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NewsFriday, October 10, 2008 7:00 AM CDT
Our pursuit of happiness: You can't buy it, experts say
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CHICAGO -- Americans have seen their retirement savings shrivel, home equity evaporate and job security vanish. The only numbers zooming upward seem to be gas and food prices. | Local retailers hold out hope for holiday season | NYC National Debt Clock runs out of digits

It may look like there’s nothing to smile about, but that shouldn’t stop us, said Ed Diener, a psychology professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who has been studying happiness for more than a quarter-century. Here’s what he wants you to know: That disappearing 401(k) balance? It’s no more a barometer of sadness than winning the lottery guarantees life satisfaction. It’s all a matter of perspective.

“There are people who have little money and are quite happy ... and then there are people who feel poor making $150,000 a year,” Diener said. “If we ratchet down some of our aspirations and expectations, we can find contentment — even in a slowing economy.”

He is no blithe guru spray-painting smiley faces along Wall Street. Researchers like Diener are trying to convey what philosophers have long written: True happiness lies in the pursuit of deeply held goals, not in fleeting pleasures and possessions.

We intuitively understand the common-sense distinction between short-term pleasure and long-term happiness. Research suggests the brain also processes those feelings differently — though exactly how the mind creates abiding happiness is unclear.

Diener is co-author, with his son, Robert Biswas-Diener, of the new book “Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Psychological Wealth.” He is part of the positive psychology movement that started about two decades ago and bypasses the Freud model of disease and dysfunction, focusing instead on emotional hardiness.

In their view, psychological wealth includes relationships, spirituality (“not necessarily religion ... but the feeling you are connected to something larger than yourself”), physical health and a sense of engagement.

What separates those with psychological wealth from miserable peers is their ability to adjust. “That means controlling what is controllable ... diversifying your stocks, then returning to the areas of your life that are going well, such as friends and family,” he said. “It means making a conscious decision to be resilient.”

Usually too vague to study

It takes strong character to find happiness in the face of adversity, but scientists often have found that aspect too vague a topic to study. Understanding how the brain processes raw feelings of desire and pleasure is far easier. Most creatures seek pleasure in some way. Pleasure motivates us to seek food, sex and a multitude of things that ensure the survival of an individual or species.

“There’s an enormous evolutionary advantage to getting pleasure from these things,” said Martin Cassell, a professor at the University of Iowa. “The more long-term aspects of what causes happiness are much less well understood.”

Cassell said he believes a key brain area for both pleasure and long-term happiness is the insular cortex, a region buried under the flaps and folds toward the front of the brain. Also called the insula, the region has been linked to sensations of joy, disgust and pain and even to out-of-body experiences. But beyond joy, a hallmark of human beings is the ability to forgo immediate gratification for the sake of some deeper contentment. That aspect of happiness takes willpower — another big subject neuroscientists have found difficult to study.

“We have no precise sense of what willpower means in the brain, or why some people are better at it than others,” said Todd Braver, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Washington University in St. Louis.

Braver’s team is studying how the brain area called the prefrontal cortex is involved in long-term decision-making. They want to understand how the anticipation of a reward far off in the future — such as the increased satisfaction of a fulfilling but low-paying job — can sometimes overrule the enticement of short-term pleasure.

The mysteries of human behavior and happiness have long dominated Diener family dinner conversations. Diener, 62, also known as “Dr. Happy,” had ample opportunity to reflect on the nature of happiness during his early-marriage years in Champaign, when dining out meant a $1 entree with his wife, Carol, also a psychologist.

Three of their five children went into the family business, including Robert, a psychologist and lecturer at Portland State University. The father and son have traveled all over the world, collecting data on well-being from tens of thousands of subjects in more than 100 countries.

Whether in the gold markets of Dubai or the Australian outback, the scientists have learned happiness goes beyond genes and circumstances. We require enough material wealth to be self-sufficient, the psychologists believe, but the levels of contentment do not dramatically increase after our needs are met. While there is a spike after a major acquisition — like a new car — the euphoria over leather seats doesn’t last.

The same is true with setbacks: Watching one’s nest egg dwindle is enough to pull anyone into a deep hole, but a year later, people typically rebound.

Take a look
Ed Diener, a professor of psychology at the University of Illinois and the co-author of the book "Happiness: Unlocking the Mysteries of Psychological Wealth," spends time with his grandchildren, Alex Yannelli, 4, left, and Caroline Yannelli, 9, at his home in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Beth Schlanker/Chicago Tribune/MCT)
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Reader comments on this story - 10 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

HoosierGal wrote on Oct 9, 2008 8:40 PM:

" I was a nineteen-year-old in one of Professor Diener's classes twenty years ago. Throughout all these years I've enjoyed seeing his name cited in various articles about happiness. I remember on the final day of class he gave us a little checklist that he said wouldn't be on the exam. It included items to ask yourself, such as, "Am I capable of intimacy?" He's a great teacher and I'll be buying his book. "

FollowTheConsitution wrote on Oct 9, 2008 6:46 PM:

" Peace

That's the problem. People won't research for the truth. They rather listen to things like MSNBC and believe everything they tell them. Much easier and a lot less time consuming. This is exactly how you get the wrong person elected only to end up looking back and saying....what happened??? How can this be??? The media told me different! "

FollowTheConsitution wrote on Oct 9, 2008 6:43 PM:

" alexp

Um, you gotta go back farther than Bush. Try thanking Clinton for this mess! It was his policy changing that did all this. The ride up to the top of the pyramid scheme could only go so far until it hit the top causing the bubble to burst and for everything to come crashing down!

Instead of listening to the Obama BS trying to pass blame to win your vote take some time and research the truth! It will surprise you just how much Obamalaid you have been drinking! "

bngurl wrote on Oct 9, 2008 6:26 PM:

" I wish I could get paid for studying happiness. It must be nice to get paid for doing nothing. "

Peace wrote on Oct 9, 2008 4:49 PM:

" I'm not sure how many of these responses are tongue-in-cheek, but I beleive the point is "inner" happiness which does not fluctuate with material gains and losses.

Alexp: I am not sure how your response ties into this article. However, I challenge you to go to the root cause of the financial crisis. What laws were changed, when and by whom to force lending institutions to lower loan requirements and issue loans they previously refused. Then, follow the trail of failed legislation to fix this problem. If your research is honest and accurate, you will come to a very different conclusion. "

alexp wrote on Oct 9, 2008 2:26 PM:

" All brought to you courtesy of the Republican party and GW Bush. He has trashed this country completely. We are now in so much trouble and he never saw it coming. It is only going to get worst folks. Next stop on the Dow is 7000. Then it could be 3500. Just think what your 401k plan is going to be worth then? Dow 1000 would be the fitting end to Bush's legacy. "

michelle24 wrote on Oct 9, 2008 2:05 PM:

" I think it depends...If I had a bunch of dough---it would make my life easier, but not necessarily happier. I sure wish it did, tho! ;) "

Brenstalka wrote on Oct 9, 2008 2:02 PM:

" I buy it on Wednesday nights... and sometimes on Saturdays, if the urge hits me. "

JMD wrote on Oct 9, 2008 1:28 PM:

" I think you can buy happiness. Absolutely, with out a doubt you can rent it. And, I can say with serious certainty that poverty does not pay for happiness. The expert must have some cash in the bank. "

hey_now wrote on Oct 9, 2008 1:06 PM:

" I could sure be happy with a bunch of money, the experts don't know anything "

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