Couple snuggling

How Close is Your Relationship?

How much do you value your close relationships? Do you fear your partner will reject you? Are you afraid to commit? How you answer these questions can give you valuable insights into yourself and your relationships with the people closest to you. Research shows you can create distance in an intimate relationship two ways: anxiety and avoidance. Too much attachment-related anxiety, and you may worry your partner doesn’t feel the same way about you or that he or she may leave. Too much attachment-related avoidance, and you may fail to make a commitment and drive people away. When you take the Close Relationships Questionnaire, developed by R. Chris Fraley, Ph.D.; Niels G. Waller, Ph.D.; and Kelly A. Brennan, Ph.D., you can measure your level of attachment. Being happy in our relationships is crucial to our subjective wellbeing, and knowing where you are will show you where to go. Take the Close Relationship Quiz at AuthenticHappiness.org.
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Happy people in Panama

Top 10 Countries for Wellbeing

It’s good to be a Panamanian. In fact, according to the Gallup-Healthways Global Well-Being Index, life is so good that Panama leads the world in four out of the five elements of wellbeing: purpose, social, community and physical. Of those polled, 61 percent of the respondents say they are thriving in three or more elements. The only category Panama doesn’t lead is financial wellbeing.Money isn’t everything, though, especially in Latin America. Six of the top 10 countries considered thriving in wellbeing are in Central or South America, with the citizens flourishing in at least three of the wellbeing elements. For them, life is about achieving goals, maintaining relationships, staying healthy and loving where they live.Click here for more information about the Well-Being Index.***The top countries for wellbeing:1. Panama 61%2. Costa Rica 44%3. Denmark 40%4. Austria 39%5. Brazil 39%6. Uruguay 37%7. El Salvador 37%8. Sweden 36%9. Guatemala 34%10. Canada 34%
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Quiz: How Passionate Are You?

Quiz: How Passionate Are You?

Research as well as my 20 years of experience shows that being passionate in life can inspire greater success, productivity and happiness in many areas. Work and personal relationships as well as physical and mental health improve when we feel a strong calling—a zest for life and the things and people in it. I have developed this quiz to help you assess how passionate you are so that you can begin to either embrace the great skills that you have or you can work on the areas that you need to improve upon. The good news is, no matter what you score, you can always learn to be more passionate. How do you rate on the passion scale? Read each statement below and ask yourself whether, for you, it is true or false. Then add up your "trues" to find out your passion score, below. I get excited about the things I like to do. I would rather be awake doing what I love than sleeping. I would consider myself a person who gets more enthusiastic than the average person. I can be driven to action by my anger. I can be driven to action by my feelings of happiness. I am emotional and my emotions tend to be powerful. I have a good sense of what my purpose is in life and I pursue it. I take risks for things that I view to be important. If I feel strongly about something, I invest energy into it. I prioritize doing things that I love. I try to direct my attention toward people, places and things that make me feel good. I talk with others about the things that I am passionate about. I consider myself to be driven. I know what I want and I try to go after it. I often push myself to my limit. When I am excited about something, I often go after it “full speed ahead.” I often get so wrapped up in doing what I love that I lose track of time. I try to get others involved in my favorite activities. I take time to figure out what is important to me. I often feel like I cannot relax until I accomplish something I am working on. If I am interested in something, I can be known to research it in a driven and motivated way. I push past my fears if there is something on the other side that I want. I have so much I want to do that I sometimes don’t have time to do it all. I believe that you can always do more, be more and learn more. If I set a goal, I typically meet it. Unless there are extreme circumstances, I always make time for what I love. I take a stand for causes that are important to me. I speak up about topics that I value. I hope that my enthusiasm rubs off on others. Even if I have a bad day or feel down, I try to motivate myself to do something positive. I dream about doing great things. If one thing doesn’t work out, I work hard to find something else. I would call myself brave. I would call myself enthusiastic. I would call myself focused. I would call myself motivated. I would call myself open to new people, opportunities and ideas. I am dedicated and motivated to learn and grow. When I do something I love, I want others to experience my joy. When I think of the word passionate, I think of me. Passion score: 30-40: You, my friend, are a highly passionate person. You are generally highly motivated, enthusiastic and goal-oriented. The one caution here: Be careful not to neglect the key people in your life or your responsibilities. Sometimes those of us who are the most passionate can lose sight of other important things in favor of our passion. 20-29: You are a person who is passionate and allots some time and energy toward your passions without going overboard. Ask yourself if you can find a way to carve out more space in your life to enjoy what it is you are passionate about. If some of your passions are limited due to fear or financial means or other obstacles, develop a plan to overcome those challenges. 10-19: You know what it is you are passionate about, but you need to work on setting goals and gaining tools to spend more time and energy investing in your passions. It would be beneficial for you to place some more focus on this area of your life so that you can get maximum fulfillment. 0-9: Being passionate does not come easily to you, but you can learn to infuse more of this great feeling into your life if you wish. Make a decision to invest more time, energy and planning into finding what it is you love and into making more of those types of experiences. If you feel a bit stuck on how to go about this, enlist friends, family or other support to help get you going. Take our quiz: How Close Is Your Relationship? Stacy Kaiser is a successful Southern California-based licensed psychotherapist, author, relationship expert and media personality. She is an editor-at-large for Live Happy, and the author of the bestselling book, How to Be a Grown Up: The Ten Secret Skills Everyone Needs to Know.
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Kids standing at a train station

