Do you think you’d be much happier if you won the lottery?
Do you think you would be much less happy if you were paralyzed in a car accident?
If you answered ‘yes’, science is against you.
In 1978, Brickman, Coates, and Janoff-Bulman published an article in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. They’d looked
at 22 people who had won the lottery and 29 people paralyzed in
accidents and found that, some time after these major, supposedly
life-changing events, their levels of happiness went back to being
similar to a control group who had had neither major good things nor
major bad things happen to them.
In other words, they were living in the snow globe.
If you’ve ever played with a snow globe, you know how, when you shake
it up, the snow flies everywhere and it’s all very dramatic.
But after a while, it all settles down again and it’s just the way it
was before. Nothing has changed except the exact distribution of the
individual flakes of snow. Overall, it’s the same as before you shook it
up.
The ability to live in the snow globe is partly a reflection of human
resilience. Our minds and bodies are designed to cope with challenges
and return to a balance similar to what we had before. It’s called
homeostasis, and we’re very good at it. (That’s because if we stop being
good at it, we tend to die.)
Leaving the snow globe
So, can we ever leave the snow globe? Or are we stuck with about the amount of happiness we have always had?
Well, according to studies of twins, between 22 and about 55% of our
individual difference in happiness is genetic. So there is a limit to
how much we can affect – but it’s a generous limit.
And recent research into “sustainable happiness theory” suggests
that, while the study of the lottery winners and the accident survivors
was probably right in what it found, there was also some important stuff
it missed.
See, the thing about winning a lottery or being injured in an accident is that both are life circumstances over which you have almost no control.
(I adjust my chances of winning the lottery very slightly downwards –
from almost zero to actually zero – simply by not taking a ticket.)
And work in 2012 by Sheldon, Abad, Ferguson, Gunz, Houser-Marko, Nichols, and Lyubomirsky in Motivation and Emotion
found that changing your life circumstances – even if you take action
to do so – has very little impact on your happiness. (You become used to
the new level of income, the new car, the new house, the new job – it
becomes your new norm – and your happiness with it drops back more or
less to your average level.)
How to be happier
What does improve your happiness is not changing your circumstances, but changing your patterns of activity to give yourself a continual series of “fresh positive experiences”.
In particular, the researchers found that happiness increased for
people who were taking successful action to improve three things:
- Autonomy. Increasing your perception that you “own and agree with your own behavior” also increases your happiness.
- Competence. Feeling that you do things well or are improving in ability increases happiness.
- Relatedness. Feeling connected with at least some other people increases happiness.
You also need a “will” (to want to increase your happiness) for the
process to work, and you need a “way” (concrete means of increasing
happiness) for the effects to be strong.
Social messages, like advertising, will tell you that buying
something or increasing your status, or pursuing a goal that’s selected
for you by someone else, will make you happy. It’s not true. Any gains
in happiness that you do get from those approaches are probably because
they incidentally lead to an increase in autonomy, competence or
relatedness. (If you’re very poor, getting some money will give you more
autonomy, for example – extreme poverty doesn’t give you many options.
But the difference between $100,000 a year and $150,000 a year doesn’t
give anything like the same gains in autonomy, or happiness, as the
difference between $10,000 and $60,000.)
How to be the happiest you can be
This study had three other important findings about the pursuit of happiness.
Firstly, if you pursue a life goal to do with autonomy, competence or relatedness and fail,
it’s likely to bring you down more than failing at a life-circumstances
goal. Presumably this is because it means more. You’ve got more to
gain, but you also have more to lose. So make sure you pick a realistic goal.
Secondly, to continue at a higher level of happiness, you need to
continue to work at success in those life-need-related goals. It’s the
flow of new challenges, successfully met, that seems to be producing the
happiness. So pick a goal that allows you to continue to challenge yourself.
Finally, people who went in believing more strongly that they could increase
their happiness (and that this would be a good and appropriate thing to
do) gained more happiness. Which sounds at first like another way of
saying that a positive mental attitude helps you have a positive mental
attitude. Who would have thought?
What it means, though, is that being open to the benefits of new experiences is part of increasing your happiness.
So, what goal will you choose to pursue to meet your needs
for autonomy, competence and connectedness? It’s likely to make you
happier, and bust you out of that snow globe you’ve been living in.
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