http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/mar/02/brain-food-activism-makes-you-happy

Brain food: does activism make you happy?
Who'd have thought it? New research shows there is a link between
being politically active and wellbeing

Aditya Chakrabortty
The Guardian,    Tuesday 2 March 2010

Marching in the drizzle against wars in far-off countries, writing
letters protesting the government's latest reactionary policy, sitting
through interminable meetings that keep sprouting Any Other Business.
It may be noble, but political activism is hardly a barrel of laughs.
And yet it makes you happier.

So find two university psychologists in new research that looks for
the first time at the link between political activity and wellbeing.
Malte Klar and Tim Kasser started by interviewing two sets of around
350 college students, both about their degree of political engagement
and their levels of happiness and optimism. Both times, they found
that those most inclined to go on a demo were also the cheeriest.

So there's a link – but can politics actually make a person happier?
In the third study, the academics took a bunch of students and divided
them up into groups. The first were encouraged to write to the
management of the college cafeteria asking for tastier food. The next
lot wrote asking the cafe to source local or Fairtrade products. They
were then tested on their wellbeing, and the group who had involved
themselves in the political debate were far and away the strongest on
the "vitality" scale: they felt more alive and enriched than those who
merely complained about the menu.

There are many fascinating aspects to this . First, the
activist-students didn't necessarily care about food ethics, but just
taking action made them feel better. Second, sending a memo is hardly
the most engaging political action – and yet it had a big impact on
those taking it. Third, the study flies in the face of the popular
wisdom that happiness resides in creature comforts and relative
affluence. Perhaps activism gives people a sense of purpose, or of
agency or just a chance to hang out with other people. Most likely it
does all of the above.

"I will fight for what I believe in until I drop dead," Barbara Castle
told this paper in 1998. "And that's what keeps you alive." Maybe the
Red Queen was on to something.


-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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