Redefining Love

A year after looking out a coffee-shop window and seeing the man in the pink tank top, Liza Baritt remembers him vividly: “This guy came along on roller skates, just singing his heart out,” she says. They locked eyes. “We sort of giggled, and he waved and smiled. I felt joyful, just totally amused, completely and utterly so glad I had that moment.” Then he skated on by. Liza, a psychotherapist and yoga teacher in Brookfield, Wisconsin, hasn’t seen the man since. And yet, to her, their flash of communion was right up there with many she has enjoyed with family, friends and romantic partners. It was, in her word, “love.” Love is all around While that might seem odd, Liza is part of a growing contingent who reject the notion that love is all about sex and soul mates, or the bonds you share with your nearest and dearest. Instead, they see love as “that micro-moment of warmth and connection that you share with another living being,” a concept introduced by Barbara L. Fredrickson, Ph.D., author and leading researcher in the positive psychology movement, in her book Love 2.0. Such moments can—and should—bloom often with your spouse, your parents and your child, she says, but they’re just as possible with a casual acquaintance or stranger. Your dry cleaner or barista, say. That woman who smiled at you from across the subway aisle. Vitamin L “It’s about connecting with people on a human level and…wishing them well or just sharing something positive,” says Barbara, a professor and director of the Positive Emotions and Psychophysiology Laboratory at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. “That is a pretty low bar for love, and I think that most people could meet that to the extent that they’re engaged in social interaction at all.” Connecting with others is as crucial to your wellbeing as food, sleep or exercise, Barbara says. Scientific studies suggest that feeling warm and fuzzy has a positive effect on your heart, brain, bodily processes, even your life span. Think of it as “Vitamin L.” And getting a dose may be easier than you think. A new look at love For some, redefining love brings a sense of release. “It’s liberating to let go of those old beliefs—‘I have to be in a relationship to have love’ or ‘I have to be a parent to feel love,’ ” says Liza, who was recently divorced. “It’s liberating to think I can go to a yoga class by myself and have some of the same emotions or connections that I might get from sex with a partner or interaction with children I’ve created, so it gives people a lot more options, to be sure.” Identifying these options and opportunities as “love” will also make us less prone to dismiss them, Barbara says. “We tend to trivialize day-to-day interactions with strangers, and yet we put love up on a pedestal as being one of the most important parts of life." That warm fuzzy feeling “When we only think of love as a status, like on Facebook, we’re missing a more fine-grained understanding of what creates our most important relationships in our life, and also what kind of fundamental ingredients in those most important relationships can be experienced in any human connection," says Barbara. "Scientific studies suggest that feeling warm and fuzzy has a positive effect on your heart, brain, bodily processes, even your life span." However, even Barbara doesn’t always use the word “love.” When describing how connection unfolds, for example, she chooses the term “positivity resonance,” explaining that this dance of brain and body has three parts. Dance of brain and body First, you and someone else share one or more positive emotions. Maybe you’re both amused at something one of you just said or did (think of Liza’s singing skater) or delighted at something you both experienced (hearing a new song or watching your favorite team score a goal). Next, a striking synchrony kicks in. You make eye contact and, sensing real friendliness, you start mirroring each other’s smiles and gestures. If you’re having a conversation, you both lean in and nod more often. From "me to "we" Research shows that your brains begin to tango; a study at Princeton University discovered that when subjects listened closely to a recorded story told by a stranger, their own brain activity closely resembled that of the storyteller, which had been measured when the recording was made. Last but not least, says Barbara, you and the other person begin to care more about each other—to shift your focus from “me” to “we.” Cultivating love Getting on someone else’s wavelength isn’t always easy, of course. If you’re sad or scared, for instance, it can be hard to mind-meld with others. Ditto if you’re feeling bad about yourself. Plus, modern life throws up endless roadblocks to love. We’re all busier than ever, and even when we’re surrounded by people, we’re also surrounded by endless distractions from our phones, tablets and televisions. Hugging and hand holding have been found to lower stress-induced spikesin blood pressure and raise levels of oxytocin, the famous “love hormone.” “You have to choose again