🐱 Yale's class on happiness

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Happiness can be learned.

That's the central idea behind Yale's most popular class ever. Professor Laurie Santos has collected all the psychological science out there and come up with a step-by-step process for boosting your own happiness.

I took the 10-week course online through Coursera free. It's officially called The Science of Well-Being, and it has already been taken by more than 225,000 students online. One in four students at Yale has taken it since it was first offered.

Santos told me she designed the course for three reasons: to synthesize what psychologists have learned about making our lives better, to help undergrads overcome stress and unhappiness on campus, and "to live a better life myself."

Five weeks in, I'm a convert. Here's why: The seminars are great, but you also get a lot of homework centered on daily exercises geared toward changing your habits — recognizing and then dropping bad ones while developing new good habits.

Here are just four exercises I picked out from a slew of new tips and tricks I've learned so far. Again, the point here is that these positive habits have been tested and proven to work, based on psychological science.

Focus on your strengths
This first homework was all about identifying your signature strengths and refocusing on them each day. I took the "VIA Survey" online (anyone can take this test free here), which revealed my 24 greatest strengths. My top four: love of learning, appreciation of beauty and excellence, leadership, and fairness.

If you're pretty self-aware, the results won't be a big surprise. The key, though, is to identify them and find situations to use your strengths every day. That'll lead you down the path to flourishing. Studies show happiness increases and depression decreases when a person uses his or her signature strengths regularly. In my case, I looked for simple ways to use fairness, humor, and love of learning throughout my day.

Tip: Additional research shows that if you're able to "bundle" four of your top strengths while at work, you'll likely flourish and have more positive experiences, and you are more likely to think of your work as a calling.

Invest in experiences
I spend money on experiences such as live music, trips, and meals instead of new toys. It's always made me happier. Now I know that research backs this up, regardless of income levels: Going for a walk or traveling to a new place are much better investments in terms of happiness than buying material things.

Turns out your stuff loses "happiness value" almost as soon as you've purchased it. Paying for experiences, however, has multiple benefits for happiness. One, the anticipation of the experience leads to more happiness and joy. Two, talking about the experience afterward with friends reignites your own happy memories and, incredibly enough, sharing these tales with friends tends to boost their happiness, too. Finally, we don't tend to get used to experiences the way we do with new stuff. There's no time to get used to a trip to Mexico City, but science shows the joy you get from buying some awesome new thing, such as a phone, begins to diminish immediately. It's just how your brain works.

Learn to savor more
Savoring is the act of stepping outside of an experience to review and really appreciate it — a way of helping you to stay present in the moment. And savoring often forces you to enjoy an experience for longer.

My homework was to pinpoint a moment to savor each day. One of mine stuck out: I was running around the park when a strong gust of wind at my back almost lifted me off the ground. It was a strange and wonderful moment, and I made sure to tell my wife when I got home. Looking for these moments has boosted my sense of awe at the world around me. Research shows reliving these happy memories can make your positive emotions last up to a month.

Express gratitude and spread kindness
This one is fun. If you're generally thankful and show appreciation for what you have, your happiness levels soar. Sounds too easy, but it works. One exercise we did was make a list of five things we were grateful for each day. Staring at your list simply makes you thankful and reflective. Even doing this once a week has been shown to boost happiness and reduce ill-health symptoms.

Meanwhile, doing random acts of kindness is another way to find happiness. One study showed that spending money on others makes you happier than spending it on yourself, even across different cultures and income levels. For example, small changes, such as spending $5 to buy a friend, colleague, or stranger a coffee, boosted happiness levels. So I've been buying a lot of coffees.

Santos adds: "It kind of seems like our brains are wired to see other people's rewards as our own rewards. And so it's kind of like getting a little click of cocaine every single time you do a nice thing for another person. It's kind of an accident of the way our social brain is wired up."

The road to happiness
Remember to also do the things you probably already know are proven to boost your well-being, such as exercising daily and getting as much sleep as possible.

But the key here is to pick up a new habit that will lead you to feeling happier. So find one above that works for you and try it. It's been well worth it already for me.
 
It seems really obvious to me that if you have to learn how to trick yourself into being happy, then maybe people don't have much to feel genuinely happy about in current year. Yes, you can "learn" to be more happy, but what is that truly solving in the world? This line of reasoning is filed under "excuses made to avoid bettering yourself" in these courses, but that in itself might be avoiding the reasons for depression being a wide-spread epidemic. Everything seems to be based, ultimately, on whatever it is that you tell yourself. Different cultures tell themselves different things. This culture seems to be desperately trying to avoid the structural problems that make us depressed.
 
People in this thread need to calm their panties.

Many colleges, especially elite ones, will offer easy classes like this to help ease their students’ workload so they can focus on their difficult ones, internships, jobs, etc. That’s why you hear universities offering classes on the Simpson’s.
 
chasing happiness for its own sake in general is just hedonism
I think the problem is the confusion of pleasure with happiness, as in the belief that something must be good if it "reduces suffering and maximizes pleasure".
 
People in this thread need to calm their panties.

