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The State of Happiness

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Alyssa Hurst

Colorado ranks just 23rd in a nationwide index on happiness. What鈥檚 up with that?

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This article appears in the Fall听2020 issue of the 快活app Magazine. To read more stories from the magazine,听.

Everybody everywhere seeks happiness, it鈥檚 true,
But finding it and keeping it seem difficult to do.
Difficult because we think that happiness is found
Only in the places where wealth and fame abound.
And so听we go on searching in palaces of pleasure
Seeking recognition and monetary treasure,
Unaware that happiness is just a state of mind
Within the reach of everyone who takes time to be kind.
For in making others happy we will be happy, too.
For the happiness you give away returns to shine on you.

Helen Steiner Rice

This poem was propped above my bed throughout my childhood, taunting me whenever my parents would banish me to the exile of time-out. I鈥檇 stare at it and angrily recite it in an attempt to turn my frown upside down.

Even at such a young age, I had begun the life-affirming pursuit of happiness. For many of us, this amorphous concept provides the foundation for so many of life鈥檚 goals. It鈥檚 our听raison d鈥櫭猼re. In the Declaration of Independence, it鈥檚 given equal weight alongside life and liberty.

But it鈥檚 hard to pin down exactly what happiness means. Is it a state of mind, as Rice鈥檚 poem suggests? Is it the delicate balance of our brain鈥檚 chemicals? Is it $75,000 in annual income or a Porsche?

Although happiness is difficult to characterize or quantify, that hasn鈥檛 stopped everyone from poets and artists to scientists and journalists from trying. Among the latest is WalletHub, a personal finance website that, not so long ago, released its happiest states ranking.

While Colorado鈥檚 metropolitan areas frequently dominate lists naming the country鈥檚 鈥渂est鈥 cities for quality of life, WalletHub鈥檚 study ranked the state 23rd on its happiness scale. Drawing on current research, it broke happiness down into three key categories: emotional and physical well-being; work environment; and community and environment. Colorado scored high in the first two categories but ranked near the bottom in the last. According to WalletHub, this category encompasses volunteer rates, ideal weather (what about those famous 300 sunny days?), leisure time, divorce rates and safety.

Is this an accurate reflection of Colorado鈥檚 overall well-being? Can we trust the WalletHub science?

While everyone understands happiness differently, psychology researchers agree on its main ingredients, says Mark Aoyagi, 快活app professor in the .

鈥淭here are typically three components to happiness. One is the experience of pleasure, two is engagement and three is meaning,鈥 Aoyagi explains. 鈥淚 think for many of us, when we think about happiness, we just think about our present emotional state. So, if we are experiencing what would be more scientifically described as joy, then we consider ourselves to be happy. But it鈥檚 a bigger umbrella than that.鈥

As abstract as it may seem, researchers have indeed found methods to measure happiness, namely through self-report surveys. To capture overall happiness, rather than the fleeting pleasure that comes from good news or a favorite treat, Aoyagi champions an approach called experiential sampling, which asks people to rate their happiness multiple times over a long period.

This isn鈥檛 just research for research鈥檚 sake either. Happiness, it turns out, can genuinely impact our very existence, says Ruth Chao, professor and chair of counseling psychology in 快活app鈥檚 . She notes that there鈥檚 a clear correlation between happiness and long life, with those over 90 reporting notably high happiness levels.

What鈥檚 more, increased happiness has the ability to safeguard against negative mental health outcomes, according to Chao鈥檚 latest research. 鈥淗appiness could be a very important protective factor against all kinds of stress and also contributes to our positive well-being,鈥 Chao explains. 鈥淭hat means that happiness could be an important factor to reduce our depressive symptoms or anxiety.鈥

Happiness is a worthy goal for individual success and purpose, but it鈥檚 also crucial for community well-being. In fact, it鈥檚 contagious, Aoyagi says. Given that knowledge, and WalletHub鈥檚 assessment, I have to wonder where my own community, Colorado, is going wrong.

Perhaps the biggest factor is personal relationships, notes professor Howard Markman, who co-directs the听听in 快活app鈥檚 Department of Psychology. The success of personal connections, he says, can help predict happiness, and when they fail, the effects can be disastrous.

鈥淲e are evolved to connect, we are evolved to attach, we are evolved to have sex,鈥 Markman says. 鈥淔riendships, romantic relationships, relationships with your family. For each of us, it is really important for our overarching well-being to have at least one person that we are really connected to and really attached to鈥攚ho knows our story, who you can turn to.鈥

He calls this the 鈥渃urrency of connection鈥 and breaks down a healthy relationship into three components: healthy handling of conflict; positive connections like fun, support and romance; and commitment.

In Colorado, with its above-average divorce rate, people may be looking for happiness without understanding its roots. 鈥淧eople think Colorado, and they think back to John Denver and 鈥,鈥欌 Markman says. 鈥淭hey have all these really positive associations. 鈥 They think coming to Colorado is going to make them happy. Guess what? The relationship issues are still relationship issues.

鈥淲herever you go, there you are,鈥 he adds.

All of us are vulnerable to unhappiness, but the condition may be particularly acute among Colorado transplants.听听As Chao notes, many of these new Coloradans, drawn by the promise of outdoor adventure and sunshine, find themselves isolated in a new place without their familiar networks. And the COVID-19 pandemic has only intensified this effect.

The skyrocketing cost of living doesn鈥檛 help. In August 2020,听听in the median price of a single-family home. Just to make ends meet, many residents find themselves engaging in more work and less of Colorado鈥檚 famous play. So perhaps that 23rd spot on the happiness ranking is starting to make sense.

That brings us back to the pursuit of happiness鈥攖he lifelong game we each play with ourselves.

鈥淏y definition, if you鈥檙e pursuing something, you鈥檙e frustrated, which I think is the experience of a lot of people in this day and age,鈥 Aoyagi explains. 鈥淭hey are pursuing the bigger house or the better job, so they are constantly frustrated. Pursuit implies a focus on the future, and happiness can only happen in the present.鈥

His recommendation is one you鈥檝e no doubt heard before, though that doesn鈥檛 make it any less relevant: 鈥淪low down and appreciate what鈥檚 going on right now.鈥 Afterall, when did driving鈥攚indows down, favorite song on max volume鈥攂ecome commuting? And can鈥檛 commuting become driving again with the right framing?

Of course, it鈥檚 not that simple. Relationships break and end; powerful, deeply damaging inequality and racism persist; and even our genetics can make happiness more difficult to attain.

But Aoyagi offers one action known to tip the scales: Write a thank-you letter to someone meaningful in your life. Deliver it by hand. Read it out loud, face-to-face.

鈥淚 think a lot of incentives and cultural movements are shifting us to become more isolated, more individualistic, more materialistic and less about community, less about volunteering,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think we are a lot more focused on getting than giving, and one of the surest ways we know to improve happiness is to give.鈥

I guess Helen Steiner Rice was on to something.