Posts tagged as:

world

Ce mois-ci, le bonheur était à l’honneur grâce à la croisée des blogs. Un grand nombre de blogueurs ont participé et je les en remercie. D’autres ont répondu à la fatidique question « Qu’est-ce que le bonheur ? » devant ma caméra.

YouTube Preview Image

Voici un petit tour d’horizon des contributions :

Julien de World Emotions nous fait un exposé des fondements du bonheur basé sur quelques études de la psychologie positive. De manière didactique, il rappelle que le bonheur est en partie génétique ou lié aux conditions mais qu’une part importante peut être travaillée par des activités intentionnelles.

Max de Blog Homme rappelle les 3 piliers du bonheur énoncés par Martin Seligman, le fondateur de la psychologie positive, lors de son passage à TED.

Jérôme de Pourquoi entreprendre se penche sur une étude de l’APCE qui met l’accent sur le bonheur d’entreprendre puisque les entrepreneurs semblent être comme on dit en anglais « a happy crowd »

Isabelle de Idées blog sur la vie aborde le sujet du bonheur au travail. Elle rêve d’un monde non plus centré sur la productivité et la rentabilité mais sur l’humain. L’amorce de ce rêve c’est l’entrepreneuriat social qui donne du sens au travail.

Pour David de Etre Riche, le bonheur se chante et parle d’un moment très particulier.

Sylvie de Job avec vue partage avec nous une fable qu’un tunisien lui a racontée. Un homme malheureux gravit une montagne et rencontre son bonheur. Une histoire qui fait réfléchir : que comprendre ?

Sophie de Esprit de succès pose la question : vaut-il mieux chercher le bonheur ou le succès ? Lequel est l’œuf, lequel est la poule ? Heureusement, les études sur le sujet nous ouvrent des pistes.

Carole Perle de Futur actuel nous offre un poème à fleur de peau, une dentelle de bulles, un hommage à la vie.

Joanne Tatham de Vie Simple nous parle du bonheur dans l’instant, la sensation. Reconnaître la présence du bonheur par la légèreté ressentie. Puis faire confiance à l’intuition, à soi.

Gregory de Deviendra grand rappelle un premier pas simple et efficace pour ceux qui veulent inviter le bonheur dans leur vie : souriez.

Nicolas Pène du blog éponyme nous parle de capital bonheur et comment la thésaurisation se fait de l’intérieur.

Anaïs de Jobmachine nous dit : soyons positifs, décidons d’être heureux et créons un cercle vertueux car le bonheur ne dépend pas des facteurs extérieurs.

Monalisa de Bonheur pour les nuls nous fait voyager dans les visions du bonheur à travers les ages.

Sébastien de Bonnetblanc pose la question de comment être heureux au travail. Sa philosophie se rapproche de celle de Confucius “Choisissez un travail que vous aimez et vous n’aurez pas à travailler un seul jour de votre vie”

Sam de Sam… but different nous propose de faire un pas en arrière et de regarder le chemin parcouru ces derniers mois. A bas le pessimisme!

Jean-Philippe de Révolution Personnelle parle du bonheur à tout prix dans la société. Le bonheur ne va pas sans son pendant, le malheur. Il nous rappelle de chercher l’équilibre, le réalisme. Le bonheur c’est maintenant, dans les choses simples.

J’en profite pour vous faire remarquer le logo de « Aidons le Japon » dans la colonne à droite de ce blog. Jean-Philippe vit à Tokyo et est au cœur du cataclysme japonais. En échange d’un don à la croix rouge, il offre des ressources (livres, vidéos) créées par des blogueurs.

Voilà ainsi s’achève la croisée des blog de Mars. Je passe le témoin à Franck de Papablogueur.

{ 2 comments }

Can happiness be measured?

by Joanna on 15/10/2009

When I was younger, I studied Economics at the University. I had to use esoteric terms, complicated theories, hypothesis “all things being equal”, going from micro to macro… I felt I had to understand a monster created by us but not for us.

We have to feed the giant to maybe have a chance to see him do what we want him to do. The pulse of the beast: the GDP. But didn’t we develop all those tools to have a better life? Is it working?  What’s the point of all that if human wellbeing is not in the center of our economics?

A small but famous country, Bhutan, is showing us a new way. Bhutan is Famous for it’s measurement of gross national happiness instead of GDP. But measuring happiness is a first step and doesn’t mean that the country is the country of happiness. A wave of suicide has been reported as a consequence of modernization and weaker family links. 

Measuring happiness video by New York Times

But can we really measure happiness?

Let me introduce you to my friend Gilles who is passionate about emotions and founded an emotion based city guide: Sencities. He is working with specialists in the field of emotions and introduced me to Florent from the Lab LUTIN (Imp in French). They pluged me on a machine that took several data like my heartbeat, my eyes movements and my breathing. The lab is studying and measuring our emotions for industrial purpose, in this lab it’s specifically for the videogame industry but we can easely imagine that it could be used to measure happiness eventhough for the moment they can’t make the difference between anger and happiness for example.