and again to connect” with family, friends and strangers, says Megan McDonough, CEO of the Wholebeing Institute in Hardwick, Massachusetts. “We don’t find love. We cultivate it.” How do you seed your life with loving moments? Experts have plenty of ideas: Practice meditation and other forms of mindfulness. Our fast-paced society can make it hard to truly pay attention to others, Megan notes. Practicing a mindfulness technique “is basically training us to be more fully present, so when we are with someone, we’re paying more attention.” And of course, when we pay attention, it’s easier to connect. Make a point of spending relaxed, unstructured time together—no screens allowed. Years ago, when Boriana Zaneva would visit her native Bulgaria, her mother resented it when she left the house to see friends. Now Boriana, a positive psychology consultant in Boston, tries harder to show her “openness to savor that time” with her mother. “When you’re coming into that place with that intention to connect, to create the space for that positive resonance, it just happens.” The result: along with plates of tomatoes, lamb and feta, the two women have shared countless helpings of love. These days when Boriana visits friends, she says, her mother no longer acts clingy, “because now she has my full attention when we’re together.” Keep it simple. When meeting someone new, Kristin Humbargar, a life-learning and leadership coach in Underhill, Vermont, begins with eye contact, followed by “just smiling and saying hello and asking how their day was.” This led to a recent exchange with a doorman during a visit to Brooklyn, New York. Kristin and the doorman discussed topics ranging from New York’s 9/11 memorial to his dreams for the future. They swapped email addresses, vowed to keep in touch (which they have) and hugged goodbye. Such interactions “resonate with you for the rest of the day,” Kristin says. “Everything is a little brighter. There is, in fact, a kind of afterglow—or maybe even a hint of euphoria.” Use technology wisely. Not all screen time is isolating, points out Liza, the Wisconsin psychotherapist. Now that she’s in a long-distance relationship, she has discovered Skyping: “Skype is the closest you can get to being in the same room—and sometimes it’s closer.” Unlike certain times when you’re actually together, “you’re really looking at them, really focusing on them, not walking away or trying to do dishes or fold laundry.” Remember the power of touch. Sure, sex can be great, but nonsexual touch may be just as important. Hugging and hand holding, for instance, have been found to lower stress-induced spikes in blood pressure and raise levels of oxytocin, the famous “love hormone.” Kristin can vouch for all the above. “My husband will hug me and look me straight in my eye, and all of a sudden I get this giggly, giddy feeling; it feels so good,” she says. Whenever her 10-year-old daughter is anxious, “we’ll play this game where I’ll rub her arms or give her a hug, and we’ll do this little chant and we’ll say, ‘Oxytocin, oxytocin, oxytocin!’ ”Voilà: mother and daughter both feel more relaxed. Smile to yourself. To prime himself for positive exchanges with others, Braco Pobric smiles each morning when his alarm goes off. Widely. “Research shows that will give me a little dopamine,” says Braco, an author in Hamilton, New Jersey, and the chief happiness officer of the Institute for Advanced Human Performance. Dopamine is a “feel-good” hormone and neurotransmitter associated with the brain’s reward system that naturally makes us feel happy.This does not mean, however, that you should plaster on a grin when encountering others, Barbara cautions, or deliberately mirror others’ gestures, as such attempts often come across as forced. It’s better to work at solo exercises that, over time, will help you feel more of the genuine sentiments that yield natural smiles, nods and so forth. Walk. Cook. Dance. Ski. Data show that shared movements resulting from positivity resonance make it more likely that a relationship will take root. Getting active together can also help long-term relationships continue to flower. Oxytocin: the chemistry of love What creates all this synchrony and sympathy? One key player is oxytocin. You may already know that oxytocin gets released at intimate moments—during sex, say, or while a mother breastfeeds a baby. But studies imply it’s also pivotal during other moments of connection, whether with people we know or with strangers. At the University of Zurich, for instance, test subjects were given real money to invest. Those who inhaled an oxytocin spray beforehand—rather than a placebo—were much more likely to entrust a fellow participant with all their cash. Oxytocin helps us detect signs of genuine goodwill and respond with our own. It soothes us and helps us let down our guard. Calm and connect Just as vital to these moments is your vagus nerve, which links your brain with organs including your heart. Working with oxytocin, the vagus directs the “calm and connect response”—the opposite of “fight or