October 2010

I recently found this wonderful little article on a website interestingly called "Tiny Buddha"! 60 Things to Be Grateful For In Life by Contributor Celestine Chua _ã–We often take for granted the very things that most deserve our gratitude._㝠~Cynthia Ozick How often do you pause to appreciate what...

I recently saw an amazing statistic in which I was made aware that the best goal kicker in my local football competition (the NRL) kicked approximately 80% of the goals he attempted. Now 80% is clearly not bad but this guy is a professional athlete,...

The Spoils of Happiness - by David Sosa for the NY Times In 1974, Robert Nozick, a precocious young philosopher at Harvard, scooped _ã–The Matrix_ã: Suppose there were an experience machine that would give you any experience you desired. Super-duper neuropsychologists could stimulate your brain so...

by Ron Doyle for Psychology Today Hey there! You know all that news you've been hearing about that MTV/Associated Press study that says college students are stressed and obsessed about social media and technology? Guess what? It also says they're happier today than they were two...

Check out this interesting press release from Psychological Science Does thinking about time or money make you happier? A new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that people who are made to think about time plan to spend...

'Happy Coffins' Make Funerals Less Grim Come on, baby, don't fear the reaper. That's the message, not from Blue Oyster Cult, from a Singapore nonprofit that recently revealed a series of coffins featuring fanciful designs and festooned with cheery slogans, such as "Say hello to my...

From OnePowerfulWord In the last few years, psychologists and researchers have been digging up hard data on a question previously left to philosophers: What makes us happy? Researchers like the father-son team Ed Diener and Robert Biswas-Diener, Stanford psychologist Sonja Lyubomirsky, and ethicist Stephen Post have...

We often say yes because we want to make others happy and are afraid to admit we aren't superhuman. Learn to say no, advises Marshall Goldsmith What kills happiness? It's usually a series of simple little things, like saying yes too much when you really should...

Most of us have thought, 'If only I could win the lottery, then I'd be happy forever.' But according to one of the first studies to look at long-term happiness, major life events, like a sudden cash windfall, are not what make us happy, rather,...

by Stephen Lunn for The Australian THE delightfully (or, depending on your political bent, dangerously) goofy ex-AFL footballer turned politician Justin Madden has one of the best titles going around as Victoria's Minister for the Respect Agenda. But if some Melbourne researchers have their way, his...