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    HOW TO SPREAD HAPPINESS INFO PACK

    G IVING D IRECTION

    Do things for others Have goals to look forward toR ELATING R ESILIENCEConnect with people Find ways to bounce back

    E XERCISING E MOTIONTake care of your body Take a positive approach

    A PPRECIATING A CCEPTANCENotice the world aroundBe comfortable with who you are

    T RYING OUT M EANINGKeep learning new things Be part of something bigger

    Everyones path to happiness is different, but the research suggests these Ten Keysconsistently tend to have a positive impact on peoples overall happiness and well-being. Thefirst five (GREAT) relate to how we interact with the outsideworld in our daily activities*.

    The second five (DREAM) come more from inside us and depend on our attitude to life.

    Ten keys to happier livingThe Ten Keys are explained in more detail below. Each has a related question to help us think abouthow our activities and attitudes affect our well-being and the well-being of the others around us.

    G IVING Do things for othersCaring about others is fundamental to our happiness. Helping other people is not onlygood for them and a great thing to do, it also makes us happier and healthier too. Givingalso creates stronger connections between people and helps to build a happier society foreveryone. And it's not all about money - we can also give our time, ideas and energy.So if you want to feel good, do good!

    Q: What do you do to help others?

    R ELATING Connect with peopleRelationships are the most important overall contributor to happiness. People withstrong and broad social relationships are happier, healthier and live longer. Closerelationships with family and friends provide love, meaning, support and increase ourfeelings of self worth. Broader networks bring a sense of belonging. So taking action tostrengthen our relationships and create new connections is essential for happiness.Q: Who matters most to you?

    E XERCISING Take care of your bodyOur body and our mind are connected. Being active makes us happier as well as beinggood for our physical health. It instantly improves our mood and can even lift us out of a

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    depression. We don't all need to run marathons - there are simple things we can all do tobe more active each day. We can also boost our well-being by unplugging fromtechnology, getting outside and making sure we get enough sleep!Q: How do you stay active and healthy?

    A PPRECIATING Notice the world aroundEver felt there must be more to life? Well good news, there is! And it's right here in frontof us. We just need to stop and take notice. Learning to be more mindful and aware cando wonders for our well-being in all areas of life - like our walk to work, the way we eator our relationships. It helps us get in tune with our feelings and stops us dwelling on thepast or worrying about the future - so we get more out of the day-to-day.Q: When do you stop and take notice?

    T RYING OUT Keep learning new thingsLearning affects our well-being in lots of positive ways. It exposes us to new ideas andhelps us stay curious and engaged. It also gives us a sense of accomplishment and helpsboost our self-confidence and resilience. There are many ways to learn new things - not

    just through formal qualifications. We can share a skill with friends, join a club, learn tosing, play a new sport and so much more.Q: What new things have you tried recently?

    D IRECTION Have goals to look forward toFeeling good about the future is important for our happiness. We all need goals tomotivate us and these need to be challenging enough to excite us, but also achievable. Ifwe try to attempt the impossible this brings unnecessary stress. Choosing ambitious butrealistic goals gives our lives direction and brings a sense of accomplishment andsatisfaction when we achieve them.Q: What are your most important goals?

    R ESILIENCE Find ways to bounce backAll of us have times of stress, loss, failure or trauma in our lives. But how we respond tothese has a big impact on our well-being. We often cannot choose what happens to us,but we can choose our own attitude to what happens. In practice its not always easy, butone of the most exciting findings from recent research is that resilience, like many otherlife skills, can be learned.Q: How do you bounce back in tough times?

    E MOTION Take a positive approachPositive emotions like joy, gratitude, contentment, inspiration, and pride are not justgreat at the time. Recent research shows that regularly experiencing them creates an

    'upward spiral', helping to build our resources. So although we need to be realistic aboutlife's ups and downs, it helps to focus on the good aspects of any situation the glasshalf full rather than the glass half empty.Q: What are you feeling good about?

    A CCEPTANCE Be comfortable with who you areNo-one's perfect. But so often we compare our insides to other people's outsides.Dwelling on our flaws - what we're not rather than what we've got - makes it muchharder to be happy. Learning to accept ourselves, warts and all, and being kinder toourselves when things go wrong, increases our enjoyment of life, our resilience and ourwell-being. It also helps us accept others as they are.Q: What is the real you like?

    M EANING Be part of something bigger

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    People who have meaning and purpose in their lives are happier, feel more in controland get more out of what they do. They also experience less stress, anxiety anddepression. But where do we find 'meaning and purpose'? It might be our religious faith,being a parent or doing a job that makes a difference. The answers vary for each of usbut they all involve being connected to something bigger than ourselves.

    Q: What gives your life meaning?

    1. Feel good around other people.

    Back in the '60s (and by that I mean the 1660s), a Dutch scientist named Christiaan Huygens

    realized that multiple pendulums mounted on the same wall always ended up swinging in perfect

    synchrony, even when he had set them in motion at different times. This phenomenon is called

    entrainment, and in my experience humans are just as likely to fall in sync as Huygens's clocks.

    At the very least, many neuroscientists believe that our so-called mirror neurons can foster our

    ability to empathize with the emotions we observe in others. One rage-aholic can fill an entireoffice with anger, while a truly happy person can lighten the mood for everyone around her. I

    once spent several hours in a room full of large, sleeping dogs, who entrained me into such

    peace, I now count that uneventful afternoon as one of my life's highlights.

    To make someone's day, all you have to do is stay physically near her while remaining in a state

    of contentment, humor, compassion or calm. Try getting deeply happy around any loved one,

    acquaintance or stranger. Refuse to let go of your good mood. You don't have to say or do

    anything else. Really. It'll make your day to see how easily you can make someone else's. And

    before you know it, you'll be soothing entire stressed-out crowds, like the ones you find at food

    courts and matador conventions.

    2. Pretend people love you.

    One of the statements that changed my life comes from spiritual teacher Byron Katie: "When I

    walk into a room, I know that everyone in it loves me. I just don't expect them to realize it yet." I'm

    by no means certain that everyone in every room loves me, but I've found that pretending they

    do works nicely when I want to make someone's day.