flight.” It slows your heartbeat and “stimulates tiny facial muscles that better enable you to make eye contact and synchronize your facial expressions with another person. It even adjusts the minuscule muscles of your middle ear so you can better track the other person’s voice against any background noise,” according to Barbara. As many of the above stories make clear, this mental and physical pas de deux can produce intense pleasure. But more than that, it may work wonders for your health. Love shortage a danger to your health Loneliness is just as deadly as smoking, obesity and other dire factors, concluded researchers at Brigham Young University in a meta-study of 148 smaller studies. That’s no surprise, says John Cacioppo, Ph.D., a University of Chicago psychologist who has researched social connection and isolation. When you feel lonely, he says, your body produces more of the stress hormone cortisol. Over time, this glut of cortisol “increases organ wear and tear.” “It might cost me a heart attack,” he says. “It might lead to increased risk of cancer in another individual.” Lonely people are also more prone to depression, poor sleep, high blood pressure, major strokes, chronic inflammation and Alzheimer’s disease, he says. Love gives immediate results The good news is that when you start to connect more with others, your health improves—in some ways immediately. Feeling less lonely on a given day can, for example, boost your mood right away and enhance your sleep that very night, John says. Overcoming such chronic problems as inflammation takes longer, but even a couple of months of better connections can make a real difference, Barbara says. In a two-month study she did with then-student Bethany Kok, Ph.D., people who reported feeling more “positivity resonance” each day improved in “cardiac vagal tone.” This involves the vagus nerve and has been linked to such perks as healthier glucose and inflammation levels. In addition, Barbara explains, people with high vagal tone are more adept at focusing their attention and controlling their emotions and, as you might expect, better at connecting with others. Data show that shared movements resulting from positivity resonance make it more likely that a relationship will take root. Getting active together can also help long-term relationships continue to flower." Making more connections Research conducted on the brains of new parents suggests connection does in fact breed more connection. Scientists at the University of Michigan, the University of Denver and elsewhere have found that attentive moms and dads undergo “remodeling” of several brain structures during their babies’ early weeks. This is crucial to future bonding with their children as well as the children’s capacity for social interaction, says James Swain, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan. Just what triggers these brain changes remains unknown, but plenty of researchers think any positive connection between people—from lovers to strangers—may cause similar shifts in neural circuitry, James says. Bringing the research to life Kristin, the learning and leadership coach, doesn’t need science to prove to her that love brings more love. As she’s fostered more moments of connection with everyone from that doorman to her daughters, she says, she has found herself craving such moments more. In turn, the payoffs of those connections have grown. “There’s that awareness of [connection] and that experience of it, and the next time you have it, it doubles. It sort of exponentially expands.” Gaëlle Desbordes, Ph.D., a neuroscientist at Harvard Medical School, also knows how connecting with others can change you. She used to be shy in a roomful of strangers, she says. But spurred by her own meditation practice, she has become much more outgoing—and that, in turn, has given her “a more optimistic worldview.” Instead of feeling threatened by new faces, she has come to believe that most people are good and generous. At professional conferences, she now longs to meet others and hear their stories. “There’s a great sense of safety and trust in people in general,” she says. Onward and outward As you share love with those around you, you may be accomplishing more than you realize. Not only does each person you connect with get the benefits of “positivity resonance,” but those benefits—chemical surges and the rest—may well lead them to connect with more people, sending ripples of goodwill and oxytocin far beyond your social circle. Emotional and physical health are contagious, according to Barbara. “Indeed, studies of actual social networks show that, over time, happiness spreads through whole communities.” Which is, Gaëlle says, exactly as it should be. “We are social animals. We love to connect, to be part of a community.” Fear of bonding with others is usually a barrier we impose, based on negative experiences in our past, she says. “Once we remove that barrier, we are finally touching base with our true nature.”
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Wake Up Happy: Series 4

