You Can Learn How To Be Happy, College Class Proves

BRISTOL, United Kingdom — Can happiness be obtained — by learning about it in school? The University of Bristol’s Science of Happiness course, which launched in 2018, is helping answer that question. Not your typical college class, the innovative course features absolutely no tests or work. Instead it focuses on teaching students what the latest peer-reviewed studies in psychology and neuroscience suggest really makes people happy. Now, the research team behind that class has released a new study reporting it really is possible to learn how to be happy.

Of course, there is a catch. Happiness is far from a “one and done” endeavor. Long-term joy in life requires ongoing practice and dedication.

Thanks to their course, researchers had already established that teaching students about the latest scientific studies focusing on happiness results in a notable improvement in well-being. During this latest project, they took things a step further. Their work shows that increases in well-being among enrolled students are ultimately short-lived — unless individuals keep up with the evidence-informed habits taught during the course (gratitude, exercise, meditation, or journaling) over the long haul.

“It’s like going to the gym – we can’t expect to do one class and be fit forever. Just as with physical health, we have to continuously work on our mental health, otherwise the improvements are temporary,” explains senior study author Professor Bruce Hood.

Redhead woman happy, smiling
Happiness can be learned, but it’s up to the student to always put all the tools into practice. (© Prostock-studio – stock.adobe.com)

Happiness Education Works

Students who took the happiness course reported a 10 to 15 percent improvement in well-being. However, only those who continued implementing what they learned during the course reported sustained improved well-being upon being surveyed again two years later.

This project is the first ever to track the well-being of students who had enrolled in a happiness course long after the class ended.

“This study shows that just doing a course – be that at the gym, a meditation retreat or on an evidence-based happiness course like ours – is just the start: you must commit to using what you learn on a regular basis,” Prof. Hood says in a media release. “Much of what we teach revolves around positive psychology interventions that divert your attention away from yourself, by helping others, being with friends, gratitude or meditating. “This is the opposite of the current ‘selfcare’ doctrine, but countless studies have shown that getting out of our own heads helps gets us away from negative ruminations which can be the basis of so many mental health problems.”

Prof Hood recently condensed the Science of Happiness course into a new book, released earlier this month. The Science of Happiness: Seven Lessons for Living Well’ details an evidence-informed roadmap to better wellbeing.

Meanwhile, here are a few more surprising tidbits from the Science of Happiness course:

  • Talking to strangers makes us happier, despite most people shying away or even dreading such encounters.
  • Social media is not bad for everyone all the time, but it can be bad for those who focus on their reputation.
  • Loneliness impacts our health by impairing the immune system.
  • Optimism increases life expectancy.
  • Giving gifts to others activates the reward centers in our brain – in many cases providing more happiness than spending money on oneself.
  • Sleep deprivation impacts how well others like us.
  • Walking in nature deactivates part of the brain related to negative rumination, associated with depression.
  • Kindness and happiness show a correlation.

The study is published in Higher Education.

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About the Author

John Anderer

Born blue in the face, John has been writing professionally for over a decade and covering the latest scientific research for StudyFinds since 2019. His work has been featured by Business Insider, Eat This Not That!, MSN, Ladders, and Yahoo!

Studies and abstracts can be confusing and awkwardly worded. He prides himself on making such content easy to read, understand, and apply to one’s everyday life.

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Comments

  1. Since time immemorial, cults have been teaching happiness. It’s their foundational principle: if you join the cult and perform their song and dance, you will always be happy and never be sad. This is, of course, lunacy. A lot of very good (actual) science has shown that sadness has functionality. It is the logical outcome to a wide range of situations in which things don’t go our way, from failing to achieve a promotion to a relationship breakup to the death of someone we love. Even if we can skip the “being sad” part of our reaction to these events, the (actual) science suggests that the emotions behind these events don’t simply disappear. They get tucked away, build up, eventually calcify, and stay with us as latent, unprocessed trauma FOREVER. As humans, we need to feel sad when things don’t go our way. It is part and parcel to our ability to feel happiness that we also feel sadness. When you think about it, do you really want the ability to feel happy when your significant other dies? Does that respect what they meant to you?

  2. Proving, some of the most unhappy people – are on the LEFT (WOKE). The crowd that has turned “victimhood” into a religion. It’s hard to have gratitude when all you think about is how someone else has wronged you. Social justice on steroids.

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