Information Related to "How Do You Measure Success?"
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Everyone
wants to be a success. As young people, we dream of having all the good
things in life—a great job in a career we enjoy, friends, a happy marriage,
vacations, opportunities to travel, plenty of leisure time and perhaps
even a pet or two. For many, this is success.
But according to studies, many people these days aren't happy. A common assumption is that happiness is based on prosperity. So with the current economic problems affecting people everywhere, we shouldn't be all that surprised that many people aren't happy. Right?
When asked how much more money they'd need to be happy, people, on average, answered 20 percent. But as STLtoday.com explained: "It turns out that's not true. If you measure people's income and self-reported happiness over time, you find that while incomes may rise, the general level of happiness does not. That's called the Easterlin Paradox, named after economist Richard A. Easterlin" ("Cold Cash v. Warm Puppy," July 14, 2008).
So what really makes people happy?
Arthur Brooks, in his 2008 book Gross National Happiness: Why Happiness Matters for America—and How We Can Get More of It, writes that marriage makes people happy but most couples' happiness levels fall after having children. Having more money doesn't make people happy but giving money away to a charity does. He also says that it is work, not leisure, that makes Americans happy.
One of the most intriguing of Brooks' contentions is that religious people are happier than the nonreligious. Yet critics counter that religion in America simply gives people more social opportunities, a cause to which they can give money and an explanation for the meaning and purpose of life—all things already known to promote happiness. Critics further argue that highly secularized countries, such as those in Europe, are equally happy without religion. So who's right?
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