From: Eric Barker <[email protected]>

Welcome to the Barking Up The Wrong Tree 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=9ac108a298&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 weekly update for March 27th, 2016.


This Is The Most Inspiring Way To Be Happier And More Motivated

Click here to read the post on the blog 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=0eb9b17dea&e=7ce02a4cc4>
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<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=dd793bcc5c&e=7ce02a4cc4>

We all wanna be happy, right? But I have a little surprising, unhappy news 
about happiness -- it can be selfish. Here's what one study showed 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=d28ff4e3e0&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

Our findings suggest that happiness is mainly about getting what one wants and 
needs, including from other people or even just by using money... Happiness 
went with being a taker more than a giver, while meaningfulness was associated 
with being a giver more than a taker.

So happiness and goodness can be separate. There's the "pleasure" type of 
happiness that comes from just eating ice cream but then there's the warm kind 
that comes from helping friends.

What kind of happy do we want to be? And which one, in the end, is better?

One researcher found out and he did it in the craziest way possible: he started 
by studying what disgusts us. He looked at things that were universally morally 
offensive -- and learned a few things you and I need to know to be truly happy.

Go down this rabbit hole with me, won't you?


Elevation Isn't Just For Elevators

NYU professor Jonathan Haidt was studying moral disgust. He found all religions 
have a notion of purity and pollution. Now discussions about morality and 
science don't usually get along too well but he thought there was something 
here worth digging into.

He found we all seem to be wired for moral disgust. Ask people to put on a 
jacket worn by a serial killer and many just won't do it. Irrational? Yes. But 
they still balk. It felt icky.

Haidt found this with a number of morally disgusting things that wouldn't 
actually hurt you or anyone else.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=fdb885ca04&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

When cross-examined, participants often dropped these post-hoc reasons, yet did 
not change their minds. Instead they became “morally dumbfounded”— that is, 
they had strong moral intuitions that an action was wrong, and they were 
shocked to find that they could not find reasons to support their intuitions.

But this made Haidt think: if we all have negative moral emotions, shouldn't 
the opposite exist too? Universal positive moral emotions? And after some 
research he found they did exist.

When we see others do morally good things like helping an old woman or donating 
to charity it can inspire a deeper and different type of happiness. He called 
it "elevation."

And it was physically distinct from the ice cream/pleasure happiness. People 
felt different when they experienced elevation than mere pleasure. They got 
warm, tingly feelings.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=d68dc91e2f&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

In both studies we found that participants in the elevation conditions reported 
different patterns of physical feelings and motivations when compared to 
participants in the happiness and other control conditions. Elevated 
participants were more likely to report physical feelings in their chests, 
especially warm, pleasant, or “tingling” feelings, and they were more likely to 
report wanting to help others, to become better people themselves, and to 
affiliate with others.

Other studies were done around the world. It seemed to be universal. Elevation 
wasn't just "feeling nice" -- people said it moved their hearts.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=d835b3cd3c&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

In 1998 Yuki Amano, a Japanese American student working with me, conducted 
similar interviews with 15 people from varied backgrounds in Japan. She found 
that informants were emotionally responsive to the good deeds of others in ways 
that resembled the responses of Americans and Indians. Many of the interviews 
revolved around Japanese words for heart (kimochi, kokoro) and for times when 
the heart is moved (kandou).

But here's where it gets really interesting: elevation didn't just make people 
feel better -- it motivated people to be better. It changed their behavior. In 
a study called "Witnessing excellence in action" the researchers reported:

Elevation led to higher reports (compared to joy or amusement) of motivations 
to do good things for other people, become a better person oneself, and emulate 
the virtuous role model more generally.

And they did go on to help others. A study titled, "Elevation predicts 
domain-specific volunteerism 3 months later"... well, it showed exactly that.

When your boss gives you a compliment, you feel good. That's pleasure. But what 
about leaders that really inspire their employees?

Yup, that's elevation again. A leader's actions spoke louder than their words. 
Another study by Haidt showed:

We found that leaders’ interpersonal fairness and self-sacrifice are powerful 
elicitors of elevation, and that this emotion fully mediates leaders’ influence 
on followers’ organizational citizenship behavior and affective organizational 
commitment.

And yet another study 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=1a69991132&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 showed one group of new mothers a clip of a musician thanking his mentor. The 
second group of moms watched some Jerry Seinfeld comedy. Both made them 
happier. But which one made the moms more likely to hug their kids?

The first one. It elevated them.

(To learn the four rituals neuroscience says will make you happy, click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=ade4ec2833&e=7ce02a4cc4>.)

