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Howard S. Friedman, Ph.D.

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Does Being Happy Improve Our Health? You Might Be Surprised

Posted: 04/02/11 12:35 PM ET

"Cheer up, watch funny shows, laugh heartily and you'll stay healthy!" It's ever-present advice, but it's wrong, wrong, wrong. We hear it all the time. If you're ill, spend a few days glued to the screen watching the exuberance of "Glee" and the laugh-out-loud comedy of "Seinfeld" reruns and, so goes the common wisdom, you'll have a speedy recovery. Or even better, stay cheery and you won't get sick in the first place. Unfortunately, there's no good scientific evidence for this sort of progression. Worse, this misconception draws attention away from the real relationships between happiness, health and long life. What does science really say?

On the face of it, the idea that an Elizabeth Edwards or any other brave person riddled with cancerous tumors could laugh away the disease -- that they would get better if only they tried really hard to cheer up -- is a form of magical thinking that is terribly implausible. Of course, someone will always offer up an example -- an anecdote of a miraculous recovery -- and there are indeed rare cases of a seemingly miraculous healing. But for every miracle, millions of brave patients succumb. Was it because they did not laugh enough?

Could good cheer open clogged arteries, release insulin to a diabetic or repair a diseased kidney? Not based on any good scientific studies that I've ever read (and I've read thousands of studies). Well, how about helping us fight the common cold, which is self-limiting, and from which almost everyone soon recovers, whether they are watching "Seinfeld," "Glee," a vampire show or "PBS NewsHour"? OK, I'll grant that perhaps a TV diet of "Grey's Anatomy," "House," and "Private Practice" might improve your medical astuteness, but that's hardly a case of cheery self-healing.

The false idea that good cheer is the key to good health arises from the very common observation that contented people are often healthy people. This is undoubtedly true. It has been documented in many ways in many studies. Of course, it is also true that healthy people tend to be happier than people careening from one health problem to another. So, is happiness causing good health, or is good health causing happiness? Most of the time, neither is correct.

Because happiness is associated with good health, some scientists looked around for causal links in human biology; that is, they searched for the hormones and blood cells that might account for this correlation. There, in plain sight for happiness researchers, were striking discoveries made by neuroscientists in the 1970s and '80s, namely the findings that the immune system can be affected by hormones associated with emotions. In fact the hormones associated with stress are a key component of immune system responses. Voilà, a light bulb went on: Maybe good cheer revs up the immune system and knocks out those nasty cancer cells and cholesterol clots! Not so fast.

There's a problem. I hate to be the one to switch off the voilà light bulb, but the evidence is slim to nonexistent that people who cheer themselves up will boost their immunity, beat back their cancers and atherosclerosis, and thereby live long, healthy lives. It's true that pieces of this process have been documented in rats, and occasionally in primates like monkeys, but I always wonder how one measures the happiness of rats! And anyway, rats do not watch "Seinfeld," and even monkeys do not watch "Glee."

So why are happy people healthier if their happiness is not affecting their health? I and my research collaborators have been looking at this issue for the past twenty years, as part of a detailed scientific study we call The Longevity Project. Following over 1,500 Americans across many decades, we have found that the same behaviors, personalities, friendships and careers that make you happy are the ones that help you stay healthy.

Happiness did not emerge as the cause of good health and long life. Instead, happiness and health were both results of certain patterns of living. We found that there are many things that you can do to simultaneously promote your happiness and your health (perhaps joining a glee club?), but laughing at your TV screen is definitely not one of them. Just as the amount of news that happens in the world every day always exactly fits the newspaper, it is also true that the links between happiness and health are not what they first seem. If you are interested in seeing the details and mapping the contours of your own life's trajectory, we provide self-quizzes and plenty of real-life examples in our book on The Longevity Project.

The striking scientific findings in The Longevity Project upend the common advice from the lands of laugh therapy, self-esteem clinics and highly indulgent parents. In fact, worrying turned out to be a very good thing. Many of the boys, girls, men and women we studied for so many years were happy and healthy because of the meaningful lives they led -- that is, lives full of dedicated work, genuine friends and dependable lifestyles. And yes, the accompanying stressful challenges were part of the secret. Laughter and pleasure from the joys of accomplishment and involvement turned out to be an indicator of good health. But watching the funniest TV shows all evening while you sit and snack is definitely not the ticket to health. "Cheer up and live long" is a dead-end myth.

