Blasphemer!I know for a fact that I have too much "stuff" in my life and would likely be happier with less clutter and more space than I am with owning dozens of fishing rods.
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Blasphemer!I know for a fact that I have too much "stuff" in my life and would likely be happier with less clutter and more space than I am with owning dozens of fishing rods.
To be fair, this study wasn't saying "there aren't any universal happiness activities". It was saying along the lines of "the methodology that has been used in these studies showing how great X activity is for happiness is faulty and not up to academic standards and thus, the data doesn't prove what the studies claim. The claims might well be true, but this data isn't showing it.". The last paragraph in the article is pretty much saying that exact thing:In the case of this study, I tend to agree that there aren't any universal happiness activities, but I'm not a scientist so I don't want to let my bias steer me towards accepting incomplete data.
-------Their findings don’t necessarily mean that the strategies won’t contribute to improving people’s mood and increasing happiness, but the durability and strength of the effect isn’t clear from the existing data. “I think there is good reason to believe that they do work,” says Folk. “But I think it’s important to understand that they might not work for everybody.”
I can only imagine how complicated that work is.I'm leading a task force to improve access to mental health care in Grant County, and even what seems like the simplest question has multiple complex answers.
+1000 to this. Everything is a bell curve. So even if exercise or going out with friends or getting out into nature helps some of us, maybe even many of us, it's important to remember that there's no one solution for everyone.One thing that seems pretty easy to explain is that there are very few universal solutions to anything mental health related. What works for one of us doesn't work for all of us - usually it doesn't even work for most of us. Being self-aware about the things that actually make you happy can really help.
That's good stuff right there. Thx
As Roger Williams once sang...Generally, most people are about as happy as they decide to be.
"Stone him!!! Stone him!!!"Blasphemer!
Maybe they’re not spending the right kind of time in nature. Went camping a few weeks ago, at a place I loved for the peace and quiet as a kid back when it was a state park, and was surrounded by noisy jackasses smoking so much weed the whole place smelled like a skunk’s ass, blasting three-different sound systems from 10am to 11pm. Felt like I was in a rave, and I left the next morning. No happiness for me in that nature.Okay, that may be a bit over the top as a title. But this is an interesting article:
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Science Studies Don't Actually Support Happiness Strategies
An in-depth look at the evidence behind the most popular happiness hacks isn’t very reassuring, saying studies lack good data.time.com
In short, a vast majority of the studies done on common/popular "how to be happy" methods did not conform to accepted rigorous scientific standards. Having control groups, excluding those who could confuse results (people with depression, for example), and so on.
The methods looked at:
- expressing gratitude
- increasing social interactions
- practicing mindfulness or meditation
- spending more time in nature
- exercising
However, the article is clear in saying:
It's interesting, because I suspect many of us in this community strongly believe that time outdoors in nature improves our mental health and happiness. I would also guess that there's a lot of support for exercise and even increasing social interactions (especially after seeing what covid isolation did to so many people). But it's curious that we don't have good data to support something that we all seem to know.
Are we wrong? Or is the data gathering just terrible? I suspect it's the latter. But it's an interesting conversation.
I think we should all step up and help Josh with this problem...I'll take an 8 wt.Blasphemer!
most of happiness is in your mind and the rest is mental.
I'll take the Islanders......I think we should all step up and help Josh with this problem...I'll take an 8 wt.
It's all about his happiness, not ours.