    I spent much of my life wandering about armored against criticism and rejection, unaware that

    my wary defense appeared to others as inexplicable offense. And since everyone around me

    was also frightened, their defenses escalated the moment they encountered mine, which in turn

    ratcheted up to meet theirs, and so on. This emotional arms race drives people apart in every

    home, office, subway car, dentist's office, rice field and square-dancing school on Earth. But

    pretending other people love you flips the vicious cycle into a virtuous one. Imagine how you'd

    enter a public spacesay, a grocery storeif you knew without a doubt that everyone in it

    adored you. How would you move? How would you look at people? What would you say? Now

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    imagine interacting with a loved one while feeling so sure of her infinite, unconditional

    acceptance that you had no need for reaffirmation. How would you behave? You'd probably lay

    down some of your armor. Then she would loosen hers. Then you'd relax even more, and so on

    and on and on. Try it right nowyou can do so without getting up! Pretending someone loves

    you, right where you sit, will begin a day-making spiral of love.

    5. Get someone else to help.

    This may require a phone call, so put a phone near your Barcalounger. Then arrange for a third

    partynot yourselfto help the person whose day you're trying to make. Ask her what she

    needs: groceries delivered? a cleaning person to detail the kitchen? You needn't bankroll these

    services. Just be the one who makes the call.

    Many are the days folks have made for me by enlisting help on my behalf. And I didn't have to

    feel guilty about burdening them, because I know that getting help for someone else is way less

    arduous than asking for help yourself. So go ahead, tell a nutritionist about your husband's

    constipation. Schedule a massage for your tightly wound best friend. Use that phone! Make that

    day!

    6. Gossip positively.

    To praise people to their faces is to be disbelieved. Most of us doubt or discredit positive

    feedback, chalking it up to politeness or brownnosing or other social convention. But what people

    say behind our backs really sticks. My life changed in an adolescent moment when I picked up a

    phone extension, not knowing the line was in use, and heard a conversation about me, me, me! I

    don't know what had gotten into the speakersperhaps a great deal of what can only be called

    alcoholbut they were saying nice things about me. This not only made my day; it served as a

    foundation for emotional survival during some tough times thereafter.

    Today, "mistakenly" copy someone on an email about his best qualities. Leave positive

    comments about your children on notes "accidentally" scattered around the house. Admire

    people loudly to third parties when you know the admired are eavesdropping. Praise be.

    7. Help a loved one play hooky.

    This is an ethically gray area, so I would never say you should do it. I'm just hypothetically

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    floating the crazy idea that one day you might happen to call in sick for someone you love ("Well,

    I think she'll keep the hand if the bacteria isn't antibiotic resistant, but it may be airborne...").

    Once she's freed from school or work, you could do something that would enrich her life forever.

    If that's the kind of thing you'd ever do. Which I would never suggest.

    One day my friend Allen called in sick for his girlfriend Jenny, then took her scuba diving to a

    coral reef where he'd previously planted an engagement ring (okay, the diving involved getting

    up, but the calling didn't). Now Allen and Jenny are married. Does she regret the memos she

    failed to receive that day, the emails that waited 24 extra hours for an answer? She does not. Go

    figure.

    Now, I realize all of this is a lot to take in. If I were you, I'd sleep on it before trying any of these

    methods. Just lie back and let all this advice float out of your head. The information will returnshould you ever need it. Relax, relax, relax. That would really make my day.

    All the flowers of all the tomorrows are in the seeds of today. ~Proverb

    For as long as I can remember, Ive wanted to contribute to the world somehow. Ive always

    dreamed of starting a charity organization. I bet that, just like me, you walk around with some sort

    of wish in your heart tochange the worldin some way, but you might not do anything about it.

    How come?

    My excuses were time, money, fears, and not knowing how to go about it. Im guessing you have

    similar hindrances.

    Until recently I held on to thelimiting beliefthat someday, one perfect day, when Im done

    being busy with pursuing my masters degree, working my current part-time job in a call

    center, and raising two small kids under five, Ill follow my heart and contribute to this

    world. Someday.

    Its a myth!

    Through my job in a call center, I witness lots of tragedies that happen to people, and theyve

    been wakeup calls for me.

    Ive understood something life-changing: all I really have is today. And I better make it

    count.

    So I made a conscious decision, a choice, to throw all my fears away and start spreading

    happiness.

    I thought, I might not be able to start a charity now, but I can take atiny stepand start as a

    volunteer in some existing organization. So I joined hospital clown project, where I do the small,practical stuff for them.

    http://tinybuddha.com/blog/choose-to-be-kind-and-change-the-world/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/choose-to-be-kind-and-change-the-world/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/choose-to-be-kind-and-change-the-world/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/when-your-beliefs-hold-you-back-release-them-to-avoid-regret/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/when-your-beliefs-hold-you-back-release-them-to-avoid-regret/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/when-your-beliefs-hold-you-back-release-them-to-avoid-regret/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/baby-steps-simple-guide-to-doing-something-new/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/baby-steps-simple-guide-to-doing-something-new/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/baby-steps-simple-guide-to-doing-something-new/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/baby-steps-simple-guide-to-doing-something-new/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/when-your-beliefs-hold-you-back-release-them-to-avoid-regret/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/choose-to-be-kind-and-change-the-world/
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    I also decided to spread happiness around my inner circlemy husband, my two kids, my

    family, friends, and colleagues, with small things.

    I make their day brighter with pancakes, a hot cup of hot chocolate, or just bypatiently listening.

    Im guessing youre questioning this hippie approach. I am too, but give it a chance anyway!

    I got inspiration from this story I read somewhere that I thought was powerful in its simplicity.

    There was once a female traveler who always carried two bags with her, anywhere she went. In

    those bags she had flower seeds. Anytime she traveled or walked by a new place, she would

    throw these seeds around her. People wondered why she did it.

    Its a lifetime habit of mine, she explained. Ill probably never come here again, but by

    spreading the flower seeds I leave something beautiful behind that people who come here

    can enjoy. It doesnt matter that they dont know me personally. All that matters is that bydoing this, Ill make someone happy.

    What if we had this philosophy in life?

    My grandmother also inspires me. Shed lost both her parents when she was a child during the

    40s in Russia, and she raised her siblings alone. She had plenty of reasons to just be bitter and

    sad. Yet, she was always happy and made others happy.

    People loved to be around her. Just like the female traveler, she spread seeds of happiness

    around her.

    Imagine if everyone would spread small seeds of happiness everywhere they went. Or maybe,

    everywhere is too broad. Lets just start with around us, at work, at school, with our kids, family,

    friends, and strangers on a street. Lets spread kindness and happiness around in our inner

    circle.

    If youre like me, quitebusy with daily life, you might not know where to start. Consider following

    and see if there are anything you can apply in your everyday.

    1. Be kind toward yourself.You know how on airplanes they advise that in case of a possible accident, parents should put

    on their oxygen masks before they help their kids? The same thing applies here.