Copyright © 2011 Howard S. Friedman. For more information, see the website of The Longevity Project.

 
 
 

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"Cheer up, watch funny shows, laugh heartily and you'll stay healthy!" It's ever-present advice, but it's wrong, wrong, wrong. We hear it all the time. If you're ill, spend a few days glued to the scr...
"Cheer up, watch funny shows, laugh heartily and you'll stay healthy!" It's ever-present advice, but it's wrong, wrong, wrong. We hear it all the time. If you're ill, spend a few days glued to the scr...
 
 
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Daria Boissonnas
Healing happens
02:01 PM on 04/04/2011
Causality and concurrence are difficult issues in science. We lay noobs often confuse the two.

At the bottom of most studies I've read about health and longevity, like you mentioned, is meaning. Whether you get that meaning from your spiritual outlook or by doing meaningful work, when you live with meaning, when you make a difference, when every struggle was worth it in the end -- it helps you let go of resentment, frustration, and other negativities that wear you down and make you sick.

Want a happy mind, happy heart, happy conscience, happy body? Work for what you know in your heart is the greater good. Do something positive that leaves the planet a permanently better place.
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WoodsideCraig
Author of the blog "The Weiler Psi"
12:51 PM on 04/03/2011
This whole thing is a very complex feedback loop of the complex interaction of mind and body, This allows researchers to reach different conclusions about the same data. You can take the longevity project data and just as easily say that people were healthy because happiness led them to the right lifestyle choices that produced better outcomes for them. Unhappiness often leads to bad choices.

This also dismisses the idea that there are different types of happiness: short term and long term, which might have entirely different effects on the body.

The author is not wrong, but is also not completely right in his conclusions.
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jf12
Occupying myself
09:16 AM on 04/03/2011
You may have seen this report.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/28/happy-teens-divorce-more_n_829258.html

Althoug you correctly dismiss the happy-healthy thing as one of correlation rather than causation, you don't go far enough. The "certain patterns of living" are also only merely correlated.
12:38 PM on 04/03/2011
The Longevity Project is the first and only scientific study to follow a large number of Americans intensively for their whole lives, from childhood through death. With a step by step analysis, we see what leads to what. (The book has lots of examples of this.) So it is more than correlation. You can see how childhood personality, family life, schooling, careers, stressful challenges, religious beliefs, success, marriage, and more all play a role, often in surprising ways. We believe this 8-decade study really does yield guideposts to a healthier and more fulfilling life.
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ProfessorDuh
06:38 AM on 04/03/2011
Happiness is not giggling at sitcoms or "good cheer," and of course it is associated with good health, virtually by definition. Happiness is a a mental state of well-being. Let's be precise in our terms here.
09:49 PM on 04/02/2011
There are enough difficult old people to dispel the notion that if you don't laugh you won't live long.
Chironomid
To read is human; to comprehend divine
09:18 PM on 04/02/2011
It's less about laughter per se and more about getting your life to line up with who you really are inside. I'm an intrrovert by nature. I started out in my profession in positions that jived with this - I was very happy. As I suceeded, I was thrust into more extroverted situations, and became progressively less happy. Time to adjust...
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Kristin Talbott
One should always be a little improbable.
12:03 PM on 04/03/2011
I agree...when you're living in a way that is not true to who you really are, there's a constant stress present because you're always having to put on an act in one way or another.

We all need to stop apologizing for who we really are, stop expecting others to be someone other than who they really are just to make us happy (long term it never can and in any case it's not their responsibility), and just live our lives in the most honest way we can.
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
08:22 PM on 04/02/2011
"Cheer up and live short" would do me. I've no wish to be a septugenarian, let alone any older!
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sophiemaki
08:16 PM on 04/02/2011
i am as healthy as can be......
the few times in my life i have been "happy." ...something goes wrong.
i am always on guard........and never happy. never got the "happy gene."
even when i was a little girl .i remember telling my mother , "i can/t be happy when i know people, and animals are suffering.."
because one is not "happy" does not mean one is depressed..
i have not been to a dr since my 11 year old daughter was born. (she goes, her uncle is a ped) i am healthy as can be. i will never be happy..
06:54 PM on 04/02/2011
Happiness and good cheer is not the key to having excellent health and well-being, although it is tangentially related. The real key is the creation, transfer and reception of compassion from our loved ones, friends and even those we do not know.Compassion is the key to achieving excellent health, well-being, high self-esteem and many other good things. Further, it is a win-win proposition that equally benefits both those who create and transfer compassion to others and for those that receive it. Compassion has no negatives, no unintended consequences, it is all good, all positive and all nourishment for the body and the "soul".