So how do we not just get happy but make sure we get elevated? (Or as the theme 
song from "The Jeffersons" goes, how do we start “Movin’ on up 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=9dd478f8d0&e=7ce02a4cc4>”?)
 Here are four ways from the research:


1) Watch An Inspiring Movie

I figure we’ll start simple. Yup, watching movies can cause elevation. (Whoever 
thought Netflix would make you a better person?)

But not any movie will do -- it's gotta be one that powerfully shows someone 
helping others or being a moral role model.

Skeptical? You shouldn't be. In fact, this is how some of those studies were 
performed. Show people a story about Mother Theresa and they feel good and want 
to help others. "America's Funniest Home Videos" made people laugh, but didn't 
elevate them.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=51c296fe65&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

In a second study we induced elevation in the lab by showing participants 
10-minute video clips, one of which was about the life of Mother Teresa. 
(Control conditions included an emotionally neutral but interesting documentary 
and a comedy sequence from the television show “America’s Funniest Home 
Videos”).

And, yes, watching an inspiring film was enough to generate that special kind 
of happiness.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=fb886f7d6d&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

Elevated participants were more likely to report physical feelings in their 
chests, especially warm, pleasant, or “tingling” feelings, and they were more 
likely to report wanting to help others, to become better people themselves, 
and to affiliate with others.

(To learn what Harvard research says will make you happier and more successful, 
click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=d655405299&e=7ce02a4cc4>.)

Okay, watching movies is pretty easy. What's a little more challenging but much 
more powerful?


2) Write About The Good Moments

Thinking nice thoughts is good but writing is different. James Pennebaker's 
research 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=59c7c2b15b&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 has shown that when we write about difficult things in our lives it can help 
us cope better.

And when you scribble about doing good things or seeing moral things, boom -- 
you can get to elevation.

In the study, "The health benefits of writing about intensely positive 
experiences" they showed that writers not only felt happier, they also improved 
their health:

Writing about IPEs was associated with enhanced positive mood. Writing about 
IPEs was also associated with significantly fewer health center visits for 
illness, compared to controls.

(To learn the single most powerful, research-backed way to increase happiness, 
click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=fb4e5ae830&e=7ce02a4cc4>.)

I know, I know: writing can feel like homework. So what's a fun way to get 
elevated?


3) Spend Time With Good People

Got a friend who is always kind and generous to others? Spend more time with 
them. Not only will you feel good, but just like mom told you, good people do 
rub off on you.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=305a26344d&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

The perception of compassionate or courageous behavior by others causes a 
pleasurable physical feeling in the chest of movement, warmth, or opening, 
coupled with a desire to engage in virtuous action oneself.

And keep in mind the opposite is true as well. Just like mom said, don't hang 
out with the bad kids.

>From The 100 Simple Secrets of Successful People 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=1570a6fa84&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

Psychologists have observed that bad habits can spread through an office like a 
contagious disease. Employees tend to mirror the bad behaviors of their 
co-workers, with factors as diverse as low morale, poor working habits, and 
theft from the employer all rising based on the negative behavior of peers. – 
Greene 1999

When I spoke to Stanford GSB professor Bob Sutton 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=a0daa29dda&e=7ce02a4cc4>,
 he told me his #1 piece of advice to students was this:

When you take a job take a long look at the people you’re going to be working 
with — because the odds are you’re going to become like them, they are not 
going to become like you.

(To learn the lazy way to an awesome life, click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=0b3155b3c1&e=7ce02a4cc4>.)

And what's the single best way to not only be happy, but to become "elevated"?


4) Do Good To Feel Good

UVA professor Timothy Wilson, author of Redirect: The Surprising New Science of 
Psychological Change 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=f3d4236859&e=7ce02a4cc4>,
 talks about 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=5b0abad64c&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 how doing good makes us become good:

It capitalizes on the tried-and-true psychological principle that our attitudes 
and beliefs often follow from our behaviors, rather than precede them. As Kurt 
Vonnegut famously wrote, “We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful 
about what we pretend to be.” People who do volunteer work, for example, often 
change their narratives of who they are, coming to view themselves as caring, 
helpful people.

Now money can bring pleasure, right? But if you want to experience elevation, 
spend it on someone else 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=258e5f7f2b&e=7ce02a4cc4>.
 Research shows this actually produces more happiness than spending it on 
yourself.

>From Happy Money: The Science of Smarter Spending 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=cd79ca4e6f&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

By the end of the day, individuals who spent money on others were measurably 
happier than those who spent money on themselves — even though there were no 
differences between the groups at the beginning of the day. And it turns out 
that the amount of money people found in their envelopes — $5 or $20 — had no 
effect on their happiness at the end of the day. How people spent the money 
mattered much more than how much of it they got.

