Saturday, February 19, 2011

Increase Happiness By Sharing In Sorrow: says Stanford researcher

Ace! NewsFlash

Stanford researchers have found that people think their peers are happier than they really are, and this distortion of reality can make people lonely and dissatisfied with their lives.
Scrolling through Facebook or mingling at a party, you might get the impression that other people’s lives are full of job promotions, exotic travel and successful relationships. We don’t often hear about the sad times they’re going through. That can make our own emotional struggles seem worse.
Recognizing that our peers hit rough patches more often than we realize might mitigate our melancholy, according to a new study by Stanford researchers.
Before their work, “no one had shown that people systematically underestimate how often others feel sad or upset,” said BenoĆ®t Monin, associate professor of organizational behavior and of psychology and a co-author of the study published in December in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
This misconception is linked to loneliness and unhappiness, according to the researchers.
“When you think everyone else is having fun, you think your life is not that great,” Monin said. “So perceptions – even erroneous ones – matter a great deal.”
Part of the problem is that negative emotions – like feeling sad, stressed or lonely – aren’t usually displayed in public settings. For most of us, a night out with friends is better than a night in with the remote, so we tend to be happier when spending time with our pals. But even if people are in a rough spot, say from relationship or financial woes, happy hour is no time to bring up bad news.
The result is that “people look at their friends’ smiles in social situations and think they’re always happy,” said Alex Jordan, the study’s first author, a recent psychology doctoral graduate, now a postdoctoral fellow at Dartmouth College.
To confirm the difficulty of knowing when your friends are feeling down, the researchers surveyed college students about their emotional experiences and how often they put feelings like laughing or crying on public display. They also asked how often emotional feelings were shared with friends. Negative emotions were nearly twice as likely to occur in private compared to positive emotions, and three times more likely to be intentionally hidden from others.
The results suggest that “you can’t take a happy face at face value,” Monin said.
In another study, participants were asked how often they experienced negative and positive emotional experiences, like arguing with a friend or having fun at a party. They were also asked to estimate how often their peers experienced the same types of emotions.
Most participants underestimated the prevalence of their peers’ negative emotional experiences and overestimated the prevalence of their positive ones.
These misperceptions occurred even among close friends. Participants in their first semester of college recorded their emotional experiences in private online diaries for 10 weeks. The participants also had three friends judge and describe how happy or sad they seemed. And time after time, those friends thought the participants were happier than they truly were.
Such emotional miscommunications might not seem like a problem, especially if you favor the “fake it until you make it” credo. However, our perceptions of the happiness of others may influence our own emotional states.
Based on their conclusions, Jordan and Monin have some suggestions for increasing happiness.
“It may be useful to remember that you aren’t as alone as you think,” Jordan said. “You’re probably not aware of the many challenges your peers are facing.”
So cry on friends’ shoulders and let them return the favor – chances are they’ve got some bad news to share also. And it might do you good to hear about it.

 Los Altos T.C. 15 Feb 2011

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