I tried an other machine/gadget/tool that claims it can raise your happiness level: hearthmath. It  helps you monitor your emotions and through exercices coordinate your brain and your heart. It’s called coherence.

Technology is trying to measure happiness but on a world level it seems that happiness became a hot subject. Even the very famous social network Facebook launched an analysis of our happiness level using keywords in users status. Learn more about it with this article or this video.

But in the end do we need so many criterias to measure happiness?

In Hypertension and Happiness across Nations , David Blanchflower and Andrew Oswald measured blood-pressure of 15,000 randomly sampled individuals from 16 countries. They compared well-being with high blood pressure and found evidence that suggests that happier nations report fewer blood-pressure problems. It matched happiness measurements that were made with a simple scale of subjective happiness.

This other study “examined the accuracy of measuring happiness by a single item (Do you feel happy in general?) answered on an 11-point scale (0-10). Its temporal stability was 0.86. The correlations between the single item and both the Oxford Happiness Inventory (OHI; Argyle, Martin, & Lu, 1995; Hills & Argyle, 1998) and the Satisfaction with Life Scale (Diener, Emmons, Larsen, & Griffin, 1985; Pavot & Diener, 1993) were highly significant and positive, denoting good concurrent validity. Moreover, the single item had a good convergent validity because it was highly and positively correlated with optimism, hope, self-esteem, positive affect, extraversion, and self-ratings of both physical and mental health. Furthermore, the divergent validity of the single item has been adequately demonstrated through its significant and negative correlations with anxiety, pessimism, negative affect, and insomnia. It was concluded that measuring happiness by a single item is reliable, valid, and viable in community surveys as well as in cross-cultural comparisons.”

We can continue measuring cold data like money but I believe that there is space to use happiness as a legitimate indicator and driver for our society. Who’s in?

{ 1 comment }

Iphone application: Happystep

by Joanna on 17/09/2009

YouTube Preview Image

A few month ago, I had the crazy idea to do world stats on happiness. And now it’s finally live on the Appstore!!!!

You launch the application plug in your mood and discover the mood of others around you. It’s so funny to see happy and sad faces in the street you are walking in. Zoom out and the world is covered with happy faces. Then you can check you happiness level compared to your country and the world with the stats.

It’s also possible to post your mood on Twitter or facebook.

Creating an application was a totally new job for me but it’s so fun to see it out there. So if you have suggestions on how to improve it, send me a message :)

Happystep is now available at the Appstore:

appstore

If you want to develop your own Iphone application, contact me, I will give you the developper and designer contact info.

{ 8 comments }

Where is happiness when it hurts?

by Joanna on 27/08/2009

“Writing from a moment of deep sorrow.

Tonight, I am alone in Spain. I feel lost. A dear friend touched a very ancient wound. I thought it was a cleared matter, a souvenir. But set the décor, rerun the script and bad memories come haunting you. You are only a nutshell on a furious ocean.

Where is happiness in those moments?

How can someone who is writing about happiness and living it everyday can make such a deep dip? I feel like a frog with my swollen eyes. Coldplay is signing melancholic songs for me, only for me. Far from everybody, I am a lonely soul. So where is happiness when my heart feels it has been left on the side of the road?

“If you ever feel neglected

If you think that all is lost

I’ll be counting up my demons”

It’s not the first time that the same demons come knocking so what is the way to go?

First, there was rage. It took over me. I was screaming, walking all over. I could have broken everything in the flat. Rage, what a curious emotion. Rage like a feeling of omnipotence. Rage, taking back the control over matter when you are totally losing it.

Second, there was self-pity. Why, why, why me?

Third, there was the need to run away. Fourth, fifth… just because the situation, the people touched a painful spot. I thought all this was far behind. What a surprise!

That’s where happiness lies: the truth. Oh yes, I wish I could be way ahead on the road but I still have some undone business to take care of. I have no clue on how to get this past me but I know that if I don’t change my methods of coping, it will rise again. It’s with a swollen heart that I wish I will get to a place of peace to talk to my friend. I know that in these moments you can be quickly overtaken by that suffering voice.

Happiness can’t ignore suffering just like with those kids in the japanese school.

I can’t hide or avoid. There are places, moments in this life that make me question the foundations of my happiness. It seems so clear and easy and suddenly concepts are shadowed by fierce emotions. But even then I can still see the shiny person within who is now coming back to the surface.

A happy life is not a life free of pain

The next day coincidences started to knock at my door again as if life was winking at me and a new door opened. I learned a lot from that moment of despair and how your mind can focus on details to match with your internal scenario. In a world where communication is a central matter, I realize that mine shuts down in crucial moments, only to push myself in recurring stories.

I wanted to share that moment because happiness seems so obvious to me but that little shot reminded me that it will always be an ongoing process.

