The Guardian (USA)

Smile! Could the pandemic lead to happier times?

- Josh Jacobs

In January 2018, a Yale University professor named Laurie Santos launched a course, Psychology and the Good Life, which quickly became the most popular class in the institutio­n’s 319year-history. After 13 years at Yale, in 2016, the 44-year-old had taken charge of one of the university’s residentia­l colleges and had become alarmed by widespread mental illness and stress. She wanted to explain the paradox of why so many students were still suffering, having achieved their dreams of being admitted to Yale and having met society’s definition of success. Santos created the lecture series in a bid to teach her students what really mattered – to help them carve out lives of meaning and contentmen­t.

Within a few days of the course’s launch, roughly a quarter of Yale’s entire undergradu­ate population had signed up. Administra­tors struggled to find space to accommodat­e everyone; having filled the university’s church, they set up an overflow room for students to watch Santos by screen, before moving her to a large concert hall. Standing behind a lectern on the auditorium’s stage, she questioned much of what the students had been taught to crave: good grades, prestigiou­s jobs, high salaries. With her message that we should step back from ceaseless competitio­n, question our priorities and savour our days, she had clearly tapped into a deep hunger for another way of viewing life.

A few months later, in March 2018, Santos launched a 10-week online version of the original happiness course that anyone could access. In the class, called The Science of Well-Being, Santos teaches us why we chase things that make us miserable and, through homework tasks, suggests how we can change our behaviours. She begins with this message: “This is the kind of thing that we really hope can actually change your life.” The course became a major hit; half a million online learners enrolled in the two years up to March. But after Covid-19 struck, it became even more popular: more than 2.6m students have now enrolled, from more than 200 countries. At the beginning of the course, Santos issues a warning: “You are about to learn that everything you thought was important for being happy isn’t.”

There has been much recent discussion about how the pandemic might fuel political and social changes, about whether or not reduced travel and clearer skies will have increased our desire to protect the environmen­t, or if new government welfare schemes will have popularise­d universal basic income and a world with less work. But we are also asking questions about the way we live individual­ly. For all the mental suffering and loss this pandemic has brought, there’s a chance that we could emerge from it with a clearer sense of how we want to spend our days, how we might live happier and more meaningful lives. For many, the question now is: will we be able to make enduring behaviour changes when it ends?

Santos has spentthis springinsi­de the Yale college where she lives and works. When we spoke last month, she told me it had been eerily quiet. Graduation had been cancelled and only the few students who couldn’t return to their home countries remained, along with the foxes and squirrels that had descended on to the empty campus. She had recently run a live question and answer session as part of her online course, where people asked her advice on issues ranging from how to deal with annoying spouses to facing job losses. She’d also led webinars for corporates and was making new episodes for her podcast series on happiness.

Then there’s the barrage of daily emails her newfound fandom has brought, many of them outlining intense pain and seeking advice. She’d been trying to stay sane through Zoom spa evenings and yoga with her friends, as well as catch-ups with college roommates. “Tragically, I think the pandemic is good for business,” she said.

Santos never planned to become a global happiness phenomenon. In fact, she comes across as slightly reserved, not the kind of person who would chase fame. At Yale, her main psychology research involves studying animals to better understand how humans copy each other, draw moral conclusion­s and make decisions. But as she got to know her students better, her focus began to shift. Some media commentato­rs were dismissing campus mental health problems as the whining of a privileged “snowflake generation”, but Santos was unconvince­d by this view. She saw the suffering as symbolic of deeper societal problems.

I studied – and taught undergradu­ates – at Yale before Santos’s course began and saw first-hand how the culture there fuels and embodies many of the modern world’s harmful extremes, such as burnout, overwork and chasing extrinsic recognitio­n. It’s a place where people are high achieving, but also time-starved and stressed-out. Their success, too often, comes at a cost. Underpinni­ng it is an ambition that can be obsessive, unhealthy and, in some cases, lethal – a warped belief that people are valuable only because of their profession­al potential.

Shocking statistics show similar problems playing out across the world. According to a large-scale 2018 survey of US colleges by the American College

Health Associatio­n, more than 12% of students say they’ve “seriously considered suicide”, 87% are “overwhelme­d” and 42% are so depressed they find it “difficult to function”. In the UK, onethird of students have experience­d serious psychologi­cal problems and half have had thoughts of self-harming, according to a national survey of 38,000 students last year, at more than 100 universiti­es, by the Insight Network, a psychiatri­c group.

The problems Santos hopes to treat aren’t limited to university life. Globally, one person dies from suicide every 40 seconds, according to the World Health Organisati­on, a rate increase of 60% in the past 45 years. Santos likes to reference her fellow wellbeing psychologi­st David Myers, whose research shows how, as countries have become wealthier, often this hasn’t increased citizens’ happiness. As Myers puts it in his book The American Paradox: “Our becoming much better off over the last four decades has not been accompanie­d by one iota of increased subjective wellbeing.” Myers told me that similar conclusion­s apply to several other countries.

What, then, is Santos’s answer to a better life? First, she suggests we’ve been misled in chasing many of the things we do: possession­s, beauty, even perhaps marriage. She points to a string of studies to explain her view, including work by Princeton researcher­s showing that, after a certain point (around $75,000 in the US), money doesn’t increase happiness and emotional wellbeing. She also references papers suggesting that weight loss and cosmetic surgery may not lead to increases in happiness, as well as research showing how salary goals keep rising as we earn more money, which means we may never feel we are making enough. We compare ourselves to others, and therefore will likely continue endlessly wanting more.

Becoming aware of all this may not be enough, though. Santos’s own research has pointed out that knowledge plays only a small role in how we make decisions; habits and an ability to regulate our emotions have much more influence on happiness. She also says our brains often deceive us, including when we feel strong urges. We may feel we want something – more money, a new coat, cupcakes – though it might not actually bring us much pleasure. And we often don’t crave the simple things we might enjoy more, like relaxing in nature or hanging out with friends. Becoming happier, therefore, routinely requires us to ignore our impulses.

“We have these intuitions about happiness that are wrong,” Santos tells me. Our brains aren’t necessaril­y built to improve our mood. They’re still wired like they were centuries ago, to prioritise escaping predators and immediate threats.

As part of her course, Santos prescribes weekly “rewirement challenges”, where she asks students to take a (scientific) leap of faith and commit to new behaviours. These include starting conversati­ons with strangers, getting enough sleep and writing gratitude letters to friends. Another of her challenges is called negative visualisat­ion in which people imagine bad things happening, like family members dying or losing their homes. It seeks to make us more grateful and combat what psychologi­sts call hedonic adaptation, which is the tendency to get used to changes in our lives so that our wants and expectatio­ns keep rising. Some of these techniques might sound like wellness caricature­s, but Santos insists there’s scientific research to suggest they all work.

Is it really possible to increase happiness? Suffering is an inescapabl­e fact of living and no lecture series could hope to solve all human struggles. But Santos does believe we can successful­ly fight against our negative, destructiv­e tendencies. That’s what we’ve been trying to do for centuries – from Aris

 ?? Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images ?? Look on the bright side: psychologi­st Laurie Santos hopes to re-wire our minds and increase our sense of wellbeing.
Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images Look on the bright side: psychologi­st Laurie Santos hopes to re-wire our minds and increase our sense of wellbeing.

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