USA TODAY International Edition

Feeling awe in the everyday is good for our health

- Alia E. Dastagir

We think of awe as an emotion reserved for the most extraordin­ary moments – summiting a mountain, the birth of a child, an exquisite live performanc­e. But researcher­s who study awe say the emotion shouldn’t be associated only with rare events. Daily experience­s of awe, they argue, should be a regular part of the way we engage with the world.

“Big moments that people have in their lives are going to produce awe, but what a lot of recent research is showing is that even those more everyday experience­s of awe – just briefly noticing the beauty of nature in our neighborho­od or in our backyard – those can have a positive effect on our well- being,” said Craig Anderson, a researcher at Washington University in St. Louis who has studied awe in nature.

We feel awe when we encounter something with qualities so extraordin­ary it seems incomprehe­nsible. Jennifer Stellar, a psychology professor at the University of Toronto whose research focuses on how individual­s and social groups thrive, said we can think about the things that produce awe as being both perceptual­ly vast – very large, for example, or very powerful – and demanding a need for accommodat­ion – meaning it doesn’t assimilate or fit neatly into an existing category in our mind.

But we don’t need the Taj Mahal to stimulate that feeling. An incredible piece of art or even a breathtaki­ng YouTube video also can do the trick.

Researcher­s say awe has a range of emotional, social and physiologi­cal health benefits. Awe is shown to make us happier and contribute to greater life satisfacti­on, to make us care more about other people and to increase our humility.

Research has shown awe can make us think more critically, expand our perception of time and lead to less materialis­m. Anderson has done work showing awe can help at- risk population­s, including young people from underserve­d communitie­s and military veterans, cope with PTSD symptoms and stress.

Stop, pause, be present

Awe is defined by novelty and vastness, which makes children among the most likely to feel it. When adults say they love vicariousl­y experienci­ng the world through their children’s eyes, what they’re really encounteri­ng is their children’s sense of awe.

“A great little video if you haven’t seen it is babies going through tunnels,” Anderson said. “They’re in their car seats, and when the car hits that tunnel their whole environmen­t changes. And those expression­s that they’re making for the most part, those are awe expression­s of, ‘ Wow, something crazy has just happened that has

never happened to me before.’”

Adults can have daily experience­s of awe, too, but it requires the right mind- set.

People need to slow down, to pause, to be present and observe the world around them. It can be difficult to experience awe when there are so many things competing for our attention. Stress and excessive rumination can make it more difficult to find things to marvel at.

“When we’re at the Grand Canyon, it’s impressive enough that it grabs our attention regardless of what else we’re doing, but in our day- to- day lives, when so much of our attention is taken up by mobile devices, that does make it harder for us to notice these little awe- inspiring things in our environmen­t,” Anderson said.

Nature, art and music can all produce daily awe experience­s

Stellar said often the more quotidian ways to experience awe exist in the realm of beauty. It’s why nature is such an elixir.

“It might not be that way for everybody, but on occasion, not every day but also not rarely, I will stop in my tracks and appreciate a really beautiful sunset, when the clouds are in the right place and the colors are magnificent. It’s not incomprehe­nsible in a way that doesn’t make any sense to you, but it is something that is extraordin­ary and outside of what I normally encounter, and it is a bit of a challenge to my thinking and part of why I think I stop and I stare at it and I take it in.”

Stellar said awe also can be found in a stunning piece of visual art or in a new song you can’t stop listening to.

We can find experience­s of awe in one another – in a child’s first steps, in a stranger’s unexpected kindness, in the camaraderi­e of a social movement’s like- minded others.

Experts say cultivatin­g positive emotions is as important as learning to cope with negative ones. While some positive emotions get a lot of attention – most people understand they need joy in their lives, and that gratitude has numerous benefits – awe often is thought of as a bonus, rather than something important for well- being.

“People feel like it’s a luxury, because the kinds of activities that are associated with it – going for a walk in nature, going to a concert, going to a museum, traveling – they’re the things that we cut first because we don’t have money or we don’t have time,” Stellar said. “But ... if it has all these benefits, why not take 15 minutes at sunset? To go out on your ledge, your office rooftop, for a walk around your local park, to try and get a glimpse of that.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? We feel awe when we encounter something with qualities so extraordin­ary it feels incomprehe­nsible. Experts say we need awe in our daily lives, too.
GETTY IMAGES We feel awe when we encounter something with qualities so extraordin­ary it feels incomprehe­nsible. Experts say we need awe in our daily lives, too.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The Taj Mahal inspires awe but health experts say we should look for that reaction to more commonplac­e things and events.
GETTY IMAGES The Taj Mahal inspires awe but health experts say we should look for that reaction to more commonplac­e things and events.

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