Hi, guest!
Join Now
Login
Password

forgotten your password?

Join Now Tools To Life Shares :: buy happiness
 
Wordbird
# # # #

Birth Date: Hidden

Place of residence:
St Louis MO, United States (map)

I am: Single & Dating

Schools: U of Iowa, The Loft, NaNoWriMo

Jobs: Class design, TOOLS , Writing and Life Coach, Hospice


Certificates:
              
Tools Program Stats:
Member Since: 01/02/07
Last Login: 04/15/12
Viewed: 574444
Program in:
Program Progress: Day 11
Personal Interests:
Music:
Books:
Favorite Places:
I Want To See:
Hobbies:
Activities:
Sports:
Movies:
TV:
Heroes:
I Want To Meet:
Tools Goal List:

Areas In My Life I Want To Work On

    Sorry, private info

Skills I Am Interested In

    Sorry, private info
Wordbird's Life List:
Recapture who I was at my most healthy and joyous. Plus wisdom.
Tune up and ride bicycle
raw veggies
Write a list of the top 20 things in life that have the ultimate highest priority and value to me.
Join NaNoWriMo and enjoy a one month writing event
Support, teach and encourage others to strengthen their joy and skill in writing
Comfort, aid and strengthen others in small ways every day
Learn more about anatomy and medicine
Work toward good health using exercise, sleep, nutrition and other tools
Give and Be Happy

 

 

2
cheers
cheer it
Wordbird AddThis Social Bookmark Button

  Wordbird

Sun, Mar 23 11:03 AM

Give and Be Happy

 

THURSDAY, March 20 (HealthDay News) -- Money can buy happiness, at least when you spend it on others.

 

 

That's the conclusion of a study appearing in the March 21 issue of Science. It found that spending on others brings people greater satisfaction than buying things for themselves.

 

 

What's more, most people seemed unaware of this hidden key to happiness, the researchers said.

 

"It's tied to 'pro-social' spending," said Elizabeth Dunn, lead author of the study and assistant professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. ..

 

 

 

Hikes in income can help boost happiness, but the effect is weak, prior studies have found. Research have also found that as the average income rises within a society, people's reported levels of happiness remain relatively static.

 

 

So is there something people could be doing with their cash to boost their mental well-being? The authors looked at the question in three different ways.

 

 

First they asked a nationally representative sample of 632 Americans (roughly equivalent between genders) to rate their happiness, report their annual income and estimate how much they spend on a typical month on different items, including gifts to others and donations to charity.

 

Those who had more of this "pro-social" spending were also happier, the team found.

 

 

Then they asked 16 employees to rate their happiness both before and after receiving profit-sharing from the company they worked for.

 

Those who gave away more of their bonus in a pro-social manner were, again, happier and this was true no matter how little or how grand the bonus.

 

 

Finally, 46 participants were given an envelope containing either $5 or $20 and asked to spend it that day. Individuals were randomly assigned to spend the money on personal items, or on a gift for someone else, including a charitable donation.

 

 

Those who spent their money on others reported greater "post-windfall" happiness than those who were looking out for themselves.

 

 

Still, most people spend more money on themselves than others (partly understandable given the influx of bills most households experience), but the authors suggest that as little as $5 may be enough to reap a happiness dividend.

 

 

"Reaching out and doing things for other people allows you to kind of create a community," said Dr. Alan Manevitz, a clinical psychiatrist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York City. "Social networks, we know, make people happier. It's all about creating social networks and community ties and having a sense of self that you feel is worthwhile so money therefore can be used in service of that."

 

And money is just one resource that can be used to that end, Dunn said. "All kinds of resources may be beneficial for our well-being," she added

 

This post is cheered by: