A Harvard study running since the 1930s says it’s human connections not money that makes people the … [+]..Getty Images
It’s hard to get proof on what makes people happy but there is a longitudinal survey that has been examining happiness since the 1930s and after decades of research, the results have been published in a new book, The Good Life.
The Harvard Study of Adult Development, led by professors Robert Waldinger and Marc Schulz, has studied the same 700 people and their families over time to determine what makes people thrive. They asked thousands of qualitative questions as well as taking hundreds of quantitative health measurements from brain scans to blood work.
In the 1930s, participants were chosen from either Harvard’s male students or a group of boys from a low-income suburb of Boston. Every five years, they gave medical information and every two years, they answered detailed questions. Their wives and children later joined the study, that has tracked this group through work, marriage, divorce and even death—25 participants left their brains to the study after they died. Waldinger is the fourth director of the project over its lifetime.
He says, “we learnt that people believe happiness is something they can achieve—if they buy that house or get a promotion or lose enough weight, then happiness will follow. We act as if it is a destination we will get to if we tick the right boxes, but the data very clearly shows that this is simply not true. And that’s a good thing, as contentment is no longer something out of reach, but eminently achievable for all of us.”
It turns out that money does not make people happy, nor does your station or rank. It is mostly relationships and the connections you forge that leads to the most contented people. Whether these are in the form of friendships, book clubs, romantic attachments, church groups, sports partners or co-workers, the people with the strongest social bonds and connections in their 50s, were in the best shape in their 80s.
Source: What Makes People Happy? Harvard Study Says Money Isn’t Most Important Factor
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Related contents:
Happiness”. Wolfram Alpha. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 24 February 2011.
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy states that “An important project in the philosophy of happiness is simply getting clear on what various writers are talking about.”
Two Philosophical Problems in the Study of Happiness”. Archived from the original on 14 October 2018. Retrieved 13 October 2018.Veenhoven, R.
Does Happiness Differ Across Cultures?” (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2018.Wolff-Mann, Ethan (13 October 2015).
What the New Nobel Prize Winner Has to Say About Money and Happiness”. Money.com.
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Can happiness be taught?”.ashington Post (17 April 2017). “All you need is love – and funding: 79-year-old Harvard study of human happiness may lose grant money
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