    Be kind toward yourself. Really. You cant give what you dont have, right? So go ahead and do

    the things you lovedance, sing, or paint all you want. Just enjoy. Then go and spread some

    happiness around you.

    2.Smile.

    http://tinybuddha.com/blog/how-to-help-someone-without-saying-a-thing/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/how-to-help-someone-without-saying-a-thing/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/how-to-help-someone-without-saying-a-thing/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/10-happiness-tips-for-busy-people/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/10-happiness-tips-for-busy-people/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/10-happiness-tips-for-busy-people/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/10-happiness-tips-for-busy-people/http://tinybuddha.com/blog/how-to-help-someone-without-saying-a-thing/
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    This is the best method ever to make your own day and spread happiness around to others.

    Dont wait to be happy; think of something good in your life, smile, and see what happens.

    3.Surprise!Surprise the people you love with flowers, small presents, kind words, help, a hug, or a genuine

    compliment.

    4.Be a hero.Notice and help someone around you, a perfect stranger.

    Ive just witnessed a hero in action. This homeless-looking guy came to a caf and wanted to buy

    coffee. All guests and servers looked at him like he didnt belong there. As he counted his coins,

    he quickly realized that he was short of money.

    Before I could say anything, this young guy walked up and paid what the man was missing. He

    sat down and enjoyed his coffee. Thats an act of everyday Superman to me, no?

    5.Say something good about someone or something.Be genuine. This makes youfeel good and its much better than gossiping, since youre

    spreading positive words and thoughts with the people around you. Win!

    6.Make an effort to have good thoughts.The thing with our thoughts is that they become words and then actions, so its important we

    observe them and choose them wisely. Our thoughts are like flower seeds. They can either

    spread happiness or sadness. The choice is ours!

    7.Listen with all your attention.It sounds so easy, yet really few master it. Give your full attention to the person youre talking

    with. It can change your whole view of the person and vice versa. That makes two happy people!

    8.Learn a skill.Then teach it for free. It could be anything from languages to cooking. Make it your one-person

    charity organization. Just dont tell anyone. Have fun!

    Happiness is not a goalits a by-product of a life well lived. Eleanor Roosevelt

    All of us have times of stress, loss, failure or trauma in our lives. But how we respond to these has

    a big impact on our wellbeing. We often cannot choose what happens to us, but in principle we

    can choose our own attitude to what happens. In practice it's not always easy, but one of the most

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    exciting findings from recent research is that resilience, like many other life skills, can be

    learned.

    Resilience comes from the Latin word resilio - to jump back- and is increasingly used in everyday

    language to describe our ability to cope with and bounce back from adversity. Some people

    describe it as the ability to bend instead of breaking when under pressure or difficulty, or the

    ability to persevere and adapt when faced with challenges.[1] The same abilities also help to makeus more open to and willing to take on new opportunities.[1] In this way being resilient is more

    than just survival, it includes letting go, learning and growing as well as finding healthy ways to

    cope.[2]

    Research shows that resilience isn't a rare quality found in a few, extraordinary people. One

    expert in the subject, Dr Ann Masten, describes it as 'ordinary magic' noting that it comes from

    our normal, everyday capabilities, relationships and resources.[3] She argues that resilience isn't

    a static characteristic of an individual but comprises many factors, internal and external. And we

    can be naturally resilient in some situations or at sometimes in our lives and not others. Each

    person and each situation is different.[4]

    All of us can take action to increase our resilience. We are all likely to experience ups and downs

    so building resiliency is valuable. We can't always predict or control what life throws at us, but we

    can build a range of skills and nurture our resources to help us respond flexibly, effectively deal

    with challenges, recover more quickly and even learn and grow as a result.[1][5][6] It can even

    lower our risk of depression and anxiety and enable us to age successfully.[1][4] What's more the

    same skills can help us manage fear of taking on new opportunities and so help us develop in

    other ways too.

    Our resilience is influenced by three key sets of factors: our development as a child and as a

    teenager; external factors such as our relationships with others or having a faith; and internal

    factors such as how we choose to interpret events, manage our emotions and regulate our

    behaviour.[1][4]

    As parents or those that work with children, we can do much to help build resilience of kids and

    teenagers. Whilst as adults we can't change our childhoods, there is plenty we can do to build our

    resilience within the second and third sets of factors, and indeed research is showing that

    resilience is developable in adults as well as in children.[1][4][7]

    There is a saying that most of us have heard: "What doesn't kill us makes us stronger" and

    science has shown that it does have some truth in it. Experiencing some adversity during our

    lives does increase our resilience by enabling us to learn ways of coping and identify and engage

    our support network. It also gives us a sense of mastery over past adversities, which helps us to

    feel we will be able to cope in the future. We have probably all experienced things as stressful

    initially (for example a new task at school or at work) but later find we are no longer phased by

    similar activities. Importantly though, for us to learn through such struggles our coping skills and

    resources can be taxed but not overwhelmed.[8]

    Psychologists Dr Karen Reivich, Dr Andrew Shatt (along with Dr Jane Gillham) argue that most

    of us aren't as prepared as we might be to face adversity and so we run the risk of giving up or

    feeling helpless in the face of difficulty. But, by changing the way we think about adversity, we

    can boost how resilient we are. Based on extensive research, they believe that our capacity forresilience is not fixed or in our genes, nor are there limits on how resilient we are able to be.

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    They have developed and studied a number of cognitive and behavioural skills that have been

    scientifically shown to build resilience in children and adults.[1]With effort and commitment we

    can learn these and put them into practice ourselves. Seven are detailed in the book:The

    Resilience Factor(see Resources below) and some of the actions suggested by Action for

    Happiness are based on these.

    Many of the other actions in this website that can help you and others around you be happier, arealso strategies that can help you to become more resilient. If you are already putting some of

    these into practice it is likely that you are already on your way to developing some useful tools

    and techniques that will also be valuable during tougher times[9].

    One of the key external sources of resilience is our network of relationships with other people

    such as family, friends, neighbours and work colleagues.[1][4][8] Taking time to nurture our

    relationships is a vital part of resilience building and helps to create resilient and happier

    communities.

    Many of these relationships are reciprocal - we can be there to support others as well as them

    supporting us. Support can range from simply making a cup of tea and listening to practical help

    such as looking after the kids, shopping or help around the house. A support network can also bea source of ideas and advice to help think things through. Strong social networks also build

    happier communities, which helps to increase the resilience of all of us.

    And support isn't just there for when times are tough, sharing good news is also important for

    building our relationships and increasing happiness.

