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President Joe Biden on Friday said he is now convinced Russian President Vladimir Putin has made the decision to invade ...
19/02/2022

President Joe Biden on Friday said he is now convinced Russian President Vladimir Putin has made the decision to invade Ukraine, but emphasized that room for diplomacy remains.

"As of this moment, I am convinced he's made the decision," Biden said during remarks at the White House.
The President also said the US believes Russian forces intend to attack Ukraine "in the coming week" or sooner, and that an attack will target the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Saturday said Russia was "moving into the right positions to conduct an attack," echoing Biden's assertion that Putin had made up his mind on invading.
"They're uncoiling and now poised to strike," Austin said, speaking from Vilnius, Lithuania. Austin said the US would pursue a diplomatic solution "until the very last minute, until it's not possible."
Biden plans to spend the weekend monitoring the ongoing Ukraine crisis from the White House as he meets with his national security team and remains in close contact with world leaders, multiple officials say. Biden had considered traveling to Delaware, as he typically does, but decided to remain in Washington.

The World's 'Happiest' Countries Harbor a Dark Side, Wellbeing Study RevealsBROCK BASTIAN, THE CONVERSATION18 FEBRUARY 2...
19/02/2022

The World's 'Happiest' Countries Harbor a Dark Side, Wellbeing Study Reveals
BROCK BASTIAN, THE CONVERSATION
18 FEBRUARY 2022
Have you looked at the international rankings of the world's happiest countries lately?

Measuring a country's subjective levels of happiness has become something of an international sport. People look with interest (and a little jealousy) to nations such as Denmark, which consistently tops the world's happiness rankings.

It has also led to Danish practices such as the "hygge" lifestyle gaining popularity elsewhere. If only we could add more coziness to our lives, perhaps we would be as happy as the Danish!

But is living in one of the world's happiest nations all it's cracked up to be? What happens if you struggle to find or maintain happiness in a sea of (supposedly) happy people?

In our new research, published in Scientific Reports, we found that in countries which rank the highest in national happiness, people are also more likely to experience poor wellbeing due to the societal pressure to be happy.

So living in happier countries may be good for many. But for some, it can end up feeling like too much to live up to, and have the opposite effect.

Broadening our search
For several years, my colleagues and I have been researching the social pressure people may feel to experience positive emotions and avoid negative ones.

This pressure is also communicated to us through channels such as social media, self-help books and advertising. Eventually people develop a sense of what kinds of emotion are valued (or not valued) by those around them.

In an ironic twist, our past research has shown that the more people experience pressure to feel happy and not sad, the more they tend to experience depression.

While this previous research has mostly focused on people living in Australia or the United States, we were curious about how these effects might also be evident in other countries.

For our latest study we surveyed 7,443 people from 40 countries on their emotional wellbeing, satisfaction with life (cognitive wellbeing) and mood complaints (clinical wellbeing). We then weighed this against their perception of social pressure to feel positive.

What we found confirmed our previous findings. Worldwide, when people report feeling pressure to experience happiness and avoid sadness, they tend to experience deficits in mental health.

That is, they experience lower satisfaction with their lives, more negative emotion, less positive emotion and higher levels of depression, anxiety and stress.

Interestingly, our global sample allowed us to go beyond our prior work and examine whether there were differences in this relationship across countries. Are there some countries in which this relationship is especially strong? And if so, why might that be?

Not a uniform problem
To investigate this, we obtained data for each of the 40 counties from the World Happiness Index, collected by the Gallup World Poll. This index is based on the subjective happiness ratings of large-scale nationally representative samples.

It allowed us to determine how the overall happiness of a nation, and therefore the social pressure on individuals to be happy, might influence individuals' wellbeing.

We found the relationship did indeed change, and was stronger in countries that ranked more highly on the World Happiness Index. That is, in countries such as Denmark, the social pressure some people felt to be happy was especially predictive of poor mental health.

That's not to say on average people are not happier in those countries – apparently they are – but that for those who already feel a great deal of pressure to keep their chin up, living in happier nations can lead to poorer wellbeing.

