of kids’ mental health should be trending up — but the opposite is happening. Kids today are struggling more than ever.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - July 7, 2023
A 'nice' workplace culture may be more toxic than you think, says this NYU professor
Goh Chiew Tong
A toxic workplace culture was one of the biggest culprits behind the Great Resignation — which saw droves of workers leaving their jobs or switching careers during the post-pandemic era.
But since then, some companies are moving to the other extreme of "a culture of niceness," and that could be just as damaging as toxicity, said one social psychologist.
"There has been a huge push around well-being and niceness at work, being kind, empathic and being caring — which are obviously good traits to have," Tessa West, who is also a psychology professor at NYU, told CNBC Make It.
"But what ends up happening is, we've somehow pitted niceness against clear communication and confrontation, even when it's necessary."
Most would agree that a workplace is toxic when it is disrespectful, non-inclusive, unethical, cutthroat or abusive. The opposite of toxicity however, isn't rainbows and sunshine — but a safe space for critical feedback and conversations, said West.
Knowing how to receive and give honest feedback is an "absolutely essential ingredient" for career development, she added.
"There's this false dichotomy of: If you're critical, that means you are toxic. Positive feedback? That's what people want," West said.
"But nice isn't always better. Sometimes nice is a cop out."
Visit the TED talks page here.
Management QOL in the News - July 1, 2023
There's more to life than being happy
Emily Esfahani Smith
Our culture is obsessed with happiness, but what if there's a more fulfilling path? Happiness comes and goes, says writer Emily Esfahani Smith, but having meaning in life -- serving something beyond yourself and developing the best within you -- gives you something to hold onto. Learn more about the difference between being happy and having meaning as Smith offers four pillars of a meaningful life.
Visit the TED talks page here.
Management QOL in the News - June 29, 2023
Emerging four day work week trends in Australia: preview report
John Hopkins,
Anne Bardoel,
Nikola Djurkovic
The recent COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically changed the way many of us think about work, and resulted in a huge increase in demand for flexible work arrangements, as employees seek a better work-life balance.
This research investigates the recent rise in popularity of a four-day work week (4DWW) – a concept which was first proposed in the 1970s that is now starting to gain serious attention 50 years later – via a series of semi-structured interviews we conducted with Australian organisations who have already adopted this way of working.
From an employer perspective, the key benefits companies have realised since switching to a 4DWW have been improved staff recruitment and retention, increased productivity levels, and reduced absenteeism.
For employees, the 4DWW gives them more time to complete their ‘life admin’ tasks, enables them to participate in more health and wellness activities, and not only gives them more time to engage in their favourite hobbies, but also enables them to discover brand new pastimes they didn’t have time to enjoy previously.
The researchers found that the key challenges to establishing a 4DWW arrangement were, scepticism – from both internal and external stakeholders – the reduced availability of staff, and finding an equitable solution that also benefits part-time staff members.
Download the full preview report here.
Management QOL in the News - June 12, 2023
12 proven ways to raise serotonin levels and boost your mood
Juliana Ukiomogbe and Shannon Ullman
- Serotonin is a hormone that helps regulate mood, sleep, memory, learning, and cognition.
- To increase serotonin naturally, try daily exercise, more sunlight, and spending time with friends.
- Talk to a doctor if you're experiencing depressive moods that are interfering with daily activities.
Have you ever wondered why you suddenly feel happier after exercising or getting a really relaxing massage? There may be a reason for that. Serotonin, known as the "happy chemical" in your brain, is heightened by doing these activities.
In fact, knowing how to naturally enhance your serotonin levels may help boost your mood. Here's how to increase serotonin levels and tips to integrate these practices into your daily life.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - June 9, 2023
Semi-Retirees Know the Key to Work-Life Balance
Kate Cray
For far too many, the decision to continue working is driven by financial necessity—an especially concerning reality given how few healthy years the average poor American has left by the time they reach retirement age. But this trend doesn’t reflect only people who can’t afford to quit. According to one 2014 survey, 80 percent of semi-retirees say they’re employed because they want to be; working after retirement is actually more common among workers with higher socioeconomic status. Though some of them might appreciate the extra income, many seem to also find these jobs enjoyable and fulfilling.
The idea of a retirement purposely filled with work might seem dismal—proof that we’ve prioritized achievement over happiness for so long that we can’t even stop in our 60s. But there might be a less pessimistic way to look at those who actively choose semi-retirement. After all, they represent a rarity in the labor market: the truly empowered worker. Examining what they get from the jobs they don’t need could illuminate what a career can offer the rest of us, helping us reimagine our relationship to work long before it’s time to retire.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - June 3, 2023
America Is Headed Toward Collapse
By Peter Turchin
How has America slid into its current age of discord? Why has our trust in institutions collapsed, and why have our democratic norms unraveled?