    Knowing when we need help and asking for it is an important part of resilience. There may also

    be times when we need to seek professional support for example from a doctor, charitable

    foundation or advice centre, counselor or therapist.

    A key ingredient in resilience is optimism. This is not about 'unrealistic' optimism or denying that

    anything bad has happened, or might happen. This is just as unhealthy a strategy as alwaysexpecting the worst. Realistic optimists are those who engage with their problems as challenges,

    which can include planning for worst case scenarios. They actively appreciate the positive aspects

    of the situation without denying the negative. They do not delude themselves into thinking they

    are invincible or that there is no problem (as an unrealistic optimist might) and they do not

    resign themselves to their fate in thinking that nothing can be done (as a pessimist would). They

    aspire or hope for positive outcomes and actively work towards them.[1] In other words, they

    recognise what they can control and do something about and what they can't, and so focus their

    efforts accordingly.

    Research indicates that optimists are more likely to cope better, seek support from others andless likely to withdraw from those around them. Through facing their issues and seeking advice it

    is easier to see things more clearly and rationally - they can therefore be more realistic than

    pessimists. They are skilled at finding benefits to the situations they find themselves in and they

    experience less negative emotions and stress.And not because they ignore the difficulties of life,

    but precisely because they take them on.[10]

    Our ability to cope with adversity can be influenced by how we are able to interpret the situation

    we are in or what has happened to us. Finding a way to put it in perspective, such as thinking of

    those in worse situations and/or finding a way to make sense of it can be helpful. A related but

    separate process, finding some benefit that has come as a result of the difficulty can also be

    constructive.[11] This isn't about denial of what happened, nor putting an unrealistically positive

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    spin on things but, where possible, trying to find some good from negative events can be a

    healthy coping strategy.[8]

    Benefit finding in adversity isn't rare. For example one study on breast cancer survivors, found

    that two thirds of the women participating reported that their lives changed for the better after

    developing the disease. Some of the benefits they cited included their illness being a "wake-up

    call", which forced them to focus on what truly mattered to them.[12] Likewise other studies have

    shown that individuals who coped effectively with other conditions such as HIV and heart disease

    also had a similar tendency to find benefit in their condition.[13]

    Experiences that bring people face to face with the fragility of life can bring them a sharpened

    appreciation of their relationships, for example, and of the importance of living in the present.

    Other trauma survivors have said they have a new belief in their own strength and resources, they

    are more comfortable with intimacy and are more compassionate with others who are suffering,

    and have developed a deeper, more satisfying philosophy of life.[13]

    Actively seeking possible benefits over time, however minor, can help the process of recovery,

    reduce the likelihood of depression and so build our resilience.11 What is certainly important is

    taking the time to reflect and process things to enable us not only to understand and find benefit

    in what has happened, but also to build it into our lives rather than ignore it.[13]

    However, a strong note of caution - finding benefit is highly individual and it isn't possible for

    everyone and every situation. Indeed it can depend on the nature of the negative event. We

    should not feel that we must find benefits, nor feel guilty or shameful when we really can't.[13]

    Recovery from major trauma, pain, or loss is a big achievement, it is difficult and takes time. It is

    not uncommon that some degree of change is a part of that process whether it is a change in our

    circumstances or how we feel about our lives. In some instances this change can be profound - a

    change in who we discover we are or how we focus the direction of our lives and research

    indicates that some people experience a significant personal growth as a result of major negative

    events.

    This is what is known as 'post-traumatic growth' (PTG) and is defined by psychologists as "a

    positive psychological change experienced as a result of the struggle with highly challenging life

    circumstances".[14] PTG tends to surprise people, and is not usually a conscious aim. PTG results

    from a fundamental change in the way we see ourselves and or the world.[14] A significant

    amount of research in recent years has focused on the factors that characterise such growth.

    These include:

    a 'seismic' disruption to how we see ourselves;

    the recognition that we have changed in some significant way for the better as a result of the

    event;

    a reconfiguring of how we make meaningful sense of the world;

    deepening personal relationships through sharing and depending on others;

    development or mastery of new skills;

    re-prioritisation of goals and priorities, or setting of different ones; and even

    a greater spiritual belief or connection to something bigger.[11]

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    Finding benefit in adversity is relatively common and transient and is seen as a mechanism to

    cope with the event whereas PTG requires active processing of the meaning of the change and

    time to identify, set and make progress towards new goals. Often PTG results in a change in our

    identity and behaviour and so is apparent to others.[11]

    The research does not suggest that there is anything inherently good about a trauma or painful

    loss - of course there isn't. But what the research does show is that when events happen that force

    us to stop, to step out of our day to day lives and to confront issues we might not usually have to,

    it is possible for some good to come from the struggle.

    [1]Reivich, K & Shatt, A. (2003). The Resilience Factor: Seven keys to finding your inner

    strength and overcoming life's hurdles. NY: Broadway Books

    People who have meaning and purpose in their lives are happier, feel more in control and get

    more out of what they do. They also experience less stress, anxiety and depression. [1] But where

    do we find 'meaning and purpose'? It might be our religious faith, being a parent or doing a jobthat makes a difference. The answers vary for each of us but they all involve being connected to

    something bigger than ourselves.

    A simple way to describe having 'meaning' in your life is that it's aboutbeing part of

    something that we really believe in that is bigger than ourselves. [8] It helps us answer

    the question: why are we here? Often it's something that can't be reduced or goes beyond the day-

    to-day. It guides us in how we choose to live our lives, what we strive for and provides a

    framework for the goals we set. It can help make sense of what happens to us, provide a source of

    comfort and strength in tough times and helps us feel that we are not alone.

    Religious faith or other spiritual practices provide meaning for many people and research

    suggests that people with faith tend to have higher average levels of happiness and well-being

    than people with no religious beliefs. [10] But religion and spirituality are not the only sources of

    meaning. For many of us, our relationships with others are a key source of meaning in our lives -

    as parents, friends and members of a community (seeConnect with people). In fact one of the

    benefits with religious faith is the connection that comes from being part of a shared community

    of like-minded people.

    Other important sources of meaning include finding your 'calling' - a job or activity that you're

    passionate about - or having a deep connection to the natural world. What is certain is that

    'meaning' is something very individual. No one can tell us what gives meaning to our lives - we

    have to find out for ourselves.

    There are many different ways of finding meaning in our lives. For some people it comes through

    experiences (often difficult ones), others through deep reflection, others from loving and being

    loved and others just from the way they choose to approach other people and the world around.

    We can each find our own way - but it's important to remember the imporance of meaning when

    making the big choices about our families, jobs, lifestyles and priorities.

