Are you happy?
Are you successful?
If you answered yes to both, which came first...happiness or success?
In a recent study detailed in December's issue of the Psychological Bulletin, published by the American Psychological Association, scientists reviewed 225 studies involving 275,000 people and found that
chronically happy people are in general more successful in their
personal and professional lives. Check out "Happiness Buys Success". The study details:
"When people feel happy, they tend to feel confident, optimistic, and energetic and others find them likable and sociable," said Sonja Lyubomirsky of the University of California, Riverside. "Happy people are thus able to benefit from these perceptions."
Previous research has often assumed that success and accomplishments bring happiness, Lyubomirsky and her colleagues write. "We found that this isn't always true," Lyubomirsky said. "Positive affect is one attribute among several that can lead to success-oriented behaviors. Other resources, such as intelligence, family, expertise and physical fitness, can also play a role in peoples' successes."
Among the good things that come from happiness: positive perceptions of self and others, sociability, creativity, a strong immune system, and effective coping skills.
"Happy people are more likely than their less happy peers to have fulfilling marriages and relationships, high incomes, superior work performance, community involvement, robust health and even a long life," Lyubomirsky said.
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