All human societies experience recurrent waves of political crisis, such as the one we face today. My research team built a database of hundreds of societies across 10,000 years to try to find out what causes them. We examined dozens of variables, including population numbers, measures of well-being, forms of governance, and the frequency with which rulers are overthrown. We found that the precise mix of events that leads to crisis varies, but two drivers of instability loom large. The first is popular immiseration—when the economic fortunes of broad swaths of a population decline. The second, and more significant, is elite overproduction—when a society produces too many superrich and ultra-educated people, and not enough elite positions to satisfy their ambitions.
These forces have played a key role in our current crisis. In the past 50 years, despite overall economic growth, the quality of life for most Americans has declined. The wealthy have become wealthier, while the incomes and wages of the median American family have stagnated. As a result, our social pyramid has become top-heavy. At the same time, the U.S. began overproducing graduates with advanced degrees. More and more people aspiring to positions of power began fighting over a relatively fixed number of spots. The competition among them has corroded the social norms and institutions that govern society.
The U.S. has gone through this twice before. The first time ended in civil war. But the second led to a period of unusually broad-based prosperity. Both offer lessons about today’s dysfunction and, more important, how to fix it.
Read full article here.
Scientists ran a health check on the Earth — and the results are worrying
By Victoria Bisset and Ellen Francis
A team of top scientists says that it has assessed the planet’s health against eight key thresholds needed to protect life on Earth and that human activities have led to seven of the eight of the boundaries already being breached.
“The window is rapidly shutting; we’re very close to irreversible tipping points,” Johan Rockström, a director at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and the lead author of the study published this week, said in a telephone interview. Rockström has described the report as the first time that quantifiable boundaries have been presented in this way “to assess the state of our planetary health,” measuring not only the stability of Earth’s ecosystems, but also assessing human well-being and equity.
The research conducted by the Earth Commission, a team of dozens of scientists representing leading global research institutions, said the eight areas measured were: climate change; aerosols (air pollution); surface water; groundwater; nitrogen fertilizer; phosphorus fertilizer; whether natural ecosystems remained largely intact; and the functional integrity of all ecosystems.
The peer-reviewed study, published in Nature, assessed each area against two thresholds: whether it remained “safe” — that is, within the levels needed so the Earth’s systems can support humans and other living organisms — and whether the levels could ensure justice between species, current and future generations, and between countries and communities.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - June 2, 2023
US life expectancy problem is 'bigger than we ever thought,' report finds
Adrianna Rodrigue
The country’s life expectancy problem gained renewed attention in recent years after seeing the largest drop since World War II during the COVID-19 pandemic.
As U.S. life expectancy continues to plummet, a new report found the country has been at a life expectancy disadvantage since the 1950s, and it has only gotten worse since then.
The study, published Thursday in the American Journal of Public Health, also shows more than 50 countries have surpassed the U.S. in life expectancy since the 1930s and a handful of states may be partly responsible.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - April 17, 2023
Why You Should Be Seeking Fun, Not "Happiness"
Steve Calechman
Positive psychology holds a certain appeal. It’s about well-being and happiness, not thinking negatively. What’s not to like? The suggestions of what to do have been said so often that they’re easy to rattle off. Show gratitude. Find your passion. Create social networks. They might sound simple, but the stuff can work.
Until it can’t.
That’s what Mike Rucker, PhD, found out. He’s a behavioral scientist and charter member of the International Positive Psychology Association. His work was all about happiness, but in 2006, his younger brother died and he found out he was going to need a hip replacement. At 44 years old, he was no longer a sibling or endurance athlete, and the happiness tools weren’t helping him deal with the negative emotions.
“I wanted to find out what could be done differently,” he says.
The answer, he found out, lay in the pursuit of fun, not happiness. Seeking fun is far more actionable. It’s also introspective and ruminating. Fun doesn’t require people to feel anything or see three daily examples of gratitude if they don’t want to. With fun, people have autonomy. If they don’t like a situation or a group of people? They can change it.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - April 13, 2023
Wellbeing and social connection can generate “an upward spiral” by reinforcing one another
Emily Manis
Social connection and agency are known to be positively correlated with emotional well-being, but does one lead to another or are they independent but related? A study published in The Journal of Positive Psychology explores these three variables over a 13-year time period to better explore their relationship.