YouTube Preview Image

{ 0 comments }

Happiness at school

by Joanna on 30/07/2009

YouTube Preview Image

If happiness was taught at school, what would the world look like?

My friend Nathalie, author of the blog Origin.all, sent me this video about a japanese teacher.

It starts with a dialogue between the teacher and his pupills on the first day of school:

“What is the most important thing this year?

- To be happy!

- What are we here for?

- To be happy!”

Surprinsingly, there is a lot of crying in the documentary because being happy doesn’t mean avoiding pain. He is teaching the kids and the viewer that bonding, caring, empathy, trust, friendship help go through difficult time. The teacher , Toshiro Kanamori, can also be hard but in the end his goal is to show how precious life is, to guide them to principles that make a happy life.

{ 2 comments }

Happiness urgently needed

by Joanna on 04/06/2009

YouTube Preview Image

Follow the link if you can’t access the video : HOME

Today I went to the library to buy a book and I came back with five!

I went by the personal development section and discovered loads of books about happiness. It surprised me because I never realized there was so much literature on happiness.
You have to know that here, in France, people can be very cynical about happiness. Happiness is for fools or it’s a sect’s slogan. When you surf the web, most of the people writing, talking about happiness are Australian or American (it seems)(well I don’t speak Tamoul or Chinese).

But lately my beliefs are shaken. Everywhere I go, the topic comes up. Just this week, I was helping a friend at a festival and happiness was on everybody’s lips at conferences. Then a couple of days later, I was at a red light on my bike, and just there was a friend eating at a terrasse. I joined him for half an hour, only to discover that he was organizing happiness diners. They invite specialists on the subject like Ruut Veenhoven director of the World Database of Happiness and editor of the Journal of Happiness Studies and discuss.

I was in shock. A happiness tribe!

Since there is prolific information on the web about happiness (see my blogroll for exemple), I could contribute better by investigating what French have to bring to the table. I have a few people in mind and I hope that even if France is the world champion antidepressant consumer, it has the capacity to produce great happiness thinkers. To be continued…

In the meantime, he is not talking directly about happiness but he is French and I see an evident link between how we treat our planet and the fundamentals of happiness. As I exposed in a former post, when you start to investigate the subject of happiness, more stuff (when basics needs are met) is not doing the trick. Happiness doesn’t lie in having more, wasting, war, exploitation… Once every man will discover his inner happiness, the need to destroy our environment will not be the logics anymore. Well that’s what I believe but It seems I am an utopist ☺

So don’t miss this sublime movie that has been released for free in several languages for us to team up and improve the life of each one of us.

{ 0 comments }

The chemistry of happiness

by Joanna on 28/05/2009

Bretagne

<Little souvenir from my stay in Brittany where I enjoyed my peace of mind >

Our body is a machine, a fined tuned machine, an unbelievable partner. I don’t know how you see your body but its mechanics are amazing. I ask “pull tongue to little boy” (bad bad girl), “shake but on dance floor”, “take fork, bring food” and you know what, my body does it for me! But that’s only one part! Once I have enjoyed that meal, he digests it and does all the work without me asking for it or even understanding how he is doing it. I may sound foolish but it is a miraculous thing to have a body. When I think about all what my body is doing for me, I often wonder why I am so cruel to him at times.

Anyway, that’s not the subject. My point today is to explore the chemicals of the body that induce happiness.

In the synapse, the space between two neurons, two neurotransmitters have been identified to be major players in affecting our moods: serotonin and dopamine.

Dopamine acts as a pacemaker: if we have too much, we are restless; too little, we are slow.
Serotonin acts as an antidepressant. If you produce a lot of it, you have a tendency to have a positive representation of the world. However, the production of serotonin obeys to a genetic determinant.  Certain genes produce long proteins, which enables them to carry more serotonin.

But if those neurotransmitters are the key to happiness why is there a gap between the day a patient swallows his pill and the effect? Why do antidepressants reduce negative emotions, such as anxiety and fear, but do not seem to boost optimism or extroversion?  (1998 study – Brian Knutson)

In addition to the neurotransmitters, hormones would also have their say in the mechanics of happiness. Among them, endorphin is a molecule secreted into the brain, blocking the transmission of painful stimuli. That’s why sport is key to happiness since 30 minutes of exercise will increase your endorphin secretion five times.
Other hormones might have a role to play such as estrogen or testosterone.  Even if they have clues , scientists are still investigating the chemistry of happiness.

If tomorrow, the pharmaceutical industry launched a pill that would trigger all the right hormones and neurotransmitters for happiness, would you take it? Isn’t happiness also the joy of overcoming difficult times? Isn’t sadness necessary?

Imagine that one day such a pill could be used to make everything OK. A dictator, a guru, any abusive person could drive users because you are happy, happy, stupid! I really doubt that the chemistry is our way to happiness just like the Dollhouse guy said, happiness is nothing without awareness or even will.

{ 1 comment }