    Although finding meaning is about connecting to something beyond ourselves, it also seems to

    tap into to something fundamental within all of us. For some people this becomes obvious early

    on - for example a calling to teach or become a doctor or to follow a particular faith. For many

    however it is a search that can take a lifetime. And sometimes a practice, such as meditation, canhelp us become more in touch with our feelings and deepest selves.

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    Interestingly, although there is strong evidence that having meaning in our lives is good for our

    wellbeing, there appears to be relatively little research on the search for meaning. Some research

    even seems to suggest that those in active pursuit of meaning may be more likely to be anxious or

    depressed. [1] This suggests it can be a bit of 'chicken or egg' experience, where the frantic search

    for meaning implies often its absence.

    A good approach is to consciously think about which activities, people and beliefs bring us the

    strongest sense of purpose and passion. Then we can focus on making sure that we prioritise

    these things in our busy lives. Often we're so busy just hurtling ahead and end up exhausted at

    the end of each day without ever finding time to think about what really gives our lives meaning.

    Sometimes it is only when we reach important new stages in our lives, such as parenthood,

    middle age or retirement - or when something happens to disrupt our lives such as a trauma -

    that we start to think about the point of being here and what is really important. But it's never too

    soon (or too late) to start putting the really important things first.

    The idea of 'having a calling' originally had religious connotations, but more recently this word

    has been applied in a non-religious context to refer to a particular approach to work. [3]

    Individuals who have a 'calling' do work which is a source of both personal and social meaning.

    They find their work enjoyable for its own sake and feel that it makes a valuable contribution to

    society or improving the world in some way. People with a calling feel strongly drawn to pursue

    their work and think of it as a core part of who they are - so their work is central to their identity.

    It's possible for people to have more than one calling at the same time, either over the course of

    their life or even concurrently. [4]

    Importantly, callings are not restricted to high status or highly paid jobs but can be any role, at

    any level. The same occupation may be experienced as a calling by one person but not others.

    Unfortunately too many people tend to regard their work merely as a means to an end - to pay for

    necessities and support their families ('a job') or as a route to achievement or prestige ('a career')

    rather than a source of real fulfilment and meaning. [3]

    Callings are generally associated with benefits such as increased job and life satisfaction and

    health, regardless of level of income, education or type of occupation. People with callings are

    less likely to suffer from stress and depression, or have conflict between work and non-work parts

    of their lives. [5] Being unable to pursue a known calling has been linked to frustration or regret,

    which can undermine psychological wellbeing and job performance. [4]

    The search for a calling can be associated with indecision and confusion about our own identity.

    However as our work is such a big part of our lives, it is often worth some discomfort and soul-

    searching tofind your true purpose.

    PREV

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    Find your true purpose

    For many of us there is a gap between the life we are leading and the people that we feel we reallyare. Too many of us spend large portions of our lives doing jobs or activities that we may not

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    necessarily believe in or feel truly motivated by. This is a big missed opportunity and a major

    source of stress.

    If we can find and pursue our true purpose, it can fundamentally change our lives for the better

    and also help us make a more positive contribution to the world around us.

    People who have a clear purpose or calling experience work as a source of personal and social

    meaning. They see their work as enjoyable for its own sake and feel that it makes a valuable

    contribution to society. They feel drawn to pursue their purpose and it is a core part of who they

    are. But how on earth can we 'find our purpose'? Surely it's not that straightforward?

    Finding a clear purpose for your life is no small task and there is no single answer or approach

    which will work for everyone. However, we know that we're at our best when we use our

    strengths and focus on topics and issues that really motivate and energise us. So a great starting

    point is to find a way to use our strengths in pursuing an area that we're really passionate about.

    Below is a very simple yet affective approach to articulating your life purpose developed by the

    coach, consultant and authorNeil Crofts.

    Step 1: What are your talents?

    We all have strengths and talents, but we don't often recognise them and use them actively in our

    daily lives. Write down a list of 5 to 8 things that you're really good at. Things that just come

    naturally to you. Don't be modest, be honest. If you're struggling then you might want to take

    theVIA Survey of Strengths.

    Step 2: What are you passionate about?

    We all have things that we're passionate about and love to do, but very often we think of these

    things as hobbies rather than involving them at the heart of our life and work. Write down a list

    of 5 to 8 things that you're passionate about. Things you love to experience, talk about, think

    about and do.

    Step 3: What would you like to change in the world?

    Our purpose is most meaningful if it contributes to some wider social benefit or greater good - for

    example by helping to overcome a pressing societal issue (e.g. sustainability, fairness, alleviation

    of suffering, equality). Write down a list of 5 to 8 things that anger you about how society

    operates at the moment. Be specific. What are the things that make you really mad?

    Step 4: Combine your answers to articulate your positive purpose

    Now see if you can find a way to combine your talents, passion and anger in a positive and

    coherent way. If you can this could be the foundation for your life's purpose. This might take the

    form of: "My life's purpose is to use my (talents) and (passion) to (suitable verb) (anger)". Here

    are a couple of examples;

    "My life's purpose is to use my talent for engineering and my passion for alternative energy

    to help develop solutions to the climate crisis"

    "My life's purpose is to use my talent for teaching and my passion for children's well-being

    to help reduce the number of kids suffering with anxiety and depression".

    Step 5: Think and talk about your purpose

    Having made a first attempt to articulate your life's purpose spend some time thinking about it

    and discussing it with trusted friends and family members. Is it really you? Does it reflect how

    http://www.neilcrofts.com/http://www.neilcrofts.com/http://www.neilcrofts.com/http://uat.viacharacter.org/VIACHARACTERPROFILE/GetYourProfile/tabid/62/language/en-US/Default.aspxhttp://uat.viacharacter.org/VIACHARACTERPROFILE/GetYourProfile/tabid/62/language/en-US/Default.aspxhttp://uat.viacharacter.org/VIACHARACTERPROFILE/GetYourProfile/tabid/62/language/en-US/Default.aspxhttp://uat.viacharacter.org/VIACHARACTERPROFILE/GetYourProfile/tabid/62/language/en-US/Default.aspxhttp://www.neilcrofts.com/
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    you're living your life at the moment, or does it suggest that you need to make some changes in

    order to follow your purpose?

    Finding your purpose or calling is not easy and pursuing it may not be practical immediately. But

    if you can then it leave you with a significantly greater sense of well-being and fulfilment - as well

    as potentially contributing to the wider social good.