Well-being has become a popular topic for research as psychology has begun to focus on how to live a good and happy life. Well-being has been linked to other positive life variables, but relationships are not well understood.
Social connection, especially having meaningful and supportive relationships, has been linked to positive mental health outcomes in previous research, including higher levels of well-being. Agency, or taking control of one’s own life and experiences, is another factor that has been linked to well-being.
Despite this, there is a lack of understanding about if these relationships are unidirectional or bidirectional. This study seeks to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship between these three variables by utilizing longitudinal data.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - April 12, 2023
The biggest lie the rich ever told? That money can’t buy you happiness
By Arwa Mahdawi
News just in: money does buy you happiness. Duh, you might say. Anyone could have told you that; it’s hardly a Nobel-prize winning insight. Well, actually, it kinda is: in 2010, Daniel Kahneman, a Nobel prize-winning economist and psychologist, came out with the theory that there was a monetary “happiness plateau”. Once you hit an annual household income of $75,000 (£62,000), earning more money didn’t make you any happier. In 2021, the happiness researcher Matthew Killingsworth released a dissenting study, showing that happiness increased with income and there wasn’t evidence of a plateau. Now the pair have teamed up in a process known as “adversarial collaboration” and released a new study finding that they were both sort of right, but Killingsworth was more right: for most people, earning more money makes you happier.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - March 27, 2023
Psychologist shares the No. 1 exercise highly successful people use to be happier
By Morgan Smith
Just like you wouldn't burn through your whole paycheck on payday, you shouldn't use all of your energy every day.
Yet most people constantly deplete their energy on a daily basis to the point of burnout, says Sarah Sarkis, a psychologist and senior director of performance psychology at Exos, a Phoenix-based performance coaching company.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - March 26, 2023
Active aging can help you live longer and improve your quality of life—6 steps to get started
By Liz Seegert
You may have heard the term "active aging," but what does it really mean? Do you have to hit the gym every day, or hike every weekend?
Not at all. Active aging includes a wide range of pursuits that keep your mind, body, emotions and spirit engaged, regardless of age, health or socioeconomic status, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). It also means being diligent about your own health and well-being.
Following the principles of active aging can help extend longevity and quality of life, according to Colin Milner, founder and CEO of the International Council on Active Aging. “Physical activity is just one of the many elements that makes up a person. "It's just as important that we are socially connected and that we are intellectually active."
Read full article here.
Finland is officially the happiest country in the world (again), so what can we learn from their wellbeing culture?
By Katie Rosseinsky
The results of the UN's annual happiness report are in, and Finland has topped the rankings of the world’s happiest country for the sixth year in a row.
Every year, researchers in the US compile surveys by the Gallup Institute, measuring a variety of factors like GDP, social support, freedom to make choices, life expectancy and generosity, and asking a representative sample of people just how satisfied they feel with their lives.
Finland was joined in the top three by fellow Nordic nations Denmark and Iceland, while Britain just made it into the top 20, ending up in 19th place.
The Finns are so proud of this national reputation that the country’s tourism board recently launched a 'happiness masterclass', inviting people from other nations to help boost their satisfaction by attending a four-day retreat in its Lakeland region. Here, guests will have the chance to enjoy spending time in forests and lakes, chill out to calming music and eat nourishing food, all while learning more about the Finnish way of life.
But what actually makes Finland such a happy nation, and can we borrow any of their secrets to boost our own wellbeing? Here are a handful of life lessons we can learn from the reigning champions of contentment…
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - March 25, 2023
World Happiness Report Finds That Crises Make Us Kinder
By Kira M. Newman
In today’s world, cruelty is hard to ignore. It sometimes feels like everywhere we turn, there are political shouting matches, shootings, and war.
And those events are certainly taking place. But at the same time, according to the World Happiness Report 2023, people around the world are experiencing more kindness, help, and support from others in their daily lives.
The crises of the last few years, in other words, have not made us reclusive and hard-hearted—but instead more willing to help each other navigate our challenges.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - March 19, 2023
85-year Harvard study found that people with this type of job tend to be the unhappiest
By Morgan Smith
The unhappiest jobs are also some of the loneliest, according to an 85-year study from Harvard researchers.
While particular roles can't be reliably correlated with dissatisfaction and burnout, certain job characteristics can be, Robert Waldinger, MD, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, one of the longest-running studies on happiness, tells CNBC Make It.
Jobs that require little human interaction and don't offer opportunities to build meaningful relationships with co-workers tend to have the most miserable employees, the study found.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - March 9, 2023
Can money buy happiness? Scientists say it can.
