These Happiness Habit Laws Are The Best I’ve Ever Learned

There is at least one difficult thing about studying the science of happiness habit laws. It is that most people when they hear about this field of research, want to know the secret formulas.

happiness habit laws
Build happiness habits.

Have scientists discovered how these patterns work? If so, then it stands to reason that they must have also found a recipe for the magic of happiness, right?

If only it were that easy.

It’s not that formulas don’t exist. The problem is that there isn’t one formula for changing the laws of happiness habits. There are thousands. At least, in my opinion.

Individuals and habits are all different, aren’t they? Therefore, the specifics of diagnosing and changing the patterns in our happiness differ.

They differ from person to person and from behavior to behavior. That leaves lots of combinations, doesn’t it?

Giving up cigarettes is different than curbing overeating, which is different from changing how you communicate with your spouse. It is also different from how you prioritize tasks at work. What’s more, each person’s habits are driven by different cravings.

As a result, this article doesn’t contain one prescription. Rather, I hoped to deliver something else. My goal is to give a framework for understanding how happiness habits work. I’ll target a guide to experimenting with how they might change.

Some habits are easy to analyze and influence. Others are more complex and obstinate and require prolonged study.

And for others, change is a process that never fully concludes.

Let’s define habits

Habits are the small decisions you make and the actions you perform every day. According to researchers at Duke University, habits account for about 40 percent of our behaviors on any given day.

Your life today is essentially the sum of your habits. How in shape or out of shape are you? A result of your habits.

How happy or unhappy are you? A result of your habits. How successful or unsuccessful are you? A result of your habits.

What you repeatedly do is what you spend time thinking about and doing each day. It ultimately forms the person you are, the things you believe, and the personality that you portray.

Everything I write about starts with better habits. When you learn to transform your habits, you can transform your life.

Martin Seligman, the father of positive psychology, theorizes that while our genetics and environment determine 60 percent of happiness, the remaining 40 percent is up to us.

In his 2004 Ted Talk, Seligman describes three different kinds of happy lives. The first is a pleasant life, in which you fill your life with as many pleasures as you can.

The second is the life of engagement, where you find life in your work, parenting, love and leisure, and meaningful life.

The meaning of life “consists of knowing what your highest strengths are. It consists of using them to belong to and in the service of, something larger than you are.”

After exploring what accounts for ultimate satisfaction, Seligman says he was surprised.

The third is the pursuit of pleasure. His research determined that it has hardly any contribution to lasting fulfillment.

Instead, pleasure is “the whipped cream and the cherry” that adds a certain sweetness to satisfactory lives. Lives founded by the simultaneous pursuit of meaning and engagement.

Here are 16 laws of happiness habits that my research has uncovered:

Listen carefully

“When you listen you open up your ability to take in more knowledge. This is versus blocking the world with your words or your distracting thoughts,” writes David Mezzapelle, author of Contagious Optimism.

“You are also demonstrating confidence and respect for others. Knowledge and confidence is proof that you are positive about yourself. This means you are radiating positive energy.”

Good listening is a skill that strengthens relationships and leads to more satisfying experiences.

A good listener may walk away from a conversation feeling as if their presence served a purpose. This is an experience that is closely connected with increased well-being.

Maintain a positive attitude

Optimism touts plenty of health benefits, including less stress and better tolerance for pain.

 As HuffPost Healthy Living reported, longevity is often among those with heart disease. When you choose to see the silver lining, you’re also choosing health and happiness.

Seligman summed up perhaps the greatest characteristic of the optimist in one of his most acclaimed books, Learned Optimism.

Value good music

Music is powerful. So powerful, in fact, that it could match up to the anxiety-reducing effects of massage therapy. Over a three month period, researchers from the Group Health Research Institute found that patients who simply listened to music had the same decreased anxiety symptoms as those who got 10 hour-long massages.

Choosing the right tunes could be an important factor, however, as a happy or sad song can also affect the way we perceive the world. Click here for a few of our favorite mood-boosting jams.

Be mindful of goodness

Celebrating great, hard-earned accomplishments is important. However,  happy people give attention to their smaller victories, too.

“When we take time to notice the things that go right — it means we’re getting a lot of little rewards throughout the day,” Susan Weinschenk, Ph.D. stated. “That can help with our moods.”.

Appreciate small things

A meticulously swirled ice cream cone. A boundlessly waggy dog. Happy people take the time to appreciate these easy-to-come-by pleasures.

Finding meaning in the little things, and practicing gratitude for all that you do have is associated with a sense of overall gladness.

smile often
Do you smile often?

Smile often

Even if you’re not feeling so chipper, cultivating a happy thought, and then smiling about it, could up your happiness levels. This makes you more productive, according to a study published in the Academy of Management Journal.

It’s important to be genuine with your grin. The study revealed that faking a smile while experiencing negative emotions could worsen your mood.