    "Your work is to discover your work and then with all your heart to give yourself to it." Buddha

    People with strong and broad social relationships are happier, healthier and live longer. Close

    relationships with family and friends provide love, meaning, support and increase our feelings of

    self worth. Broader networks bring a sense of belonging. So taking action to strengthen our

    relationships and build connections is essential for happiness. [1][2][3][4][5]

    Our connections with other people are at the heart of happiness - theirs and ours. Whether these

    connections are with our partners, families, friends, work colleagues, neighbours or people in ourbroader communities, they all contribute to our happiness. Chris Peterson, one of the founders of

    positive psychology puts it simply as: "Other people matter".

    Scholars and scientists agree about the central importance of relationships for our wellbeing and

    our happiness. [2][3][4][5] Many studies have shown that both the quality and quantity of social

    connections have an impact on our health and longevity as well as psychological wellbeing. [6]

    Not having close personal ties poses the same level of health risk as smoking or obesity. Having a

    network of social connections or high levels of social support appears to increase our immunity to

    infection, lower our risk of heart disease and reduce mental decline as we get older. [7]

    Close, secure and supportive relationships are the most important for well-being, whether these

    are with our husband, wife, partner, relatives or friends. SeeFamily and Friends. Research shows

    that it's the quality of our relationships that matters most. [2] This is influenced by:

    Experiencing positive emotions together - e.g. enjoyment, fun

    Being able to talk openly and feel understood

    Giving and receiving of support

    Shared activities and experiences. [8]

    Just as relationships are a two-way thing, it seems the connection between happiness and

    relationships is too. Not only do relationships help to make us happier, but also happy people

    tend to have more and better quality relationships. [9]

    So working on our relationships is good for happiness and working on our happiness is good for

    our relationships. That's a win all round!

    By nature we are social creatures and it makes sense that relationships are central to our

    happiness - the survival and evolution of the human race has depended on it!

    Indeed some eminent psychologists and biologists argue strongly that, contrary to the well-

    known 'selfish-gene' theory (i.e. that we are concerned only with the survival of our own genes), it

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    is the survival of the group that is likely to be most successful in evolutionary terms - even if the

    genes of its members are unrelated. [3]

    It does seem that we are wired for relationships - think of emotions and behaviours such as love,

    compassion, kindness, gratitude, generosity, smiling and laughing. [3] Or how reluctant we

    usually are to break bonds with people and how painful it is when we do. [10]

    Our need to feel connected to other people - to love and be loved, and to care and be cared for - is

    a fundamental human need. [11] Some experts argue that the capacity to be loved, as well as to

    love, is the most important human strength. [12]

    As well as our close relationships, we all have wider connections with people across the different

    circles of our lives - at work, in our communities or through our social activities. Although these

    relationships are less deep, these are also important for happiness and wellbeing.

    Having diverse social connections predicts how long we live and even impacts how resistant weare to catching colds! Our broader social networks provide a sense of belonging and influence

    how safe and secure we feel. Building connections in ourLocal Communitycontributes to our

    own happiness and that of those around us, enabling our communities to flourish. [13]

    Remarkable new research shows that happiness is contagious across social networks. Our

    happiness depends not only on the happiness of those in our direct social network, but on the

    happiness of the people they know too. In other words, happiness ripples out through groups of

    people, like a pebble thrown into a pond. [14]

    We can help to build happier communities by doing what we can to boost our own happiness and

    also being conscious of the impact our behaviour on others. Even seemingly small, incidentalinteractions, such as a friendly smile or act of kindness can make a difference - to ourselves, the

    people we interact with and the people they affect too.

    Feeling good about the future is important for our happiness. We all need goals to motivate us

    and these need to be challenging enough to excite us, but also achievable. If we try to attempt the

    impossible this brings unnecessary stress. Choosing ambitious but realistic goals gives our lives

    direction and brings a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction when we achieve them.

    Goals are the way we can turn our values and dreams into reality. Happiness doesn't just happen

    - it comes from thinking, planning and pursuing things that are important to us. Scientific

    research shows that setting and working towards goals can contribute to happiness in various

    ways, including:

    Being a source of interest, engagement or pleasure

    Giving us a sense of meaning and purpose

    Bringing a sense of accomplishment when we achieve what we set out to (or milestones

    along the way) - this also builds our confidence and belief in what we can do in the future

    [2][3][4]

    Goals help focus our attention. Actively working towards them appears to be as important for our

    well-being as achieving the end results we are aiming for.

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    Goals are most successful when they're something we really want to achieve and when we set

    them for ourselves - rather than being something someone else wants us to do.

    Goals can be long-term, short-term or even day-to-day. A long-term goal might be a big career or

    life goal - for example to become a doctor or obtain a qualification. A short-term goal might be a

    plan for the coming weeks or months - for example to organise a party or join a 5-a-side team. A

    day-to-day goal might be just to cook something different or contact an old friend.

    Smaller goals may seem unimportant. But having personal projects that matter to us - and are

    manageable - has been consistently shown to boost well-being, especially when they're supported

    by others around us. And it's even better if we can link our smaller goals back to our bigger aims

    and priorities in life.

    The way we set goals influences the actions we take to achieve them, the effort we put in and how

    persistent we are at sticking to them. Good goal-setting can be learned (seeSet your goals and

    make them happen). Some of our goals may be ambitious, but it's important that they're stillachievable. Achieving our goals brings a sense of accomplishment and makes us feel more

    positive about the future.

    Science shows that people who are optimistic tend to be happier, healthier and cope better in

    tough times. [1] Although we may have a natural tendency to be more optimistic or pessimistic,

    there are things we can do to take a more optimistic outlook, without losing touch with reality.

    Optimism is about believing that things are more likely to turn out good than bad. Not

    surprisingly our level of optimism can influence how persistent we are in aiming for our goals

    and how we deal with setbacks.

    Taking an optimistic approach to our goals includes:

    Choosing goals that take us towards something positive we want to achieve, rather than

    goals that help us avoid things we don't want.

    Being proactive when problems arise and looking for ways to resolve them, rather than

    ignoring or putting off dealing with issues.

    Avoiding dwelling on the negative - learning to accept difficult things that we can't change

    and re-adjusting our goals rather than avoiding them. [2]

    Although there is some evidence of benefits to pessimism - such as in assessing risks to our

    health - the research suggests that optimism is better for our health and happiness overall.

    Studies show that in difficult situations - such as starting college, aging or dealing with medical

    issues - optimists appear to experience less distress and higher well-being than pessimists. [1]

    But it's important we keep our feet on the ground. An overly optimistic outlook can be unhelpful.