By Adela Suliman
It's a question that philosophers, economists and social scientists have grappled with for decades: Can money buy happiness?
For most people in the United States, the answer is, seemingly, yes.
Two prominent researchers, Daniel Kahneman and Matthew Killingsworth, came to this conclusion in a joint study published this month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, overturning the dominant thinking that people are generally happier as they earn more, with their joy leveling out when their income hits $75,000.
Read full article here.
An 85-year Harvard study on happiness found the No. 1 retirement challenge that 'no one talks about'
By Robert Waldinger and Marc Schulz
In 1938, Harvard researchers embarked on a study that continues to this day to find out: What makes us happy in life?
The researchers gathered health records from 724 people from all over the world, asking detailed questions about their lives at two-year intervals.
As participants entered mid- and late-life, the Harvard Study often asked about retirement. Based on their responses, the No. 1 challenge people faced in retirement was not being able to replace the social connections that had sustained them for so long at work.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - February 2, 2023
The Hidden Link Between Workaholism and Mental Health
By Arthur C. Brooks
Winston Churchill was many things: statesman, soldier, writer. He was one of the first world leaders to sound the alarm about the Nazi menace in the 1930s, and then captivated the global imagination as a leader against the Axis powers in World War II. While prime minister of the United Kingdom during the war, he kept a crushing schedule, often spending 18 hours a day at work. On top of this, he wrote book after book in office. By the end of his life, he had finished 43, filling 72 volumes.
Churchill also suffered from crippling depression, which he called his "black dog," and which visited him again and again. It seems almost unthinkable that he could be so productive in states so grim that he once told his doctor, "I don't like to stand by the side of a ship and look down into the water. A second's action would end everything."
Some say Churchill's depression was bipolar, and windows of mania allowed him to work as much as he did. But a few of his biographers explain it differently: Churchill's workaholism wasn't in spite of his suffering, but because of it. He distracted himself with work. Lest you think this far-fetched, researchers today find that workaholism is a common addiction in response to distress. And like so many addictions, it worsens the situation it's meant to alleviate.
Read full article here.
What the Longest Study on Human Happiness Found Is the Key to a Good Life
By Robert Waldinger and Marc Schulz
Since 1938, the Harvard Study of Adult Development has been investigating what makes people flourish. After starting with 724 participants—boys from disadvantaged and troubled families in Boston, and Harvard undergraduates—the study incorporated the spouses of the original men and, more recently, more than 1,300 descendants of the initial group. Researchers periodically interview participants, ask them to fill out questionnaires, and collect information about their physical health. As the study's director (Bob) and associate director (Marc), we've been able to watch participants fall in and out of relationships, find success and failure at their jobs, become mothers and fathers. It's the longest in-depth longitudinal study on human life ever done, and it's brought us to a simple and profound conclusion: Good relationships lead to health and happiness. The trick is that those relationships must be nurtured.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - January 30, 2023
Nothing Drains You Like Mixed Emotions
Arthur C. Brooks
"Ōdī et amō," the Roman poet Catullus wrote of his lover Lesbia about 2,000 years ago. "I hate and I love. Why I do this, perhaps you ask. I know not, but I feel it happening and I am tortured."
Maybe you can relate. If you’ve ever had mixed feelings about someone you love, you know the intense discomfort that results. If your feelings were purely positive, of course, the relationship would be bliss. Even purely negative feelings would be better, because the course of action would be clear: Say goodbye. But mixed feelings leave you confused about the right thing to do.
Romance isn't the only part of life in which mixed feelings can cause pain. Maybe your ambivalence is instead directed toward your employer, and you can't decide whether to stay and work to make things better, or go someplace else. Or maybe some of your memories are painfully mixed and hard to interpret. Perhaps your childhood was both good and bad, not fitting into a neat frame, and thus feels impossible to explain to others or even yourself.
Mixed emotions drain your emotional batteries, like a phone connecting to multiple networks simultaneously. They are one of the most complex psychological phenomena we are capable of, and bring us a great deal of distress. You might think that purely negative emotions are the most unpleasant ones; in truth, a cocktail of negative and positive can be worse.
Read full article here.
Work-related stress is fueling America's mental health crisis. Here are solutions to make it better
By L'Oreal Thompson Payton
Do your opinions count at work? Does your job feel important? Do you have a close friend at the office?
