It was back in 2012 that the United Nations first declared March 20
International Day of Happiness, to recognize happiness as not only a
universal goal of all human beings, but also to encourage both
organizations and individuals to help increase happiness through
education and public awareness-raising activities.
The subject has also continued to fascinate scientists, who are still
searching for the answer to the question, “what makes us happy?” with
their recent findings throwing up some surprising results.
Blame biology if you’re feeling blue
Some scientists have found that rather being a state of mind,
happiness could actually be in our genes. After studying various
countries around the world a team of researchers from the Varna
University of Management, Bulgaria, published findings earlier this year
that suggests that countries that have a certain gene variant — A
allele — also have higher levels of happiness. In fact the gene was
linked to happiness even more than wealth or the stability and safety of
the country. Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador, Ghana and Nigeria
all showed a high prevalence of the gene as well as high reports of
happiness, despite their countries’ high crime rates. Iraq, Jordan, Hong
Kong, China, Thailand and Taiwan, who all showed a low prevalence of
the A allele, were also the least likely to rate themselves as “very
happy” in the study.
Japanese researchers from Kyoto University found last year that those
who are happier with their lives, and feel happiness in a more intense
way, have a larger volume of grey matter in the precuneus region of the
brain. However it’s not all bad news for those with smaller volumes of
grey matter, with the team commenting that several studies have shown
that grey matter can be increased with meditation.
Spend time not money
And debunking the common idea of the mid-life crisis, a study
published earlier this year in the journal Developmental Psychology
found that the idea that we hit a happiness low point in middle age is
actually just a myth. The 25-year study by researchers at the University
of Alberta, Canada, actually found in their study that happiness levels
increased as participants aged, and with no major drops in happiness
around the mid-life crisis years, and so no excuse to splash out on that
sports car.
And perhaps unsurprisingly, a team of researchers from the University
of British Columbia found back in January that those who valued time
over money reported being happier, with using spare time on more
meaningful activities such as volunteering for a charity also increasing
happiness.
Can social media make you sad?
And for Facebook addicts, a 2015 study by the Happiness Research
Institute in Denmark found that Facebook could be making you unhappy.
After just a week away from the social networking site participants
reported they were more satisfied with their lives, with the researchers
finding that overall Facebook users are 39 percent more likely to feel
unhappy than non-users.
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