Listen in on five powerful interviews with New York Times best-selling authors and experts in the fields of happiness and positive psychology. These insights and strategies to make your life better are now at your fingertips; no matter what time of day. Plus we're including transcripts and info-graphics of each session!We hope you'll find these interviews inspiring and helpful. Thank you again for being part of our Wake Up Happy series.Listen in as Dan Tomasulo, creator of Interactive-Behavioral Therapy and the Dare to be Happy experiential workshops, talks about how to Dare to be Happy. ​ Tune in as Stacy Kaiser, successful Southern California based licensed psychotherapist, author, relationship expert and media personality, talks about Secret Skills to Happiness. ​ Catch Dr. Jay Kumar, expert counselor to organizations and businesses on harnessing the art and science of happiness for both short- and long-term success, talks about how Your Brain is Wired for Happiness. ​ Join in as Margaret Greenberg, coauthor of the business book Profit from the Positive: Proven Leadership Strategies to Boost Productivity and Transform Your Business, and a sought after executive coach by Fortune 500 companies, talks about how to Profit from the Positive. ​ Get excited as Todd Kashdan, world-recognized authority on well-being, strengths, social relationships, stress, and anxiety, talks about The Upside of Your Dark Side. ​ ​
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Couple in a fight

The Truth About Forgiveness

Strangely enough, I became an expert researcher and teacher on forgiveness because I was miserable. I was bitter and unhappy, and even my wife was getting tired of hearing me moan and groan.A couple of years earlier I had been deeply betrayed by a very close friend and I still did not know how to cope. I complained to anyone who would listen, and I felt like a victim, until one day my wife said something that made me to stop and rethink my attitude. She said that she still loved me, but didn’t like me as much since I had become a bitter man full of self-pity.She is the most patient person I know, and even she had run out of patience with me.The secret of relationships: They cause pain.Interestingly enough, I was already a marriage and family therapist at the time. I was trained to help others manage anger, frustration and loss, but I couldn’t manage my own.In all my years of therapeutic training, I realized, no one had ever mentioned forgiveness. No one had ever enunciated the simple truth about relationships: You might get hurt. At times you’ll be disappointed, possibly even mistreated. Since we cannot, and don’t wish to avoid relationships altogether, how can we gain the skills to cope with their ups and downs? By forgiving.Start by looking outside yourselfI realized my therapeutic training had not prepared me for the difficult task of forgiving. I was so wrapped up in my own self-pity that hadn’t even thought of the possibility of forgiving my former friend until I saw how my wife was affected.My training as a therapist had focused on each individual’s pain. My wound, my terrible mother, my hostile ex-spouse, my alcoholic excesses … But I began to realize, in reality my pain isn’t so unique. Maybe focusing on this trauma as uniquely mine had become more of a problem than the betrayal itself!The key to forgiveness: EmpathyBuddhists are right when they say suffering is everywhere, and at the heart of everything human. My real problem was not that I had been horribly wronged, but rather that I lacked compassion and understanding.Something in me changed. Not overnight and not necessarily easily. In some small way I got over myself. That moment of compassion and care for my wife triggered more empathy. I saw that I had caused as well as received pain. Through this glimmer of compassion, I saw that my therapeutic training had been inadequate. Suffering is everywhere; loss is omnipresent.The result of my new thinking was essentially this: If we