Why might this be the case? We reasoned that being surrounded by a sea of happy faces may aggravate the effects of already feeling socially pressured to be happy.

Of course, signs of others' happiness are not limited to the explicit expression of happiness, but are also evident in other more subtle cues, such as having more social contact or engaging in pleasurable activities. These signals tend to be stronger in happier countries, ratcheting up the effects of social expectations.

In these countries, feeling happy can easily be viewed as the expected norm. This adds to the social pressure people feel to adhere to this norm, and exacerbates the fallout for those who fail to achieve it.

What's the solution?
So what can we do? At a personal level, feeling and expressing happiness is a good thing. But as other research has found, it's sometimes good to be sensitive about how our expression of positive emotion may affect others.

While it's good to bring happiness and positivity to our interactions, it's also good to know when to tone it down – and avoid alienating those who may not share our joy in the moment.

More broadly, perhaps it's time to rethink how we measure national wellbeing. We already know that flourishing in life isn't just about positive emotion, but also about responding well to negative emotion, finding value in discomfort, and focusing on other factors such as meaning and interpersonal connection.

Perhaps it's time to rank countries not only by how happy they are, but how safe and open they are to the full range of human experiences.The Conversation

Brock Bastian, Professor, Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

SIX IDEAS TO ENJOY YOUR GOLDEN YEARSThere are very few who look forward to retirement. But the fact is that retirement p...
16/04/2021

SIX IDEAS TO ENJOY YOUR GOLDEN YEARS
There are very few who look forward to retirement. But the fact is that retirement period is the golden period of a person’s life. When we are young, we have to face tough competition in studies and work hard to achieve our goals. After getting a job, we have to work night and day to make a name in our career. Also, we have the responsibility of raising a family. There is hardly any respite from the time we turn 10 till the time of retirement. Relief comes only then. Should we then let go of this opportunity to enjoy life and fulfil some of our dreams and passions?
Here are a few ideas for living a retired life. First, money beyond a point has little utility. Continuing full-time work beyond retirement is not going to add pleasure. Of course, one must have enough financial security to lead a decent life post retirement. Also any position or fame cannot be a long-term companion. The earlier one realizes this, the better.
The greatest happiness comes out of freedom, not by being bound by rules of employer-organization, or by our own greed. The freedom to do anything that you want to do is special only to the retired people. Retirement is a shift from ‘have to do this’ to ‘can do this also’.

Travelling to another city to meet relatives or friends and staying with them, seeing the places not seen before, pursuing hobbies like sports, music, performing art, watching classical movies, reading books, writing, undertaking social service or spiritual studies are all options available for a senior citizen.

Third, during our active work life we tend to neglect our body. Once retired, the first thing to do is detoxify our body and start maintaining it well with exercise, yog and pranayama. Also, because of work pressure we are conditioned to think in terms of targets and getting things done fast, and as a result acquire negative habits of anger and intolerance. Now is the time to break these patterns.

Fourth, maximum happiness during retired life comes from the company of a few good friends. Friends never let us become old. This should be the topmost factor in our decision about the choice of city to live in. If possible, stay in a small, fully furnished, rented apartment so as to retain the freedom to change cities without any hassles.

Fifth, the entire world is a beautiful creation of God. If you haven’t found time to see it so far, do it now. Make a bucket list of places you want to see. Go around the world. Feel the bliss of each place which is unique. Experience the hand of God behind the creation.

Finally, keep in touch with our spiritual knowledge base. What is this world, who is God, who am i, are some of the questions which are addressed very well by our ancient spiritual texts. We can try to understand this wisdom and imbibe it, so that we can die with an enlightened mind and take rebirth in a new body, where, as scriptures say, our evolved mind of this birth is carried forward.

https://afroneuz.godaddysites.com/f/six-ideas-to-enjoy-your-golden-years?blogcategory=Spirituality

15/04/2021

A year of national reckonings on race and inequality has tested how real the Housewives should be.

14/04/2021

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