My good friend, KC Blair is the leading proponent of compassion theory, and, its leading advocate. He has developed a compassion theory that makes great intuitive sense, but, is at the same time very powerful in its elegance and its far-ranging impact and implications. From compassion flows love and all the good things correlated with its creation, transference and reception. It is within all of us, we can all create and transmit it to ourselves and to others, and we can all benefit from it as well.
09:10 AM on 04/03/2011
How very well said. I would like to know more about KC Blair's compassion theory.

In my experience, compassion is the wellspring from which all blessings flow.
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BannedInBoston
Everyone is entitled to my opinion.
04:28 PM on 04/02/2011
Good to hear. I've never been happier than when I stopped worrying about not being happy....
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Cody Allison
Conscious Evolution
03:33 PM on 04/02/2011
yeah...a doctor not knowing the healing power of laughter...while it's not a cure all...by any means...the right state of mind is imperative in anything and everything you do during the day. A negative attitude will definitely impact your health. Perhaps you've forgotten Dr. Patch Adams?

Gesundheit.
03:52 PM on 04/02/2011
The question is whether laughter itself is doing the healing, or whether you should be doing things like helping your friends--that bring both health and happiness. If you read the research summarized in The Longevity Project, I think you'll see that the "right state of mind" is something that can be developed step-by-step across the years, often in non-intuitive ways.
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jeanrenoir
03:31 PM on 04/02/2011
This is a wonderful post. I'm a college prof who feels lots of his students have been set up for lots of unnecessary misery by being raised, apparently, by parents determined that their little darlings stay "happy" and "positive" all the time. The result has often been lazy, complacent students who are headed for LOTS of unhappiness when they get out there in the totally unforgiving real world and don't even have the academic achievements mandatory for satisfying work, and thus start life with two strikes against them at the very foundation of what is necessary for "happy" fulfilling lives. CHARACTER and good habits--among which are rigorous, self-disciplined thinking and realism, including anticipating the WORST that can happen--along with generous portions of accidental good luck, are the keys to any happiness my students or anyone else is likely to come across on this particular planet. Tweeting won't cut it.
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Amber Berglund
Got Mashed Potato, ain't got no T-Bone
01:16 AM on 04/03/2011
You should look for work at a community college if the student attitude bothers you. It's a completely different situation when the students are working part-time jobs, and paying for classes out of their own pockets.
Wealth has a lot to do with creating that attitude...but that's what's wrong with the price of college and its inaccessiblity to the working classes, who are generally more pragmatic, if not fatalistic.
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Ranveig Elvebakk
Innovator, author and lecturer on weight and nutri
02:28 PM on 04/02/2011
Stress is known to cause illness because the brain talks to the immune system. The more positive the conversation, the better -
02:19 PM on 04/02/2011
Laughing, finding humor, enjoying - may not be the cure-all for cancer but it is a sure guarantee to make the life one does have - a heck of a lot happier. Helps going through the treatment for any disease - more acceptable. Finding laughter in life is such a valuable goal. There is absolutely no downside to finding joy. However it arrives.
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Susan Orlins
Writer and author of blog Confessions of a Worrywa
12:56 PM on 04/02/2011
I'm fascinated by this because I'm such a worrywart. Indeed, though, happiness for me is not sitting around watching Seinfeld and eating butter popcorn. I'm both happy and a worrywart. That said, would I reduce my longevity a bit if I could get rid of my worry brain? You betcha!

I try to take a look at the humorous side of worry on my blog www.confessionsofaworrywart.com.
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BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
03:15 PM on 04/02/2011
I am too. I hate admitting it but I come from a long line of worry worts! My Father made it to 85 and his mother to 83 so I guess it is not a deadly condition but still I wish I could not worry so much.
09:48 AM on 04/03/2011
My parents were worry-worts and it literally killed them. I was going in the same direction (surprise!) but happily got turned on to meditation ... a simple, western-style sitting and breathing, and it has made a huge difference in my level of happiness and my physical health as well. Ten or 15 minutes of just sitting and breathing, I can feel a headache vanish, or a stomach ache ease away. (headaches and stomach aches were my physical reactions to worrying). No altars, candles or incense, flowing robes or chanting required!