    Being optimistic does not mean blindly ignoring the negative facts. Having unrealistically high

    expectations can lead to disappointment, a sense of failure and a more pessimistic view of the

    future.

    When we think about the future we are all guessing to some degree - so we have to base our goals

    and our judgments on what little we know now. Taking a realistic but hopeful view of theoutcomes seems to increase the likelihood that things really will turn out ok. [5]

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    Six Habits of Highly Empathic PeopleByRoman Krznaric| November 27, 2012 |17 Comments

    We can cultivate empathy throughout our lives, says Roman Krznaricand use it as a radical

    force for social transformation.

    If you think youre hearing the wordempathyeverywhere, youre right. Its now on the lips of

    scientists and business leaders, education experts and political activists. But there is a vital

    question that few people ask: How can I expand my own empathic potential? Empathy is not just a

    way to extend the boundaries of your moral universe. According to new research, its ahabit we

    can cultivateto improve the quality of our own lives.

    But what is empathy? Its the ability to step into the shoes of another person, aiming to

    understand their feelings and perspectives, and to use that understanding to guide our actions.

    That makes it different from kindness or pity. And dont confuse it with the Golden Rule, Do unto

    others as you would have them do unto you. As George Bernard Shaw pointed out, Do not do

    unto others as you would have them do unto youthey might have different tastes. Empathy isabout discovering those tastes.

    The big buzz about empathy stems from a revolutionary shift in the science of how we understand

    human nature. The old view that we are essentially self-interested creatures is being nudged firmly

    to one side by evidence that we are also homo empathicus, wired for empathy, social cooperation,

    and mutual aid.

    Over the last decade, neuroscientists have identified a 10-section empathy circuit in our brains

    which, if damaged, can curtail our ability to understand what other people are feeling. Evolutionary

    biologists like Frans de Waal haveshown that we are social animalswho have naturally evolved to

    care for each other, just like our primate cousins. And psychologists have revealed that we

    areprimed for empathybystrong attachment relationshipsin the first two years of life.

    But empathy doesnt stop developing in childhood. We can nurture its growth throughout ourlivesand we can use it as a radical force for social transformation. Research in sociology,

    psychology, historyand my own studies of empathic personalities over the past 10 years

    reveals how we can make empathy an attitude anda part of our daily lives, and thus improve the

    lives of everyone around us. Here are the Six Habits of Highly Empathic People!

    Habit 1: Cultivate curiosity about strangers

    Highly empathic people (HEPs) have an insatiable curiosity about strangers. They will talk to the

    person sitting next to them on the bus, having retained that natural inquisitiveness we all had as

    children, but which society is so good at beating out of us. They find other people more interesting

    than themselves but are not out to interrogate them, respecting the advice of the oral historianStuds Terkel: Dont be an examiner, be the interested inquirer.

    Curiosity expands our empathy when we talk to people outside our usual social circle,

    encountering lives and worldviews very different from our own. Curiosity is good for us too:

    Happiness guru Martin Seligman identifies it as a key character strength that can enhance life

    satisfaction. And it is a useful cure for thechronic loneliness afflicting around one in three

    Americans.

    Cultivating curiosity requires more than having a brief chat about the weather. Crucially, it tries to

    understand the world inside the head of the other person. We are confronted by strangers every

    day, like the heavily tattooed woman who delivers your mail or the new employee who always eats

    his lunch alone. Set yourself the challenge of having a conversation with one stranger every week.

    All it requires is courage.

    http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/author/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/author/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/author/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/six_habits_of_highly_empathic_people1#disqus_threadhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/six_habits_of_highly_empathic_people1#disqus_threadhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/six_habits_of_highly_empathic_people1#disqus_threadhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/topic/empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/topic/empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/topic/empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/the_evolution_of_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/the_evolution_of_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/the_evolution_of_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/research_digest/can_toddlers_see_the_world_through_your_eyes#toddlers_capable_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/research_digest/can_toddlers_see_the_world_through_your_eyes#toddlers_capable_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/research_digest/can_toddlers_see_the_world_through_your_eyes#toddlers_capable_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/social_security_benetshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/social_security_benetshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/social_security_benetshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/better_together_a_review_of_the_lonely_american/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/better_together_a_review_of_the_lonely_american/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/better_together_a_review_of_the_lonely_american/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/better_together_a_review_of_the_lonely_american/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/better_together_a_review_of_the_lonely_american/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/better_together_a_review_of_the_lonely_american/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/social_security_benetshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/research_digest/can_toddlers_see_the_world_through_your_eyes#toddlers_capable_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/the_evolution_of_empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/gg_live/happiness_matters_podcast/podcast/habits_1/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/topic/empathyhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/six_habits_of_highly_empathic_people1#disqus_threadhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/author/
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    Habit 2: Challenge prejudices and discover commonalities

    We all have assumptions about others and use collective labelse.g., Muslim fundamentalist,

    welfare momthat prevent us from appeciating their individuality. HEPs challenge their own

    preconceptions and prejudices by searching for what they share with people rather than what

    divides them. An episode from the history of US race relations illustrates how this can happen.

    Claiborne Paul Elliswas born into a poor white family in Durham, North Carolina, in 1927. Finding

    it hard to make ends meet working in a garage and believing African Americans were the cause of

    all his troubles, he followed his fathers footsteps and joined the Ku Klux Klan, eventually rising to

    the top position of Exalted Cyclops of his local KKK branch.

    In 1971 he was invitedas a prominent local citizento a 10-day community meeting to tackle

    racial tensions in schools, and was chosen to head a steering committee with Ann Atwater, a black

    activist he despised. But working with her exploded his prejudices about African Americans. He

    saw that she shared the same problems of poverty as his own. I was beginning to look at a black

    person, shake hands with him, and see him as a human being, he recalled of his experience on

    the committee. It was almost like bein born again. On the final night of the meeting, he stood in

    front of a thousand people and tore up his Klan membership card.

    Ellis later became a labor organiser for a union whose membership was 70 percent African

    American. He and Ann remained friends for the rest of their lives. There may be no better example

    of the power of empathy to overcome hatred and change our minds.

    Habit 3: Try another persons life

    So you think ice climbing and hang-gliding are extreme sports? Then you need to try experiential

    empathy, the most challengingand potentially rewardingof them all. HEPs expand their

    empathy by gaining direct experience of other peoples lives, putting into practice the Native

    American proverb, Walk a milein another mans moccasins before you criticize him.