When you take into consideration that people spend most of their waking hours either at work or commuting to work, it should come as no surprise that workplace stress is the top driver of mental health issues. According to Calm's 2023 Workplace Mental Health Trends Report, 50% of employees say that work stress is impacting their personal lives and their relationships with their family members and friends, as well as their relationships with themselves.
"When people are overwhelmed or stressed at work, it can result in parents being disconnected from their kids at home or partners not having the emotional energy to give to their loved ones," explains Calm CEO David Ko. "It is important for employers to train mindful managers that can recognize signs of high stress or burnout and promote a healthy work-life balance. Productivity and company culture will suffer when work stress impacts employees’ personal lives."
But it’s time for employers to go beyond simply talking about mental health needs and putting action (and money) behind making it a priority.
Read full article here.
Forget Hygge, Here Are Four Scandi Wellbeing Trends We Should Follow In 2023
By Dayna McAlpine
Winter is rough and its shorter days, colder temperatures, and lack of sunshine can make us all feel a bit miserable.
However, in Scandinavian countries, where winters are notoriously long, the people there are also consistently ranked as some of the happiest on earth.
So as the winter months stretch out ahead of us - and with an Arctic blast set to hit the UK – we could all benefit from the Scandi’s serotonin-boosting secrets right now.
Fortunately, it's more simple than you might think. Hygge (pronounced hyoo-guh), the Danish word that describes something as "invoking or fostering a sense of coziness, contentment, and well-being," has had its moment in the spotlight – it's time for something new.
Ally Fekaiki – wellbeing expert and founder of Juno - has shared four other Scandi-wellness trends that we should incorporate into our daily lives to help us stay happy and healthy, even on the gloomiest of days.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - January 16, 2023
Despite Everything You Think You Know, America Is on the Right Track
By David Brooks
Negativity is by now so deeply ingrained in American media culture that it’s become the default frame imposed on reality. In large part, this is because since the dawn of the internet age, the surest way to build an audience is to write stories that make people terrified or furious. This is not rocket science: Evolution designed humans to pay special attention to threats. So, unsurprisingly, the share of American headlines denoting anger increased by 104 percent from 2000 to 2019. The share of headlines evoking fear surged by 150 percent.
If any event deserves negative coverage, the terrible coronavirus pandemic is it. And in the international media, 51 percent of stories in the first year of the pandemic were indeed negative, according to a 2020 study. But in the United States, a stunning 87 percent of the coverage was negative. The stories were negative even when good things were happening, such as schools reopening and vaccine trials. The American media have a particularly strong bad-news bias.
This permanent cloud of negativity has a powerful effect on how Americans see their country. When Gallup recently asked Americans if they were satisfied with their personal life, 85 percent said they were, a number that has remained remarkably stable over the past 40 years. But when Gallup asked Americans in January 2022 if they were satisfied with the direction of the country, only 17 percent said they were, down from 69 percent in 2000. In other words, there was a 68-percentage-point gap between the reality people directly experienced in their daily life and the reality they perceived through the media filter.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - January 12, 2023
6 Surprising Things You Think Are Making You Happy—But Are Doing the Opposite
By Frank Martela
Fat salaries and corporate success aren't the gateways to happiness they're cracked up to be. But it makes sense that we might think they are. "We're fed such an incredibly dense diet of popular media and marketing that shapes our understanding of happiness in a way that actually gets in the way of it," says Emiliana Simon-Thomas, science director at the University of California at Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center. "I think we as a society, particularly in the West, have a bit of an illusion about where happiness comes from and how to get more of it."
Researchers have long sought to sort fact from fiction when it comes to pinpointing what increases happiness. Here are six surprising things we often think are making us happy—but that might actually be doing the opposite.
Read full article here.
Management QOL in the News - January 9, 2023
Ikigai - How To Live A Long And Happy Life
Philosophies for Life
Management QOL in the News - January 7, 2023
I'm a Psychology Expert in Finland, the No. 1 Happiest Country in the World—Here Are 3 Things We Never Do
By Frank Martela
For five years in a row, Finland has ranked No. 1 as the happiest country in the world, according to the World Happiness Report.
In 2022's report, people in 156 countries were asked to "value their lives today on a 0 to 10 scale, with the worst possible life as a 0." It also looks at factors that contribute to social support, life expectancy, generosity and absence of corruption.
As a Finnish philosopher and psychology researcher who studies the fundamentals of happiness, I'm often asked: What exactly makes people in Finland so exceptionally satisfied with their lives?
To maintain a high quality of life, here are three things we never do:
- We don't compare ourselves to our neighbors.
- We don't overlook the benefits of nature.
- We don't break the community circle of trust.
Read full article here.