Various and Sundry: May 2006 Archives

Oops!

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I have to take it back.

Yesterday I wrote about an article in Prevention about a study done on happiness. The credit goes to Martin E. P. Seligman, PhD and his colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania. My apologies.

The article entitled "What really makes us happy" is in the February 2006 issue.

If you are interested in reading this article, it may be archived at their website www.prevention.com. The author also suggests learning what your character strengths are that create happiness at the following website: www.authentichappiness.org.

Besides displaying gratitude - "an affirmation of the goodness in one's life and the recognition that the sources of this goodness lie at least partly outside the self" - the article suggest other ways to attain happiness.

Try these this week:

Write and personally deliver a gratitude letter to someone who has been kind to you but to whom you have never adequately thanked.

Record three things that have gone well each day.

Write about your early memories every night.

Do something new or different each day that satisfy your curiousity like visit a museum, read a book on an unfamiliar subject, or research your family tree.

Create a place in your home that you can call your "awe wall". Cover it with poems, children's pictures or drawings, a beautiful picture from a magazine, favored quotations, notes from friends, and certificates of appreciation or accomplishment.

I recall a radio interview that I heard some years ago. The announcer was interviewing a prominent psychologist about depression. He asked the psychologist what he does when he feels down. I'll never forget what he said. The fastest way to feel better about the world around you and about your circumstances is to focus on others. Go out and serve the world around you. Focusing on other's needs puts ours in the necessary perspective - out of sight.

Thinking Positive

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I was reading an article in a Prevention magazine this morning that was summarizing the research on how people create happiness in their lives. The study conducted by members of the Psychology Department from my alma mater, University of Missouri-Columbia, utilized survey data from people who had gone to their website.

I'm always interested in how studies are conducted. I am curious about how researchers pick their subjects. In this case, the participants came, somewhat unwittingly, to them. I presume they were interested in happiness for some reason. Maybe they wanted more of it for themselves, or maybe they were curious about what created happiness, or even how to define happiness.

In any case, researchers asked respondents to continue further with the study asking them to try something specific each day for one week. They discovered that of all the activities that created the most happiness is a very simple practice of gratitude. That's right, identifying the things that go right, giving thanks for the things that you have, and appreciating what others have done for you.

In that vain, I'd like to create a little happiness. This weekend my husband and I made a trip to my favorite green house - a 35 minute trip to Timbuktu. I swear I don't know how people find this place! I love it because the owner knows my name and always asks me what I plan to do with the flowers I'm buying. He knows the garden pests that I've dealt with in the past and has offerred organic gardening advice because he knows that my husband and I are concerned with our environment enough to severely limit the use of chemicals. He knows his plants and he stands by his product. It's not like going to Lowe's and buying plants where not a soul knows squat about live plants. If it dies, he replaces it.

Something more . . . even if my favorite "greenhouse guy" wasn't there, I would still buy herbs. I do cook with my herbs, bundle them and use them as smudge sticks, dry them for scented pillows/sachets and bath scents, but I think the thing I love the most is just playing in my herb garden. Is there anything more intoxicating that basil and thyme? Brushing up against them releases their aromas. It's calming and . . .

. . . makes me happy.

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Various and Sundry category from May 2006.

Various and Sundry: April 2006 is the previous archive.

Various and Sundry: June 2006 is the next archive.

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