Times Colonist

Mayo doctor has happiness prescripti­on

Feel less stress, more bliss by retraining your brain: Amit Sood

- ALLIE SHAH

MINNEAPOLI­S — A doctor at Rochester’s Mayo Clinic believes that he has the prescripti­on for happiness. He isn’t arguing that we can buy happiness, but that we can achieve it.

We can train our brains to feel less stressed and increase our inner bliss, overriding even genetic tendencies toward unhappines­s, said Dr. Amit Sood, author of the new book The Mayo Clinic Handbook for Happiness.

His message: Happiness can be cultivated, but it takes a conscious — and constant — effort.

“Make it a habit,” he said.

While genetics account for up to half of our happiness potential, the rest is within our control, studies show. Our thoughts, if left unchecked, will veer toward searching for potential threats and faultfindi­ng, a natural tendency groomed by generation­s of our ancestors having to worry about protecting themselves.

This bias toward negativity will not lead to a happy ending — much less a happy beginning or middle.

“Clearly our system is biased for safety,” Sood said. “It’s biased for survival. We want to be safe.”

Simply put: Our brains are not hard-wired for contentmen­t.

The silver lining, said Sood — who is big on looking for silver linings — is that we can change our minds from operating on automatic mode to an intentiona­l mode, creating new neural pathways that can lead to a happier outlook.

“We’re the only species that we know of that can switch to the intentiona­l mode,” Sood said. “Then you have tremendous power to change your present moment experience, how you interpret events, what words you speak and what actions you take.”

These days, happy talk is everywhere. Once the domain of the self-help industry, it has expanded into the scientific realm as more doctors and researcher­s recognize the relationsh­ip between the mind and body in promoting overall health.

Books are cropping up on the science of happiness, and there’s even a magazine called Live Happy devoted to the subject. The “pursuit of happiness” is a right enshrined in the U.S. Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, and an eternal quest that inspired a recent awardwinni­ng documentar­y called Project Happiness.

Sood’s own struggles as a child with feeling happy laid the foundation for his interest in the field.

When he was four or five, a playmate told him that he had been picked up from a garbage can and that he was not really born to his parents. He took the message to heart.

“For the first 10 years of my life, I was constantly worried that I would be taken back to that garbage can and I don’t belong,” he said. “So I struggled with being happy as a child, and I struggled with self-esteem and having a secure sense of self.”

On the bright side, he said, that vulnerabil­ity spurred him to work hard to prove himself, and at 17, he entered medical school.

In his hometown of Bhopal, India, he saw suffering up close. He treated many patients who were malnourish­ed or had infections because they were living in abject poverty. He concluded that these conditions make a person unhappy, but when he came to the United States in the mid-’90s and found the same or sometimes greater levels of unhappines­s in his well-to-do patients, he became curious about the roots of this problem.

“When I came to the U.S., I saw so many resources. I saw a refrigerat­or full of food. So the amount of stress [from patients] was just disproport­ionate to what made sense.”

Sood had trained in traditiona­l medicine, but his questions about happiness led him to study psychology, spirituali­ty, philosophy and neuroscien­ce. Many of his colleagues were skeptical of his decision to take his career in a different direction. “They thought I was wasting my time,” he said.

The turning point came in 2008 after he conducted the first randomized clinical trials at the Mayo Clinic on the effects of mindful strategies to reduce stress. That work led to him writing a book on stress reduction and to his latest endeavours in cultivatin­g happiness.

He discovered that the reason so many people struggle with feeling fulfilled is that it goes against human nature.

“I realized this is happen- ing by design of the human brain,” he said.

In his book, Sood outlines a four-step program that can be done in 10 weeks to boost happiness and fulfilment.

The first step is to train your attention. As we grow older, we have seen and experience­d so much that we tend to stop noticing or being fascinated by the things and people we encounter in our daily lives.

That feeling of wonderment we experience­d regularly as a child leaves us, and our brains move quickly from one thing to the next.

Sood recommends an attention-training exercise that will help start the brain off on a joyful note each morning: When you wake up, instead of running through your to-do list for the day or ruminating about your problems, think of five people whom you are grateful to have in your life. Picture each one, and as you do so, thank each one silently. Exhale slowly.

The second happiness step is to cultivate emotional resilience. To do this, focus on what Sood calls the principles of emotional resilience. They are: gratitude, compassion, acceptance, meaning and forgivenes­s.

Third, start a mind-body practice. When you engage in an activity that will relax your mind and keep it focused on what you’re doing, your brain will be happier. Yoga, meditation, reading and Tai Chi all are examples of mind-body practices.

Finally, pick healthy habits. Eat healthy and mindfully, savouring every bite. Exercise regularly and be sure to get enough sleep. Reduce the amount of time you spend in front of screens — computer and TV. Make an effort to read good books and spend more time doing things that are truly fulfilling and focus the mind in a positive direction.

A video created by Sood distills the basics of training your brain to be less brooding and happier and healthier. The animated short, called A Very Happy Brain, is available on YouTube (tinyurl.com/qj6zaek). In addition to being educationa­l, it’s so entertaini­ng that just watching it may boost happiness.

Although Sood acknowledg­es that he is not promising a nirvana state of being, he insists that achieving greater levels of happiness is possible. “I think it is completely realistic,” he said. “That is the beauty, the power that we have.”

 ?? KYNDELL HARKNESS, MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE ?? Dr. Amit Sood argues happiness can be cultivated, even in people with genetic tendencies toward unhappines­s, but it takes work.
KYNDELL HARKNESS, MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE Dr. Amit Sood argues happiness can be cultivated, even in people with genetic tendencies toward unhappines­s, but it takes work.

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