Build resilience

According to psychologist Peter Kramer, resilience, not happiness, is the opposite of depression.

Happy people know how to bounce back from failure. Resilience is like padding for the inevitable hardship human beings are bound to face.

build resilience
Work to build resilience.
As the Japanese proverb goes, “Fall seven times and stand up eight.”

Be someone who shares

Even though there are only 24 hours in a day, positive people fill some of that time doing good for others. This does some good for the do-gooders themselves.

A long-term research project called Americans’ Changing Lives found a bevy of benefits associated with altruism.

“Volunteer work was good for both mental and physical health. People of all ages who volunteered were happier and experienced better physical health and less depression,” reported Peggy Thoits, the leader of one of the studies.

Givers also experience what researchers call “the helper’s high.” This is a euphoric state experienced by those engaged in charitable acts.

“This is probably a literal “high,” similar to a drug-induced high,” writes Christine L. Carter, Ph.D.

“The act of making a financial donation triggers the reward center in our brains. This reward center is responsible for dopamine-mediated euphoria.”

Let go of time

When you’re immersed in an activity that is simultaneously challenging, invigorating, and meaningful, you experience a joyful state called “flow.”

Happy people seek this sensation of getting “caught up” or “carried away,” which diminishes self-consciousness. It promotes the feelings associated with success.

As explained by Pursuit-of-happiness.org, “For a Flow state to occur, you must see the activity as voluntary, enjoyable, and motivating. It must require skill and be challenging. It should have clear goals toward success.”

Spend money on others

Maybe money does buy happiness.

A study published in Science found that spending money on other people has a more direct impact on happiness than spending money on oneself.

Unplug

Whether by meditating, taking a few deep breaths away from the screen, or deliberately disconnecting from electronics has advantages.

Unplugging from our hyper-connected world has proven advantages when it comes to happiness. Talking on your cell could increase your blood pressure and raise your stress levels.

Uninterrupted screen time has been linked to depression and fatigue.

Technology isn’t going away, but partaking in some digital detox gives your brain the opportunity to recharge and recover.

This is critical for increasing your resilience.

Exercise as a priority

A wise student once observed: “Exercise gives you endorphins. Endorphins make you happy.”

Exercise has been shown to ease symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress, thanks to various brain chemicals. These chemicals are released amplify feelings of happiness and relaxation.

Also, working out makes us appreciate our bodies more. One study published in the Journal of Health Psychology found that exercise improved how people felt about their bodies.

This occurred even if they didn’t lose weight or achieve noticeable improvements.

Enjoy the outside

Want to feel alive? Just a 20-minute dose of fresh air promotes a sense of vitality, according to several studies published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology.

“Nature is fuel for the soul, “ says Richard Ryan, Ph.D., the lead author of the studies.

“Often when we feel depleted, we reach for a cup of coffee, but research suggests a better way to get energized is to connect with nature.”

Enjoy laughter

You’ve heard it before: Laughter is the best medicine. In the case of The Blues, this may hold some truth.

A good, old-fashioned chuckle releases happy brain chemicals.  These chemicals, other than providing the exuberant buzz we seek, make humans better equipped to tolerate both pain and stress.

Make your laughter vivid by including what comes naturally to you. For example, you may not be able to imagine sequences of images very well, but you may excel in imagining other modalities such as smell, touch, and sound.

You may be excellent in infusing your visualization with emotional charge and great feelings. DO not feel compelled to stay within any single modality but make your laugher and imagination vivid and rich by including numerous modalities.

Your senses are wonderful tools for you to engage while unleashing the power of the imaginative mind. Make it colorful and exciting. Make your imagination your ally and your best friend.

The bottom line

Individuals and habits are all different. Therefore, the specifics of diagnosing and changing the patterns in our happiness differ. They differ from person to person and from behavior to behavior. That leaves lots of combinations.

There are many happiness prescriptions. As you have seen, there is a framework for understanding how happiness habits work.

Some habits are easy to analyze and influence. Others are more complex and obstinate and require prolonged study. And for others, change is a process that never fully concludes.

Customer engagement
Customer engagement improvements are worth the effort.

All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new ideas.

When things are not what you want them to be, what’s most important is your next step.

Test. Learn. Improve. Repeat.

Are you devoting enough energy to continually improving your continuous learning?

Do you have a lesson about making your learning better you can share with this community? Have any questions or comments to add to the section below?

Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way.

More reading on mentoring from Digital Spark Marketing’s Library:

Remarkable Lessons in Motivation Steve Jobs Taught Me

How to Create Honest Employee Trust and Empowerment

The Story and Zen of Getting Things Done

10 Positive Thinking Ideas from Peers and Mentors

Mike Schoultz is a digital marketing and customer service expert. With 48 years of business experience, he consults on and writes about topics to help improve the performance of small business. Find him on FacebookTwitter, Digital Spark Marketing, and LinkedIn.