Welcome to the happiness frenzy, now peaking at a Barnes & Noble near
you: Last year 4,000 books were published on happiness, while a mere 50
books on the topic were released in 2000. The most popular class at
Harvard University is about positive psychology, and at least 100 other
universities offer similar courses. Happiness workshops for the
post-collegiate set abound, and each day  'maple story mesos'
(http://www.mesosoon.com) "life coaches" promising bliss to potential
clients hang out their shingles.In the late 1990s, psychologist Martin
Seligman of the University of Pennsylvania exhorted colleagues to
scrutinize optimal moods with the same intensity with which they had
for so long studied pathologies: We'd never learn about full human
functioning unless we knew as much about 'wow power leveling'
(http://www.kaufen-wowgold.de/power-leveling.asp) mental wellness as we
do about mental illness. A new generation of psychologists built up a
respectable body of research on positive character traits and
Happiness-boosting practices. At the same time, developments in
neuroscience provided new clues to what makes us happy and what that
looks like in the brain. Not to be outdone, behavioral economists piled
on research subverting the 'wow power leveling'
(http://www.wowgoldvip.de/power-leveling.asp) classical premise that
people always make rational choices that increase their well-being.
We're lousy at predicting what makes us happy, they found.It wasn't
enough that an array of academic strands came together, sparking a slew
of insights into the sunny side of life. Self-appointed experts jumped
on the Happiness bandwagon. A shallow sea 'archlord gold'
(http://www.gamcc.com/Archlord-Online/) of yellow smiley faces,
self-help gurus, and purveyors of kitchen-table wisdom have strip-mined
the science, extracted a 'buy archlord gold'
(http://www.gamcc.com/Archlord-Online/) lot of fool's gold, and stormed
the marketplace with guarantees to annihilate your worry, stress,
anguish, dejection, and even ennui. Once and for all! All it takes is a
little gratitude. Or maybe a lot.But all is not necessarily well.
According to some measures, as a nation we've grown sadder and more
anxious during the same years that the Happiness movement has
flourished; perhaps that's why we've eagerly bought up its offerings.
It may be that college students sign up for positive psychology lessons
in droves because a full 15 percent of them report being clinically
depressed.


-- 
Qiuene60


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