What Is Positive Psychology - Sandip Roy
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What Is Positive Psychology - Sandip Roy

Positive psychology focuses on positive states, positive traits, and positive institutions:

  • Positive states mean feeling great, feeling grateful, feeling proud, feeling alive.

  • Positive traits mean character, and also things like talents and interests that we consider to be positive characters, along with grit, self-control, kindness, sense of humor.

  • Positive institutions indicate our schools, our religious places, our sports teams, our cultural traditions, the things that really support us in feeling good and being good.

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The 10 Vital Happiness Rules - Atalanta Beaumont
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The 10 Vital Happiness Rules - Atalanta Beaumont

The most important thing to realize about being happy is that it is “how” not “what.” Things will not make you happy. Affluenza—coined as the dogged pursuit of “more”—is particularly prevalent in Western societies and will often be pursued at the risk of “overload, debt, and anxiety.” An awareness of this behavior can stop us from falling into its clutches—more does not make people happy.

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Stop Preaching Happiness, Gratitude, and Positive Affirmations - Michelle P. Maidenberg Ph.D., MPH, LCSW-R, CGP
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Stop Preaching Happiness, Gratitude, and Positive Affirmations - Michelle P. Maidenberg Ph.D., MPH, LCSW-R, CGP

Our negativity bias and challenge with staying in the present moment compels many of us to regret, fear, worry, and spiral into thinking and feeling negatively.

It leaves in its path individuals who feel as if there is something fundamentally wrong with them. Those who become sad, frustrated, and disappointed because they cannot rid themselves of thoughts and feelings that they perceive as getting in their way, no matter how hard they try.

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Positive Psychology Takes a New Look at Happiness
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Positive Psychology Takes a New Look at Happiness

PP2.0 rests on the four pillars of virtue, meaning, resilience, and well-being rather than on the single criterion of happiness. You may not be “happy” right now, but you can still feel your life has meaning and that you have the inner strength to cope with the challenges that come your way.

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Don’t Wish for Happiness. Work for It. - Arthur C. Brooks
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Don’t Wish for Happiness. Work for It. - Arthur C. Brooks

In his 1851 work American Notebooks, Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote, “Happiness in this world, when it comes, comes incidentally. Make it the object of pursuit, and it leads us a wild-goose chase, and is never attained.” This is basically a restatement of the Stoic philosophers’ “paradox of happiness”: To attain happiness, we must not try to attain it.

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How to Be Happy: A Surprising Lesson on Happiness From an African Tribe - James Clear
Be Happy, Ubuntu Tom North Be Happy, Ubuntu Tom North

How to Be Happy: A Surprising Lesson on Happiness From an African Tribe - James Clear

“Africans have a thing called ubuntu. We believe that a person is a person through other persons. That my humanity is caught up, bound up, inextricably, with yours. When I dehumanize you, I dehumanize myself. The solitary human being is a contradiction in terms. Therefore you seek to work for the common good because your humanity comes into its own in community, in belonging.”

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The Happiness Ruse - Cody Delistraty
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The Happiness Ruse - Cody Delistraty

This imperative to avoid being – even appearing – unhappy has led to a culture that rewards a performative happiness, in which people curate public-facing lives, via Instagram and its kin, composed of a string of ‘peak experiences’ – and nothing else. Sadness and disappointment are rejected, even neutral or mundane life experiences get airbrushed out of the frame. It’s as though appearing unhappy implies some kind of Protestant moral fault: as if you didn’t work hard enough or believe sufficiently in yourself.

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Excelling at the School of Happiness - Robert Puff Ph.D.
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Excelling at the School of Happiness - Robert Puff Ph.D.

  • Each individual is responsible for determining whether their own life is going well.

  • A happy life looks different depending on the person, often involving a combination of self-improvement, helping others, and seeking happiness.

  • People tend to be happier when they let go of unrealistic expectations about how life should be and focus on the things they can control.

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Choosing Happiness - Kristen Fuller, M.D.
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Choosing Happiness - Kristen Fuller, M.D.

  • How many times have you told yourself, “I just want to be happy?”

  • There is a plethora of research about the science of happiness, and results conclude that each one of us can work towards the goal of happiness. But what does it exactly mean to “be happy?”

  • Is happiness a fleeting emotion or a state of mind?

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