do not learn to let past wounds go, we keep ourselves from fully functioning in the present and future. Letting go of the painThe little glimpse of compassion also opened me to the flip-side of suffering: gratitude or appreciation. The flip-side of dwelling on loss and wounds is being thankful for what we have. My obsession with my friend’s behavior caused me to miss so much beauty, so much love and opportunity surrounding me; I was blinded by hurt. Helping myself, helping othersI got over the betrayal and moved on. I made peace with my friend and even resumed a relationship with him.Soon afterward, I was a Ph.D. student at Stanford, finishing my degree in counseling psychology, when I had to choose a dissertation topic. I thought of my travails with forgiveness and thought, if it was so difficult for me, it had to be a challenge for others, as well. I wanted to see if science could establish my hunch that forgiveness would be as life-changing and healing for others as it had in my own experience.Almost 20 years later, the results are consistent. Forgiveness researchers like myself have shown over and over that forgiveness is good for one’s body, mind and relationships. What's more, forgiveness can be taught and practiced just like any other skill. It just takes some interest, time and effort.Fred Luskin, Ph.D., is the Director of the Stanford Forgiveness Project, where he teaches workshops on forgiveness and serves as a Senior Consultant in Health Promotion and a Professor at the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology. He is also the author of the book Forgive for Good. Find out more about his groundbreaking research here.
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Give the GIft of Happiness

The perfect gift is just a few clicks away When you give a gift subscription to Live Happy magazine you give a yearlong gift of meaning, health, purpose and love. Live Happy brings together the best of the happiness movement, from cutting-edge science to in-depth interviews with artists and thought leaders, all in one beautifully photographed and illustrated package. Happiness empowers us to make a positive difference in our lives and in the lives of others. Happier people are healthier, more satisfied with life and their relationships, and they live longer. Come with us on our journey to live happy and spread that joy to our readers. Happiness is a journey anyone can take and it starts with just one step.You can choose from:2 Year All Access — Get 12 issues of the print magazine plus the digital edition for $29.95. Save 58% off the cover price!1 Year All Access — Get 6 issues of the print magazine plus the digital edition for $17.95. Save 50% off the cover price!1 Year Digital Access — Get 6 issues of the digital edition for only $9.99 (an extra bonus issue currently will be added)
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Networking Events

Networking Events and Speaking Engagements With Live Happy CEO and Co-Founder Kym YanceyAttend a Live Happy Reception with your host Kym Yancey, CEO and Co-Founder of Live Happy. Each event Kym will share more about how Live Happy is leading a global movement to make the world a happier place and share tips on how you can become happier.If you are already a happy person, this event will thrill you and add dimension and range to your happiness. If you are seeking to be happier you will be energized by the insights and new possibilities. In addition to connecting with new friends and networking we will share ways to be happier so you can:Discover the power and impact that happiness has in all areas of your lifeIncrease happiness in yourself and in those you touchConnect, network and share with othersEnergize your relationships and create a richer, deeper experienceSee your career take off and new exciting opportunities unfoldExperience a greater sense of fulfillment and happiness right nowLocations and dates vary.
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no image found

