Meaning Is Healthier Than Happiness
People who are happy but have little-to-no sense of meaning in
their lives have the same gene expression patterns as people who are enduring
chronic adversity.
EMILY ESFAHANI SMITHAUG 1 2013, 8:00 AM ET
For at least the last decade, the happiness
craze has been building. In the last three months alone, over 1,000 books on
happiness were released on Amazon, including Happy Money, Happy-People-Pills For
All, and, for those just starting out, Happiness for Beginners.
One of the consistent claims of books like these
is that happiness is associated with all sorts of good life outcomes,
including — most promisingly — good health. Many studies
have noted the connection between
a happy mind and a healthy body — the happier you are, the better
health outcomes we seem to have. In a meta-analysis (overview) of 150 studies
on this topic, researchers put it like this: “Inductions of well-being lead to
healthy functioning, and inductions of ill-being lead to compromised health.”
Being happy is about feeling good. Meaning is derived from
contributing to others or to society in a bigger way.
But a large new study, just
published in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences(PNAS)
challenges the rosy picture. Happiness may not be as good for the body as
researchers thought. It might even be bad.
Of course, it’s important to first define happiness.
A few months ago, I wrote a piece called “There’s More to Life
Than Being Happy” about a psychology study that
dug into what happiness really means to people. It specifically explored the
difference between a meaningful life and a happy life.
It seems strange that there would be a
difference at all. But the researchers, who looked at a large sample of people
over a month-long period, found that happiness is associated with
selfish “taking” behavior and that having a sense of meaning in life is
associated with selfless “giving” behavior.
"Happiness without meaning characterizes a
relatively shallow, self-absorbed or even selfish life, in which things go
well, needs and desire are easily satisfied, and difficult or taxing
entanglements are avoided," the authors of the study wrote. "If
anything, pure happiness is linked to not helping others in need.” While being
happy is about feeling good, meaning is derived from contributing to others or
to society in a bigger way. As Roy Baumeister, one of the researchers, told me,
"Partly what we do as human beings is to take care of others and
contribute to others. This makes life meaningful but it does not necessarily
make us happy.”
The new PNAS study also sheds light on the
difference between meaning and happiness, but on the biological level. Barbara
Fredrickson, a psychological researcher who specializes in positive emotions at
the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and Steve Cole, a genetics and
psychiatric researcher at UCLA, examined the self-reported levels of happiness
and meaning in 80 research subjects.
Meaning was defined as an orientation to something bigger than the
self.
Happiness was defined, as in the earlier study,
byfeeling good. The researchers measured happiness by asking subjects
questions like “How often did you feel happy?” “How often did you feel
interested in life?” and “How often did you feel satisfied?” The more strongly
people endorsed these measures of “hedonic well-being,” or pleasure, the higher
they scored on happiness.
Meaning was defined as an orientation to
something bigger than the self. They measured meaning by asking questions like
“How often did you feel that your life has a sense of direction or meaning to
it?”, “How often did you feel that you had something to contribute to
society?”, and “How often did you feel that you belonged to a community/social
group?” The more people endorsed these measures of “eudaimonic
well-being” — or, simply put, virtue — the more meaning
they felt in life.
After noting the sense of meaning and happiness
that each subject had, Fredrickson and Cole, with their research colleagues,
looked at the ways certain genes expressed themselves in each of the
participants. Like neuroscientists who use fMRI scanning to determine how
regions in the brain respond to different stimuli, Cole and Fredrickson are
interested in how the body, at the genetic level, responds to feelings of
happiness and meaning.
Cole’s past work has linked various kinds of
chronic adversity to a particular gene expression pattern. When people feel
lonely, are grieving the loss of a loved one, or are struggling to make ends
meet, their bodies go into threat mode. This triggers the activation of a
stress-related gene pattern that has two features: an increase in the activity
of proinflammatory genes and a decrease in the activity of genes involved in
anti-viral responses.
“You have a forward-looking immune system,”
Fredrickson told me, “If you have a long track record of adversity, it prepares
you for bacterial infections. For our ancestors, loneliness and adversity were
associated with bacterial infections from wounds with predators and fights with
conspecifics.” On the other hand, if you are doing well and having a lot of
healthy social connections, your immune system shifts forward to prepare you
for viruses, which you’re more likely to contract if you're interacting with a
lot of people.
What does this have to do with happiness?
Cole and Fredrickson found that people who are
happy but have little to no sense of meaning in their
lives — proverbially, simply here for the party — have the
same gene expression patterns as people who are responding to and enduring
chronic adversity. That is, the bodies of these happy people are preparing them
for bacterial threats by activating the pro-inflammatory response. Chronic
inflammation is, of course, associated with major illnesses like heart disease
and various cancers.
“Empty positive emotions” — like the
kind people experience during manic episodes or artificially induced euphoria
from alcohol and drugs — ”are about as good for you for as
adversity,” says Fredrickson.
It’s important to understand that for many
people, a sense of meaning and happiness in life overlap; many people score
jointly high (or jointly low) on the happiness and meaning measures in the
study. But for many others, there is a dissonance — they feel that
they are low on happiness and high on meaning or that their lives are very high
in happiness, but low in meaning. This last group, which has the gene expression
pattern associated with adversity, formed a whopping 75 percent of study
participants. Only one quarter of the study participants had what the
researchers call “eudaimonic predominance” — that is, their sense of
meaning outpaced their feelings of happiness.
This is too bad given the more beneficial gene
expression pattern associated with meaningfulness. People whose levels of
happiness and meaning line up, and people who have a strong sense of meaning
but are not necessarily happy, showed a deactivation of the adversity stress
response. Their bodies were not preparing them for the bacterial infections
that we get when we are alone or in trouble, but for the viral infections we
get when surrounded by a lot of other people.
Fredrickson’s past research,
described in her two books, Positivity and Love 2.0,
has mapped the benefits of positive emotions in individuals. She has found that
positive emotions broaden a person’s perspective and buffers people against
adversity. So it was surprising to her that hedonistic well-being, which is
associated with positive emotions and pleasure, did so badly in this study
compared with eudaimonic well-being.
“It’s not the amount of hedonic happiness that’s
a problem,” Fredrickson tells me, “It’s that it’s not matched by eudaimonic
well-being. It’s great when both are in step. But if you have more hedonic
well-being than would be expected, that’s when this [gene] pattern that’s akin
to adversity emerged.”
The terms hedonism and eudaimonism bring to mind
the great philosophical debate, which has shaped Western civilization for over
2,000 years, about the nature of the good life. Does happiness lie in feeling
good, as hedonists think, or in doing and being good, as Aristotle and his
intellectual descendants, the virtue ethicists, think? From the evidence of
this study, it seems that feeling good is not enough. People need meaning to
thrive. In the words of Carl Jung, “The least of things with a meaning is worth
more in life than the greatest of things without it.” Jung’s wisdom certainly
seems to apply to our bodies, if not also to our hearts and our minds.
Comments
Post a Comment