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A Focused Mind is a Happy Mind
Posted By John Schinnerer On 13. November 2010 @ 00:44 In Executive coach, Danville CA, Mindfulness, Consciousness, Optimal Human Functioning, San Francisco Bay Area, Managing anger, keys to happiness, Executive leadership, Well-being, Managing Sadness, Managing Anxiety, Emotional IQ, Dr. John Schinnerer, Managing stress, Business & psych, Staying calm, Tips to help anxiety, Emotional management, Emotional mind, Depression, Happiness, Positive Psychology | No Comments
From Ken Pope’s listserv…
Subject: recommended: *Science*: “A Wandering Mind Is an Unhappy Mind” by Matthew Killingsworth & Dan Gilbert at Harvard University

Today’s new issue of the American association for the Advancement of Science’s journal *Science* (Vol. 330. no. 6006) includes an article: “A Wandering Mind Is an Unhappy Mind.”
The authors are Matthew A. Killingsworth and Daniel T. Gilbert.
Here are some excerpts:
Many philosophical and religious traditions teach that happiness is to be found by living in the moment, and practitioners are trained to resist mind wandering and “to be here now.”
These traditions suggest that a wandering mind is an unhappy mind.
Are they right?
Laboratory experiments have revealed a great deal about the cognitive and neural bases of mind wandering (3-7), but little about its emotional consequences in everyday life.
The most reliable method for investigating real-world emotion is experience sampling, which involves contacting people as they engage in their everyday activities and asking them to report their thoughts, feelings, and actions at that moment.
<snip>
We solved this problem by developing a Web application for the iPhone (Apple Incorporated, Cupertino, California), which we used to create an unusually large database of real-time reports of thoughts, feelings, and actions of a broad range of people as they went about their daily activities.
The application contacts participants through their iPhones at random moments during their waking hours, presents them with questions, and records their answers to a database at [1] www.trackyourhappiness.org.
The database currently contains nearly a quarter of a million samples from about 5000 people from 83 different countries who range in age from 18 to 88 and who collectively represent every one of 86 major occupational categories.
To find out how often people’s minds wander, what topics they wander to, and how those wanderings affect their happiness, we analyzed samples from 2250 adults (58.8% male, 73.9% residing in the United States, mean age of 34 years) who were randomly assigned to answer a happiness question (”How are you feeling right now?”) answered on a continuous sliding scale from very bad (0) to very good (100), an activity question (”What are you doing right
now?”) answered by endorsing one or more of 22 activities adapted from the day reconstruction method (10, 11), and a mind-wandering question (”Are you thinking about something other than what you’re currently doing?”) answered with one of four options: no; yes, something pleasant; yes, something neutral; or yes, something unpleasant.
Our analyses revealed three facts.
First, people’s minds wandered frequently, regardless of what they were doing.
Mind wandering occurred in 46.9% of the samples and in at least 30% of the samples taken during every activity except making love.
The frequency of mind wandering in our real-world sample was considerably higher than is typically seen in laboratory experiments.
<snip>
Second, multilevel regression revealed that people were less happy when their minds were wandering than when they were not [slope (b) = -8.79, P < 0.001], and this was true during all activities, including the least enjoyable.
Although people’s minds were more likely to wander to pleasant topics (42.5% of samples) than to unpleasant topics (26.5% of samples) or neutral topics (31% of samples), people were no happier when thinking about pleasant topics than about their current activity (b = -0.52, not
significant) and were considerably unhappier when thinking about neutral topics (b = -7.2, P < 0.001) or unpleasant topics (b = -23.9, P < 0.001) than about their current activity (Fig. 1, bottom).
Although negative moods are known to cause mind wandering (13), time-lag analyses strongly suggested that mind wandering in our sample was generally the cause, and not merely the consequence, of unhappiness (12).
Third, what people were thinking was a better predictor of their happiness than was what they were doing.
The nature of people’s activities explained 4.6% of the within-person variance in happiness and 3.2% of the between-person variance in happiness, but mind wandering explained 10.8% of within-person variance in happiness and 17.7% of between-person variance in happiness.
The variance explained by mind wandering was largely independent of the variance explained by the nature of activities, suggesting that the two were independent influences on happiness.
In conclusion, a human mind is a wandering mind, and a wandering mind is an unhappy mind.
[end excerpts]
The author note provides the following contact info:
<[2] mkilling@fas.harvard.edu>.
Ken Pope
To life, love and laughter,
John Schinnerer, Ph.D.
Founder of Guide to Self
P.S. For a free PDF copy of John’s award-winning self-help book on ways to focus the mind, turn down negative emotions, and turn up positive emotions simply visit [3] http://www.GuideToSelf.com, click on the yellow book icon on the left side of the page, and enter your email and name. You will be granted instant access to 216 pages of life-improving scientifically-proven tools to focus your mind!
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URL to article: http://drjohnblog.guidetoself.com/2010/11/13/a-focused-mind-is-a-happy-mind/
URLs in this post:
[1] www.trackyourhappiness.org: http://www.trackyourhappiness.org/
[2] mkilling@fas.harvard.edu: http://drjohnblog.guidetoself.commailto:mkilling@fas.harvard.edu
[3] http://www.GuideToSelf.com: http://www.guidetoself.com/
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