    George Orwell is an inspiring model. After several years as a colonial police officer in British

    Burma in the 1920s, Orwell returned to Britain determined to discover what life was like for those

    living on the social margins. I wanted to submerge myself, to get right down among the

    oppressed, he wrote. So he dressed up as a tramp with shabby shoes and coat, and lived on the

    streets of East London with beggars and vagabonds. The result, recorded in his book Down and

    Out in Paris and London, was a radical change in his beliefs, priorities, and relationships. He not

    only realized that homeless people are not drunken scoundrelsOrwell developed new

    friendships, shifted his views oninequality, and gathered some superb literary material. It was the

    greatest travel experience of his life. He realised that empathy doesnt just make you goodits

    good for you, too.

    We can each conduct our own experiments. If you are religiously observant, try a God

    Swap, attending the services of faiths different from your own, including a meeting of Humanists.

    Or if youre an atheist, try attending different churches! Spend your next vacation living and

    volunteering in a village in a developing country. Take the path favored by philosopher John

    Dewey, who said, All genuine education comes about through experience.

    Habit 4: Listen hardand open up

    There are two traits required for being an empathic conversationalist.

    One is to master the art of radical listening. What is essential, says Marshall Rosenberg,

    psychologist and founder of Non-Violent Communication (NVC), is our ability to be present to

    whats really going on withinto the unique feelings and needs a person is experiencing in that

    very moment. HEPs listen hard to others and do all they can to grasp their emotional state and

    http://college.cengage.com/english/chaffee/thinking_critically/8e/students/additional_activities/p198.pdfhttp://college.cengage.com/english/chaffee/thinking_critically/8e/students/additional_activities/p198.pdfhttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/why_inequality_is_bad_for_the_one_percenthttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/why_inequality_is_bad_for_the_one_percenthttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/why_inequality_is_bad_for_the_one_percenthttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/why_inequality_is_bad_for_the_one_percenthttp://college.cengage.com/english/chaffee/thinking_critically/8e/students/additional_activities/p198.pdf
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    needs, whether it is a friend who has just been diagnosed with cancer or a spouse who is upset at

    them for working late yet again.

    But listening is never enough. The second trait is to make ourselves vulnerable. Removing our

    masks and revealing our feelings to someone is vital for creating a strong empathic bond. Empathy

    is a two-way street that, at its best, is built upon mutual understandingan exchange of our most

    important beliefs and experiences.Organizations such as theIsraeli-Palestinian Parents Circleput it all into practice by bringing

    together bereaved families from both sides of the conflict to meet, listen, and talk. Sharing stories

    about how their loved ones died enables families to realize that they share the same pain and the

    same blood, despite being on opposite sides of a political fence, and has helped to create one of

    the worlds most powerful grassroots peace-building movements.

    Habit 5: Inspire mass action and social change

    We typically assume empathy happens at the level of individuals, but HEPs understand that

    empathy can also be a mass phenomenon that brings about fundamental social change.

    Just think of the movements against slavery in the 18th and 19th centuries on both sides of theAtlantic. As journalist Adam Hochschild reminds us, The abolitionists placed their hope not in

    sacred texts but human empathy, doing all they could to get people to understand the very real

    suffering on the plantations and slave ships. Equally, the international trade union movement grew

    out of empathy between industrial workers united by their shared exploitation. The overwhelming

    public response to the Asian tsunami of 2004 emerged from a sense of empathic concern for the

    victims, whose plight was dramatically beamed into our homes on shaky video footage.

    Empathy will most likely flower on a collective scale if its seeds are planted in our children. Thats

    why HEPs support efforts such as Canadas pioneeringRoots of Empathy, the worlds most

    effective empathy teaching program, which has benefited over half a million school kids. Its unique

    curriculum centers on an infant, whose development children observe over time in order to learn

    emotional intelligenceand its results include significant declines in playground bullying and higherlevels of academic achievement.

    Beyond education, the big challenge is figuring out how social networking technology can harness

    the power of empathy to create mass political action. Twitter may have gotten people onto the

    streets for Occupy Wall Street and the Arab Spring, but can it convince us to care deeply about the

    suffering of distant strangers, whether they are drought-stricken farmers in Africa or future

    generations who will bear the brunt of our carbon-junkie lifestyles? This will only happen if social

    networks learn to spread not just information, but empathic connection.

    Habit 6: Develop an ambitious imagination

    A final trait of HEPs is that they do far more than empathize with the usual suspects. We tend to

    believe empathy should be reserved for those living on the social margins or who are suffering.

    This is necessary, but it is hardly enough.

    We also need to empathize with people whose beliefs we dont share or who may be enemies in

    some way. If you are a campaigner onglobal warming, for instance, it may be worth trying to step

    into the shoes of oil company executivesunderstanding their thinking and motivationsif you

    want to devise effective strategies to shift them towards developing renewable energy. A little of

    this instrumental empathy (sometimes known asimpact anthropology) can go a long way.

    Empathizing with adversaries is also a route to social tolerance. That was Gandhis thinking during

    the conflicts between Muslims and Hindus leading up to Indian independence in 1947, when he

    declared, I am a Muslim! And a Hindu, and a Christian and a Jew.

    http://www.theparentscircle.org/http://www.theparentscircle.org/http://www.theparentscircle.org/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/wisdom_of_babieshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/wisdom_of_babieshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/wisdom_of_babieshttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/hot_spothttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/hot_spothttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/hot_spothttp://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/oct/19/occupy-movement-subverting-global-financehttp://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/oct/19/occupy-movement-subverting-global-financehttp://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/oct/19/occupy-movement-subverting-global-financehttp://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/oct/19/occupy-movement-subverting-global-financehttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/hot_spothttp://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/wisdom_of_babieshttp://www.theparentscircle.org/
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    Organizations, too, should be ambitious with their empathic thinking. Bill Drayton, the renowned

    father of social entrepreneurship, believes that in an era of rapid technological change,

    mastering empathy is the key business survival skill because it underpins successful teamwork and

    leadership. His influential Ashoka Foundation has launched theStart Empathy initiative, which is

    taking its ideas to business leaders, politicians and educators worldwide.

    The 20th century was the Age of Introspection, when self-help and therapy culture encouraged usto believe that the best way to understand who we are and how to live was to look inside

    ourselves. But it left us gazing at our own navels. The 21st century should become the Age of

    Empathy, when we discover ourselves not simply through self-reflection, but by becoming

    interested in the lives of others. We need empathy to create a new kind of revolution. Not an old-

    fashioned revolution built on new laws, institutions, or policies, but a radical revolution in human

    relationships.

    http://startempathy.org/http://startempathy.org/http://startempathy.org/http://startempathy.org/