Networking Events

Networking Events and Speaking Engagements With Live Happy CEO and Co-Founder Kym YanceyAttend a Live Happy Reception with your host Kym Yancey, CEO and Co-Founder of Live Happy. Each event Kym will share more about how Live Happy is leading a global movement to make the world a happier place and share tips on how you can become happier.If you are already a happy person, this event will thrill you and add dimension and range to your happiness. If you are seeking to be happier you will be energized by the insights and new possibilities. In addition to connecting with new friends and networking we will share ways to be happier so you can:Discover the power and impact that happiness has in all areas of your lifeIncrease happiness in yourself and in those you touchConnect, network and share with othersEnergize your relationships and create a richer, deeper experienceSee your career take off and new exciting opportunities unfoldExperience a greater sense of fulfillment and happiness right nowLocations and dates vary.
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Person holding a present

Give Happy

Before you go racing out to the mall to pick up a new oversized reindeer sweater for Aunt Sally and a set of drums for your 4-year-old nephew (fun for him, not so much for your brother and his wife), here is a holiday shopping guide based on the science of happiness that might help.The gift of happiness?Scientifically, the greatest predictor of happiness is, by far, social support—the breadth, depth and meaning in your relationships. So consider giving gifts that are activities, like a special evening at the local ice rink complete with hot chocolate and marshmallows. Unlike a physical gift, this experience gives you a chance to spend quality time with friends or family and strengthen your bond. The key is to use these moments to really connect and converse more deeply than you normally do with other people. This reminds our brains of the deep social support that fuels our own happiness as well as theirs.Encourage savoringThe difference between momentary pleasure and long-term positive memory is based on the ability to savor, or mentally return to, an event or feeling. A gift that causes a spike in happiness at the moment but that you can’t remember even a week later is analogous to going on a fantastic vacation that you won’t recall. When shopping this season, think of gifts that will continue to benefit the recipient. For example, for your spouse, you could buy a personalized pillow with important dates in your relationship that will literally help that person savor special moments every time he or she sees it. (We have one of these!) For a friend, perhaps buy him or her a coffee mug with a picture of something meaningful so the day starts with a positive reminder—the key is to pick a present that will continue to focus the recipient’s attention on positive, happy moments.Avoid the deficit trapIt’s normal to sometimes wish that we could give a better present than we can afford. Stanford professor Carol Dweck, Ph.D., calls the phenomenon of focusing on what we don’t have “deficit mindset,” and it robs the present (and our presents) of joy.Instead, we should cultivate a positive mindset by focusing on the facts that we have someone whom we care about so much that we want to give him or her a nice gift and more resources than some people in this world. Receiving is as important as givingWe’ve all heard that it’s better to give than receive, but the saying misses an important corollary: How you receive matters (a lot) to the giver’s happiness.If you receive well, your reaction to a gift can actually be a gift in and of itself. The problem is that many of us can’t receive gifts without our brains producing negative thoughts such as, “I’m not worthy of this present” or “Now I feel indebted to her.” Think about it: We’re happier when others are excited about our gifts and respond with joy and gratitude. So by subtly changing our ego-driven thoughts of guilt to “I am so grateful to her not only for the present, but also the friendship it represents,” we fuel greater levels of happiness for both the giver and ourselves.That way, when Aunt Barbara surprises you with a matching reindeer sweater, you can be genuinely grateful for her love—and the adorable pictures the two of you can take together to cherish for years to come.Shawn Achor, author ofThe Happiness Advantageand the newly releasedBefore Happiness, is one of the world's leading experts on human potential. Michelle Gielanis an expert on the science of positive communication and how to use it to fuel success. She formerly served as the anchor of two national newscasts at CBS News. Together, Shawn and Michelle createdGoodThink, a positive psychology consulting firm.
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