Latest Haps
|
|
happyjordan | 5 days a ... 3 pts |
|
|
sun0120 | start of my ... 3 pts |
|
|
genavano | renewing and strengthening ... 3 pts |
Psych: Happiness Leaders
| sabedog | 89 haps | |
| lyssa | 69 haps | |
| happyjordan | 28 haps | |
| mikebaldwin | 13 haps | |
| Cindy | 13 haps | |
| genavano | 9 haps | |
| Jovi | 6 haps | |
| GaryAdam | 5 haps | |
| garyadamshannon | 4 haps | |
| spittenger | 3 haps |
Hap Words
|
One Day Body Detox
Feel better inside and out with this super-simple body detoxification plan! dailyhap.com/articles/one-day-body-detox#.URPtkEL3DJw |
|
|
Use Your Sickness to Get Happy
Flu, colds, allergies—it's full-on sick season, but you can use it to your advantage to get happier! dailyhap.com/articles/how-to-use-your-sickness-to-make-you-happy#.URPtTUL3DJw |
|
|
What Are You Fighting For?
Knowing why you're doing anything will help you succeed at it and be happier! dailyhap.com/articles/what-are-you-fighting-for#.URPtD0L3DJw |
Money Can’t Buy Happiness … Or Can It?
How much money do you really need to be happy?
By lyssa - 10:51PM - 04/12/2012
It’s hotly debated: can money buy happiness? Most people say no, yet as a society we pursue money like it can.
The truth? To a point, money can indeed buy happiness. Research has shown that until an individual reaches a certain point, about $75,000 a year in the United States, money does buy happiness. But after that point, an individual’s happiness doesn’t improve as they earn more money, according to Princeton University researchers.
This is an iteration of the Easterlin paradox, a discovery in 1974 by Richard A. Easterlin which shows the rich are generally happier than the poor, though neither GDP growth nor higher GDP per capita increase happiness once development satisfies basic needs [via HappyCounts.org]. This suggests that once basic needs are met—and basic may indeed go beyond food, water, shelter—money can’t buy happiness.
However, if money can buy people access to things they enjoy—leisure time, travel, sports, or fashion—it can buy happiness. But the catch is that these things often ignore the discrepancy between evaluating and experiencing happiness.
There’s a transformation of people’s perceptions and feelings as society evolves. As freedom of choice and material wealth spread, happiness is affected by heightened expectations. Affluence may cause individuals to judge their lives as comparatively better, but the individual may feel increasingly dissatisfied.
Psychologist and Nobel prize winner Daniel Kahneman breaks the idea of subjective well-being and happiness into two components: the emotional well-being shaped by everyday experiences, and a person's cumulative life evaluation. Kahneman disagrees, and finds that higher income improves a person's life evaluation even among people who are already wealthy. "More money does not necessarily buy more happiness," he told US News, "But less money is associated with emotional pain."
This research suggests that even if you haven’t hit the $75,000 threshold, you can improve your happiness through a few tweaks in thinking:
- Keep expectations reasonable even as your income goes up
- Appreciate your everyday experiences despite their cost
- Evaluate your cumulative life experiences from a positive standpoint
These three tips will help dispel the notion that money can buy YOU happiness and help you find happiness right now, regardless of your income.
For a sampling of some of the most ridiculous things money can buy, check out our Pinterest board!
Image: Some rights reserved by harry525
Latest Articles
|
|
Saturdays are Happier than TuesdaysAnd other happiness markers measured by hedometer |
|
|
Change Your PasswordsA Simple and Effective Way to Nurture Long-Term Happiness |
|
|
The Secret Health PillIt's not a secret, you just didn't realize how good it is for you |
|
|
Do Your TLCs Need Some TLC?Tender Loving Care or Therapeutic Lifestyle Choices |
|
|
Happy News About SADGoogle searches about mental illness follow seasonal patterns |
|
|
Three New Ways to Use Stress, Pressure, and Anxiety to Your AdvantageBe a Happy Test-Taker or Daunting-Task-Tackler with these strategies |
|
|
How to Be Magically CharismaticThere are pros and cons to magic charisma |
|
|
Couples Who Aren't Close Can Still Be HappyMore important is if your degree of closeness matches your desires |
Psych Archives
May 2013 (1)
Apr 2013 (6)
Mar 2013 (8)
- Couples Who Aren't Close Can Still Be Happy
- Four More Ways Mindfulness Makes You Better at Life
- The Ideal Positive : Negative Ratio for Happiness
- Happiness Peptide Identified: Hypocretin
- Avoiding Scary Situations Creates More Anxiety
- Everyone Needs Work-Life Balance to Be Happy
- Bullying Makes Bullies and Their Victims Unhappy
- Shared Activities Give Dad/Daughter Relationships Happiness
Feb 2013 (5)
Jan 2013 (3)
Dec 2012 (5)
Nov 2012 (6)
Oct 2012 (4)
Sep 2012 (6)
Aug 2012 (6)
Jul 2012 (5)
Jun 2012 (7)
- Seasons of Change: Feel Your Way to Enlightenment
- Verts: Introverts vs. Extroverts
- Verts: Introverts vs. Extroverts
- Is Your Work Ethic Genetically Pre-Determined?
- Seasons of Change: Mental Telepathy and Intuition
- The Hedonic Adaptation Prevention (HAP) Model for Happiness
- 10 Ways to Support Your Partner at Work





Comments