Here's the most interesting part of doing good to feel elevation: people see 
you helping others and the elevation spreads. Haidt's research shows it can 
cause an upward spiral for everyone around you:

...elevation is particularly interesting because of its power to spread, 
thereby potentially improving entire communities. If elevation increases the 
likelihood that a witness to good deeds will soon become a doer of good deeds, 
then elevation sets up the possibility for the same sort of "upward spiral" for 
a group that Fredrickson (2000) describes for the individual. If frequent bad 
deeds trigger social disgust, cynicism, and hostility toward one's peers, then 
frequent good deeds may have a type of social undoing effect, raising the level 
of compassion, love, and harmony in an entire society.

(To learn how to help others without being a martyr, check out tips from 
Wharton's Adam Grant here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=287cd08dc5&e=7ce02a4cc4>.)

Alright, you're "movin' on up." Let's round up what we've gleaned and learn 
what really makes elevation so special...


Sum Up

Here's what we learned about elevation -- the best way to be happier:
Watch inspiring movies: Seeing stories of others doing good makes you happier 
and makes you want to be good.
Write about the good moments: Thinking's nice but writing is better.
Spend time with good people: Hang out with the good kids, like mom told you.
Do good to be good: Be the one who elevates others and karma can be a very real 
thing.
"Elevation" may be a new idea to social science but the concept has been around 
a long time. Over 200 years ago, Thomas Jefferson wrote the following 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=1ec7aebe83&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

When any... act of charity or of gratitude, for instance, is presented either 
to our sight or imagination, we are deeply impressed with its beauty and feel a 
strong desire in ourselves of doing charitable and grateful acts also. On the 
contrary when we see or read of any atrocious deed, we are disgusted with its 
deformity and conceive an abhorrence of vice. Now every emotion of this kind is 
an exercise of our virtuous dispositions; and dispositions of the mind, like 
limbs of the body, acquire strength by exercise.

As we all know, there are different kind of unhappiness (anger, sadness, 
frustration, etc.) But now we've learned there are different kinds of happiness 
as well.

Jonathan Haidt recounts the words of someone talking about how even our tears 
can differ. Some come when we are sad, but much like the difference between 
happiness and elevation, tears can also mean joy.

>From Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived 
><http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=83447357fb&e=7ce02a4cc4>:

It’s the kind of tear that flows in response to expressions of courage, or 
compassion, or kindness by others... That was a tear of celebration, a tear of 
receptiveness to what is good in the world, a tear that says it’s okay, relax, 
let down your guard, there are good people in the world, there is good in 
people, love is real, it’s in our nature. That kind of tear is also like being 
pricked, only now the love pours in.

Simple pleasures are nice but seeing others do good and doing good ourselves 
can produce a more powerful type of happiness that inspires, motivates, and 
makes the world a better place.

Happiness doesn’t need to be selfish. And neither do you.


Elevate others! Please share this with friends and loved ones. Thank you!


 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=c0c545f5d8&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=4ab332495a&e=7ce02a4cc4>


2. My Top Post At Time Magazine

If you've made it this far down the email you've got some grit. Want to make 
sure your kids have that same tenacity for achieving long term goals? Click 
here: 

How to Make Sure Your Kids Have ‘Grit,’ Backed by Research 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=48d43fd379&e=7ce02a4cc4>

 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=fbb5250de3&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 
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3. Email Extras

Findings from around the internet... 

+ Want to dress for success? Here's the science. Click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=e4d528237b&e=7ce02a4cc4>.
 

+ Why are today's kids so miserable? And what's the heartwarming answer to how 
to make them happier? Click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=8f188a3007&e=7ce02a4cc4>.
 

+ When is being an anxious person a *good* thing? Click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=08433a7699&e=7ce02a4cc4>.
 

+ Miss last week's post? Here you go: How To Make Sure Your Kids Have Grit, 6 
Secrets Backed By Research 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=80ca236fdf&e=7ce02a4cc4>.
 It's my interview with Carol Dweck, originator of the idea of the "growth 
mindset". (And thanks to the awesome Adam Grant 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=51ec966c8d&e=7ce02a4cc4>
 for the introduction to her.) 

+ Why is it so hard to persuade people with facts? (Oh, tell me about it...) 
And what's a better way to convince them? Click here 
<http://bakadesuyo.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=b083212130155b748c7785081&id=322c21e5bd&e=7ce02a4cc4>.
 

+ You made it to the end of the email. You make me feel young and spritely -- 
which is especially important because today's my birthday. Happy birthday to 
me. And I hope *you* have an awesome day as well. :)

Thanks for reading!
Eric


PS: If a friend forwarded this to you, you can sign up to get the weekly email 
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