Many colleges, especially elite ones, will offer easy classes like this to help ease their students’ workload so they can focus on their difficult ones, internships, jobs, etc. That’s why you hear universities offering classes on the Simpson’s.
I don't care about adult daycare's curriculum except that it's sold to kids as being mandatory, and the idiots that attend this bullshit claim to be better than those who don't.

I don't really care what happens in upper class finishing school, just stop giving them my tax money.
 
It seems really obvious to me that if you have to learn how to trick yourself into being happy, then maybe people don't have much to feel genuinely happy about in current year. Yes, you can "learn" to be more happy, but what is that truly solving in the world? This line of reasoning is filed under "excuses made to avoid bettering yourself" in these courses, but that in itself might be avoiding the reasons for depression being a wide-spread epidemic. Everything seems to be based, ultimately, on whatever it is that you tell yourself. Different cultures tell themselves different things. This culture seems to be desperately trying to avoid the structural problems that make us depressed.
The average American psyche apparently has a lot in common with those literal shit pit meat farms where the animals stand in feces 24/7, and can only survive because of constant antibiotics.
 
I wouldn't criticize people who genuinely want to better themselves by adapting these practices. But if people would have found the cure for depression, then they would have done that a couple of millenniums ago.
 
you don't get any tangible benefit out of it, and it creates no substantial value. it's as pointless as blowing the money on drugs and booze for a quick night of good feels.
chasing happiness for its own sake in general is just hedonism, and will not give you the long-term satisfaction and sense of purpose that you likely crave.
I feel like this attitude can go too far, though. Basically this is saying never take vacations, go to concerts, or fuck, take a night to mist watch a movie because it’s just something you enjoy and doesn’t lead to a “sense of purpose”
 
That's called stoicism
Sure, in moderation, but it can turn pathological and develop into scrupulosity very easily. Like I want to say 'You should find happiness for yourself, and prioritize your happiness, even when the world is going to shit', because on an individual level that is true for everyone, but it's easy to see that statement as the kind of hedonism that some people think is destroying western civilization. A balance is required. Idk if I'm making any sense if not just ignore me.
 
"Invest in experiences". I'm sure this wasn't pushed by concert promoters and travel agents. You can't resell these things if the singer shows up wasted or your vacation is ruined thanks to Tropical Storm AmberLynn.

Owning a motorcycle, however, has vastly increased my happiness through my adult life.
 
Sure, in moderation, but it can turn pathological and develop into scrupulosity very easily. Like I want to say 'You should find happiness for yourself, and prioritize your happiness, even when the world is going to shit', because on an individual level that is true for everyone, but it's easy to see that statement as the kind of hedonism that some people think is destroying western civilization. A balance is required. Idk if I'm making any sense if not just ignore me.
I didn't say stoicism is a good thing. Also, a true stoic will not criticize others for hedonism, as that's a waste of time that he could use to make the world a better place.
 
chasing happiness for its own sake in general is just hedonism, and will not give you the long-term satisfaction and sense of purpose that you likely crave.

The belief that short term happiness is unimportant is a dumb one.

Short term happiness is pretty essential to happiness. The reward for a happy childhood is a happy childhood. You don't need a long term benefit to justify enjoyment.
 
This first homework was all about identifying your signature strengths and refocusing on them each day. I took the "VIA Survey" online (anyone can take this test free here), which revealed my 24 greatest strengths. My top four: love of learning, appreciation of beauty and excellence, leadership, and fairness.

I took it for science. It’s honestly not very enlightening. A lot of the questions are redundant or ask things like “people often describe you as <adjective>.” Which seems like a good way to set someone up to lie to themselves about what people think about them. It’s kind of pompous in its own way, and after answering most of the questions as “neutral,” it gave me back some generic list of traits and then offered me some $20+ pamphlets and guides.

Turns out your stuff loses "happiness value" almost as soon as you've purchased it. Paying for experiences, however, has multiple benefits for happiness.

Does the experience lose “happiness value” after you purchase it? Apparently OP goes to concerts and eats out a lot. How is a meal a greater experience than something that a person worked hard for?

Savoring is the act of stepping outside of an experience to review and really appreciate it — a way of helping you to stay present in the moment.

I mean, some people savor their tech-toys, but apparently that’s wrong according to OP...

For example, small changes, such as spending $5 to buy a friend, colleague, or stranger a coffee, boosted happiness levels. So I've been buying a lot of coffees.

I get the feeling that the writer is an unhappy and insecure person. They seem really desperate at week 5 out of 10 of this seminar to maintain some extreme level of Nirvana happiness, and they really have to tell everyone about how enlightened and generous they now have become before even finishing the class. It just reads as disingenuous to me, but I’m jaded.

I’m pretty sure any member here could come up with much more relatable and less vague suggestions for living a happy and fulfilled life.
 
I don't understand this fascination with people being taught basic life skills like it's some kind of amazing information. You look at all this motivational speakers, self help books, classes, and you'll learn that they all are about the exact same shit. Keep a clean house/space, be open to new ideas, be charitable, be appreciative, go outside.... It's honestly nauseating that people pay for this shit, it's lower than fortunetelling, psychics, and mediums.
 
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